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GOING BY ELECTRICITY. Some Thing? the Trolley Car Con ductor Must Be and Do. The successful conductor joins to he chivalry and impressiveness.ota policeman the savoir faire of the centleman behind the, silk-counter, for persons v(ho go. Jhojne ton^jdubiL ?t 2 m the moaning may^veftoA? persuaded ? ?ix^ifi?orei#\^?y8 b& fore they of^am#in^ "ring up/' ?ays Charjfes M.*8ki?ner in-the Atlantic, f 5? W&Jt * % S. The conductor must keep fifty or gixty streets in lhind. He ..must be sure to let the plderly lady;, off at the one she has! been thinking ?f; and when she foils him h^must'not impeach her veracity iif she "just knew" sho told him. He must not allow the man who immerses him self in a newspaper to forget an ob ligation of 5 cents to the company. He must curb a natural inclination to embrace the wives of strangers when he lifts them up the steps. tjc j?ust call the attention of for getful persons to th? fact that they, are chewing tobacco or are drunk. He must arbitrate between the man who opens the window and the wo man who wants it shut and shut it. Ke must insinuate himself up and down the aisle of his car without tipping sendees into the laps of irascible bankers or treading on the corns of such as wear them. And while others clutch a^ straps or dashboards or doorknobs or the cord lie rings his fares with, when the inotorman is seized with a sud den frenzy for action he must never lie down on the floor or lose his dig nity. He can be philosophic after he grows used to it and find advan tages in his wild career, As a con ductor remarked : "The worst of go in' by 'lectricity is it 'most shakes your liver out. But you never get dvspepsy."_ Gypsy Notiono About Mountains. In some of the gypsy tribes living about central Europe tho moun tains are called bar, "rags," or nuchlyis, which last term usually moans "clouds," "mist," the same name being applied to the clouds as the mountains, the latter being re garded as a kind of pathway to heaven. According to gypsy ideas the clouds are daughters of the mist king, and the lightning flashes the sons of the fire king, who would soar up high into space, but the wind king comes and drives them down to the earth, their grand mother. In tfyeir flight before the wind king the lightning and its progeny very ollon lose the road to their father, the fife king, who dwells deep in the earth, and fall prostrate in the wrong part of the earth, where they, are changed to stones. Such lightning stones, known in Germany as thunderbolts and weather stones, are pushed out of the ground after nine years, and whoever finds such a stone on a mountain will be rendered lucky if he always carries a little bit of this stone with him. The Grave of 8t. Swithin. St. Swithin, by his express re quest, was r buried in the open churchyard, "thinking no vault was so good to cover his grave as that of heaven/' When he was canon ized, however, the monks of Win chester took it into their heads that his body ought to have a more dig nified resting place, and resolved to Temove it into the choir, fixing the 15th of July for its solemn trans lation. It rained, however, so vi olently on that day and for forty days in succession that they aban doned their design as contrary to the divine will and instead erected a chapel over his grave, at which many mir/rles are said to have been wrought. An Opportunity. "And how is the poor lady on jour first floor?" asked a lin. dame who was district visiting. "Very sadly, ma'am," replied the lodging house keeper. "She'll hard ly last over the night." "Dear, dearl" rejoined the sym pathetic inquirer. "Is she , con scious?" gj % "Only at times, ma'am; just be tween the fits, you know." "Ah, yes,-very sad; very sad in deed! Next time she comes tc I wish you'd ask her the address o? her laundress. She was a very good one, I recollect, and worked cheap." ?London Tit-Bits. Nothing Easier. Mr. and^ Mrs. Bailey, a V - ung couple recently married, were begin ning their housekeeping and were ?oing the work of putting the rooms m order themselves.. Mr. Bailey was having 6ome.trou ble in hanging one of the presents, a fine clock, upon the wall of the o-iuing roomv "Why >g it taking yoii^so long, dear," asked the young wife, "to put up that clock?" "I cant get it plumb,*' he replied. "Then why don't you send for the plumber?" she asked in perfect sincerity. * f For Infants sind Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of ^Lez/^X&^^j ? The man who lete his wife buy his necktios for him is the pnrnc man, who lots her decide for him that he doesn't like to suioke in the house. CURING A BAU Y HORSE. An Eaey and Effective Remedy, At though a Bit Heroic 'Only, voco in my life have I, been stuck on a balky horse," said the old horseman, "and I worked a cure in a manner you may call he roic. I Most hoi sea balk out of pure cusscdness. ?it?y won't movo be jcauso^they, dpfct want to. This an imal ,vrcs all right until I got him home, and then ho revealed all his meanness. ^Neither coaxing nor licking did any good. He'd go only wjien he 'took a notion' to. I be came disgusted with his tricks, and one dt? I droyc hini over to a coun try, railroad . crossing. ?heto was [ quite ?**steep grade at the crossing, " and I figured that he would balk on the tracks. For this reason I had hitched him to an old vehicle. True to my' ^figuring, the beast came to a dead stop at the top of the grade and stood right across tho rails. I left him there and got down and walked away for a few rods, as I didn't want to bo hit by the splin ters. "It was forty minutes before I caught sight of a freight train down the road. Tho horse heard and saw it, and if I had coaxed him a little ho would have moved on. I wasn't coaxing, however, and when ho saw wasn't lie braced his feet, dropped his ears and determined to die game. As the whistle tooted I saw him trembling, and as the rails began to hum he rolled his eyes, but he never moved till the cowcatcher picked him up. How high he went up I can't say, but he landed in a swamp with an awful thud, and pieces of the wagon rained down for five min utes after.' I supposed the horse was dead, of course, and went back to the farm to say so, but within two hours he came limping home and asked to be* taken in. In a week he was as good as ever, but what a chango in disposition! He was like a boy after a good spank ing, and, although I owned him for fiveyears after that, he never balked again. Now and then he seemed a bit inclined to, but all I had to do was to go 'Toot, toot, toot !' and he would drop his tail and ears and be good for the next three months."? Detroit Free Press. Care of the Piano. Every one has observed after pur chasing a new piano that it soon takes on a dull, smoky appearance. To remove this 'ise a fine sponge, tepid water and castile soap. Go over tho case, a little at a time. Tho ,water alone without the soap will usually be ail that is needed. ; A chamois skin as dry as can be wrung out of water should be used to dry the Eurface after using the sponge. For old pianos a polish ?f raw lin-| seed oil (two parts), alcohol and best vinegar 'one part each) may be ap plied with good results if care be taken to ?isc a very little at a time and to thoroughly rub that little off. Shake the polish frequently, use soft cotton cloth, one piece to rub it on and a large clean piece to finish it off with. Bruises, usually on the front; can bo taken off by I rubbing with powdered pumice stone and water or with sapolio. Clean the keys with alcohol ana wa ter, equal parts. Wasted Energy. "Mad!" he exclaimed. "Of course I'm mad. I tell you what we need in this world is some good system of general thought transference or mind reading. You know how hard I worked to get Margaret." "Yes." "Just gave all my waking thoughts to the subject, neglected my business, and all that, ana made a fool of myself generally." "But you succeeded." "Oh,' yes; we're engaged. And now that we have exchanged confi dence!) I find that she was working just as hard to get me, and it makes us both mad to think of th? waste of effort."_ Sofaslo Acid. Boracic acid is an element of vol I panic gases and is found in combina tion with various salts in the vicin ity of active or extinct volcanoes in different portions of the world. Borax is largely used in glassmok ingt in pottery glazing and* enamel ' ing and medically for the treatment of external sores and ulc?rations. It is valuable as an antiseptic and in Sweden is largely used in the Sreservation of meat and milk, pro ucing, it is claimed, no unpleasant or unwholesome effects. A Creative Force. A man of exp?rience, and observa tion who has. watched the develop ment of advertising until it has be come the very lifcblood of business { enterprise affirms that advertising I does more than attract from a given ! amount of trade a larger share to the I advertiser. Ho finds that it creates new customers and also that it crc I atcs a demand for new or neglected j products. It is a force without which no striking success is possible.? Philadelphia Record. >" I > ., ,.. i, ? ?r??? "? ata uainp a box of Chamberlain's Stomach *'%% 'Liver Tablets and find them the best thing for my stomach I overused," ?ay? T. Robinson, Justice of the Peace. Loomifl, Mich. These tablets not only correct disor ders of the stomsch but regulate the liver and bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. Price 25c per box. For sale by" On-Gray & ? A girl never thinks her photo graph looks like her unless it doesn't look like her. JL 11. A .HAPPY SEQUEL The Result of a Policitoua Termina # tlon to a Novel. ? few years ago one of outmost popular novelists was busily en gaged in writing a serial novel for a London jouraal when a certain nobleman called on her in a state of intense excitement. "Do telL mt ," said he, "have you finished the -story now appearing in-?" "Why, of ourse; some time ago," was tho reply. "Does the heroine die at the end?" "Oh, certainly. After ?uch con sumptive symptoms as I have de scribed how could she possibly live?" **But you must make her live. You vnvjst change tho catastrophe, for on your heroine's li?o depends my daughter's." "Your daughter's?" exclaimed the novelist in durprise. "Yes," was the" startling rejoin der. "She has all tho various symptoms of consumption which you have described and watches mournfully for every number of your novel, reading her own fate in that of-your heroine. Now, if you make your heroine live I feel persuaded that my daughter, whoso imagination has been very deeply impressed; will livo too. Come, a life to save is a temptation"? "Not to be resisted," added the novelist. Consequently the last chapter was changed. The heroine recovered and was duly made happy. About five years after the novelist met tho nobleman at a party. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "let me in troduce you to my daughter. I think she owes her life to you. There she is." "What! That handsome woman who looks the very picture of health?" "Yes; she is married, and has had three children." "And my novel has had three editions," said the novelist with a laugh; "so we are auits."?London Tit-Bits. Men's Hats In Elizabeth's Time. The gay young courtiers of the queen?Elizabeth of immortal mem ory?shone resplendent in high crowned hats of rare device, which, like the brilliant Raleigh, they hung around with strings of pearls. Kingsley describes his Elizabethan adventurer John Oxenham as hav ing on his head "a broad velvet Spanish hat," and Master Frank Leigh as shading his delicate com plexion from the sun with "a broad dove colored Spanish hat with feathers to match, looped up over the right ear with a pearl brooch." But hats or caps were worn ac cording to taste or circumstances, and Scott tells us that when Leices ter rode bareheaded at Elizabeth's 6?de on her entry into Kenilworth his esquire had charge of his lord ship's black velvet bonnet, ?ar nished with a clasp of diamonds and surmounted by a white plume. ?Chambers' Journal. S ' Cunning Gulls. An example of the cunning of gulls was observed at Tacoma wh?n several alighted on a bunch of logs that had been in the water for a long time, with the submerged sides thick with barnacles. One was a big gray fellow, who seemed to be the captain. He walked to a par ticular log, stood on one side of it close to the water and then uttered peculiar cries. Tho other gulls came and perched on the same side of the log, which under their combined weight rolled over several inches. The gulls, step by step, kept the log rolling until the barnacles showed above the water. The birds {ricked eagerly at this food, and the og was not abandoned until every barnacle had been picked. -f Diamond Cutting. Not only is diamond cutting not a specially highly paid occupation, but it is one involving a most .hu miliating system of espionage to the worker. Each man has to strict ly account for the stones he receives on going to work in the morning and the count has to be carefully taken when the unfinished work is handed in at night to be locked np in a safe, against the return of the workmen the next day. The possi bilities of theft are great, though a dishonest workman knows that an attempt to dispose of an unfinished stone would bring suspicion upon him wherever the attempt was made. Her First Request. Grea*i * excited, the band of res cuers surrounded the missionary whom they had saved from the hands of her kidnapers. Utterly weak and fain., she lay upon a cot, but smiled feebly at her friends. "Is there anything we can get for you?" asks one. "Yes," she whispers, "yes. Get me a fashion paper. I haven't seen one for six months."?Judge. This aiffnaiaro ia on every box ot tbe genuine Laxative Brooo-Qutaiiie **m? the remedy the* cores a cold in.es? day ?- A woman seems to have an idea that she might be thought a heedless or negligent wife when she wakes up her husband in the night to ask him is ho is sleeping comfortably. ? No man ever realizes how much trAsh he owns until he moves. xiiu-rjiiw^ AlVX'JBJUJUJLU'J j CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE, j The Events That Led One Man to Re gard It With Suspicion. "As to circumstantial evidence, it's a queer thing," said the man in the brown suit. "Fivo or sis years ago I was in a certain town for a night when a bank was robbed. Next morning I was arrested as an accomplice, it being contended that I whs seen idling in front of the bank and evidently acting as sen- | tinel to those within. Three differ ent persons identified mo as the man, and a fourth claimed to have seen mo enter the hotel at a late hour by way of a shed, and a win dow. I was locked up for examina tion, with a chance of things going hard with mo, when evidence began to come forward on my side. The landlord asserted and swore that I was sitting in the office at 10 o'clock p. m. Two servants sworo they saw mo going to my room half un hou.-r later. A man having rooms oppo site the hotel Bwore tnat ho saw m* smoking at my window at midnight. A guest of the hotel who had a "? nom next to mine sworo that my cuores disturbed him from midnight till 2 o'clock and that ho heard mo turn over in bed at 3, and so I was honorably discharged from custo dy." "But about its being queer ?" was asked. ' , "Why, all the people on both ?ides were mistaken. I was not outside the bank at tho time named, and neither was I in tho hotel." "But you were somewhere?" "Oh, of course. Fact is, I got mashed on the landlord's daughter, and we sat up all night on a bal cony and talked love and looked at tho moonlight?yes, sir, sat there all night like a couple of idiots, and, -though I declared I would die for her and -she said she only wanted me and a humble cottage, sho was married to a red haired butcher within a year and I was being sued by a snub nosed widow for a breach of promise. I was simply observ ing, you know, that circumstantial evidence is a queer thing, and 3 wish to add that a -jurjmen should not be influenced too much by it.'J ?Pearson's Weekly. Remarkable Ideas of Beauty. It is remarkable to learn the ex traordinary ideas of female beauty which characterize different na tions. The ladies of Arabia stain their fingers and toes red, their eye brows black and their lips blue. In Persia they paint a black streak around their eyes and ornament their faces with representations oi various figures. " The Japanese women adopt the singular method of gilding theii teeth, and those of tho Indians ?aint them red. In some parts ol ndia the pearl of the tooth must bo dyed black before a woman can bo beautiful. The Hottentot wom en paint the entire body in compart ments of red and black. Spurgeon'a Forcible Way. Spurgeon sometimes carried dra matic action to a ludicrous excess in the pulpit. Mr. Haweis says that once in the- middle of his sermon the preacher shouted out : "What's that thee says, Paul, *I can do all things V I'll bet thee half a crown o' that." So tho preacher took out half a crown and. put it on-the Bible. "However," ho continued, "let's see what the apostle has to say foi himself." So ho read on, " 'Through Christ that strengthened me/ Oh," says he, "if that's the terms of the bet I'm off!" And he put tho half crown back into his pocket. Hair Restrained by Law. ; Centuries a<^o for some reason it was thought necessary to introduce a kind of sumptuary law with re spect to the length of garments and the length of the hair. Men were forbidden -to wear their hair on their shoulders and women to wear the long plaits hanging loose. It was a mark of distinction for maid ens to wear long hair, only the slave born having it cut short. So it is not likely that women of free birth were induced by any edicts to cut their hair loose, but orly to confine it within reasonable bounds. Bridges In China. Most ancient -Chinese bridges are only wide enough to allow the pas sage of two mounted men, railings on each side serving to insure the traveler's safety. It is thought highly probable that the mission aries who first reported on tho early suspension bridges of China, and who, of course, gave some idea of their plan of construction, were really tho cause of that unique species of - bridge building being adopted by western nations. A Peculiar River. Unique properties ore possessed by tho river Tinto, in Spain. It petrifies the sand of its bed, and if a stono falls ' in the stream and alights upon another, in a few months they unite and become one stone. Fish cannot live in its waten. If you have no sppetite for your mealii something is wrong with your digestion, liver or bowels. Prickly Ash Bitter* olesnses and strengthen* the stomach, purifies the bowels and creates sppetite. vigor and cheerful ness. Evans Pharmacy. ? You would never know how im portant some men are if they didn't inform you. ? When it comes to making pay mcuts some men never get beyond compliments. NO MISUNDERSTANDING. The Farmer Told the Parson Why He Iftvitcii Him to Drink. Ono cold Sunday morning a3 the worshipers from a little country I church iu England were slowly wending their way toward their homes a burly old Devonshire tann er might have been seen leaning over his yard gate, nodding his head and wishing a cheerful "Good dayl" to passcrsby. At last his greetings became less frequent, and, telling himself that nearly every one must havo passed, ho was about to turn away when he descried tho well known form of the vicar coining down the roid. "Very cold day, farmer," com mented tho clergyman as he drew near. "Mortal cold, indeed," was the hearty response. "Bo 'c too proud to step inside u minute an' taste a good glass o' sweet cider, pa'sou?" "I ain not too proud, of course," returned the vicar amusedly, "but I will not accept your kind offer all t1 o same, thank you, for. to tell you the truth, it is close upon my dinner hour, and I must go straight home." "Then you bean't thirsty ?" "No, thanks." "Look 'o here, pa'son!" exclaimed tho farmer. "Us don't want to havo no misunderstanding for want o' a few words o' explanation, on' I should like for 'e to know that 3 shouldn't have made so bold as to ask 'e to drink if it hadn't been foi what I heard the doctor say to his son 'bout you as he went past m) yard a quarter hour ago." "What was that ?" asked the vic ar, with considerable interest. "Why," said he, "'The vicar ii terrible dry this morning ' " Japanese Serenity. Perhaps the secret of the 6wce expression and habitual serenity o tho Japanese women can be foun< in their freedom from small wor rics. Tho fashion of dress neve varying saves the wear of mind ove that subject, and the bareness o tho houses and simplicity of die make housekeeping a mere bagn telle. Everything is exmiisitel clean and easily kept so. There i no paint, no drapery, no crowd o little ornaments, no coming int 1 the houses in tho footwear worn i the dusty streets. And then th t feeling o? living in the rooms tha can bo turned into balconies an ; verandas at a moment's notice, o having walls that slide away as free ly as do the scenes on the stago an ! let in all out of doors or chong ' the suits of rooms to the shape an [ size that the whim of the day or th ho'\r requires! The Japanese ar learning much from us, some thing i not to their improvement. W might begin, with profit to oui selves, to learn of them. Company Manners. The pitfalls of company manner receive a fresh exemplification i 1 the story of a woman who, havin, heard that it was impolite to pree a guest to have more of a dish a 1 table, thereby calling attention t the second serving, so instructe 1 her daughter previous to a dinne she was giving, charging her to ac accordingly. At the table Bhe hear 1 her say, "Mr. X., will you have som oysters?" and immediately th mother exclaimed in a horrifie tone : 1 "Why, hasn't Mr. X. been servei r to oysters yet ?" Whereupon the daughter respond ed that he had been helped thre times, which contributed to the hap pmess of neither mamma nor Mi Peculiar Rainstorms. I There is at least ono place in th . United States where a man may L out in a heavy rain and not get we i even though he has neither mackin tosh nor umbrella. In the Colorado desert they havo rainstorms durin; which not a drop of water touche the earth. The rain can be seei falling from tho clouds high abov the desert, but when the wate reaches the stratum of hot, dry ai beneath the clouds it is entirely ab sorbed before falling half the dis tance to the ground. It is a singu lar sight to witness a heavy down pour of rain not a drop of whicl touches the ground. These str?ng? rainstorms occur in l?sions when the shade temperature often rangei as high as 128 degrees F. 8eelng at a Distance. To see objects at a distance of 10( miles the observer must be standing at a height of C,CG7 feet above th< level of the sea. The rule is thai the distance in miles at which ar object on tho earth's surface ma) be seen is equal fo the pquare rool of one and a half times the heigh! of the observer in feet above se? level, allowance being made for the effect of atmospheric refraction This rule is often of value to ocean travelers in estimating a ship's dis tance. Stops the Cough and Works off in Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets our a cold in one day. No cure, No Pay Price 25 cents. ? The largest perfrci pearl eve discovered in the Mississippi Hive in spherical in ?h ape and in three quar ters of an ioch in diameter. 1 weighs 121 grain* and is valued a $10,000. It wan found recently nea Prairie du Chien by a pearl b>her. dough'8 Quick Wit. An effort of one of John B. Gough'? toura of tho West was to arouse his converts to a political movement in favor of prohibition; an? in several states the 'politicians began to give consideration to the cry, says the Philadelphia Times. The distillers and liquors dealers are said to have been so frightened that they employed men to follow and lecture, sit among the audience and endeavor to con found him with questions. He had workod a Topeka, Kan., audienoo up to a fine pitch of excitement, and iu his effective manner, cried: "Temperance! Temperanco! Tem perance ! ! ! It will ineau money in your pocket, clothes on your back, happiness iu your homes, and God iu your heart!" Up leaped one of the paid inter rupters and shouted to tue audience ; "Money in your pockets! Why, fellow-citizens, follow this mac's ideaf and we'll all be in the poorhouse Think of the fields of tassclcd corn that stretch on every side ! Whiskej is made from corn. We sell million: of dollars worth of corn to the whisk makers* Stop the manufacture o whiskey and what'11 we do?" Theo turning to Gough ho wen on: "You, Mr. Smavty?what'11 we do Tell us, if prohibition comes, what'] we do with our corn?" "Raise moro hogs, my friend," r< plied Gough, without a second's be9 tation. _ The Same Old Story. J. A. Kelly relates an experiem similar to that which has happened i almost every neighborhood in tho Un ted States and has been told and r told by thousands of others. He say "Last summer I had an attack of d; seotery and purchased a bottle < Cbp.inberlain's Colic, Cholera ai Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used a cording to directions and with eutir ly satisfactory results The trcub was controlled much quicker than fc mer attacks when I used other rem dies," Mr. Kelly is a well knov citizen of Henderson, N. C. For sa by Orr Gray & Co. ? The harder a woman ohascE man the hadrer sho has to. ( ? Truth never runs a raoe wi fiction without getting tripped up ai beaten. (MOTHERS, DO YOU KNOW the many so-called birth medicines, ai most remedies for women in the treatme of her delicate organs, contain more or le opium, morphine and strychnine ? Do You Know that opium and morpbi: are stupefying narcotic poisons? Do you Know that in most countries dru gists are no t permitted to sell narcotics wit out labeling them poisons? Do You Know that you should not ta' Internally any medicine for the pain accoi panying pregnancy ? Do Yon Know that Mother's Friend is purely vegetable preparation, and that it applied externally only. Do You Know that Mother's Friend is oelobrated prescription and that it has bei I in use overt orty years, and that each botl of the genuine bears tho name of Tho Bra field Regulator Co.? Do you know that when you use this p? feet remedy during childbirth or througho the entire period of gestation that you w be free of pain and bear healthy, clev children? Well, these things are worth knowir They ate facts. Of druggists, $1.00. Acce no substitute. Ourbook ''Motherhood" Ire THE BkADHELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, OA. Money to Loadi_at 7 per C I have eeveral Thousand Dollars the will loan on Farming Lands In And non County at Seven per cent, intere Will losn y mi any amount from Thi Hundred Dollars up. K. O. MoADAMS, Attorney n? Law. Andetaon, 8. C July 0, 1902_3_3m SOUTH CAROLINA MILITARY ACADEMY. TWO Vacancies in the State- Benefic r y Mcholsfrehip are to be ti warded on coi iVetitive examination* for thin, Anders County. Blank forma of appllcatl should be applied for at once to Col. C, Gadsden, Chairmen Hoard of Visito TIkhp applications, fully made out, mi he in the hands of the Chairman on t 31 .<tt July In order to receive attention. C. 8. GAD3DEN, Chairman Board Visitors WOFFORD COLLEGE. Mpartanbnrg, H. C. H. N. BN Y DER. M. A., President. Full College Courses. Favoral surroundings. The best influences. Necessary expenses from 8160 $175 for the year. For Catalogue other information, apply to J. A. GAME WELL, Secretary. VYofford College Fitting School Sparenburg, 8..C. Elegant new building. Careful s tent ion to individual student. Boa and tuition for year, 8110. All i formation given by A. M. DuPRE. Head Master. July 9,1902 3 7 Yellow Poison In your blood? Physicians call it malarial germ. It can be seen chang ing red blood yellow under a micro scope. It works day and night. First, it turua your cowplexiou yellow. Chill*, aching sensations creep down your back bone. You feel weak and worthless. Roberts' Chill Tonic Enters the blood, drive? out the yellow foison and stop3 the trouble at once, t not only prevents but completely cures chills, fevers, night sweats and malaria. The manufacturers know all about this yellow poison, aud have perfected Roberta* Tonic to drive it out, nourish your system, restore appe tite, purify the blood. It has cured thousands of cases of chills, fevers and malaria. It will cure you or your money back. This is lair. Try it. Price, 25c. ORR. GRAY & CO. EVANS PHARM ACT. DENDY DRUG CO. :e m i e s: ? of id c e !c ir e rn de I a th ad Foley's Honey and iSr^ for childrentsafe, sure. No opiates* Hi We rob pectf ully solicit a share of your business. \ From this date unlit further notice we will close our doors at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Will thank our customers and friends to attend 90 their business before that hour. F(Jtey'Y~Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right* id nt sa Ice is en ;lo cl il! 'fr lt. 11 er at, ree SF?CIAl NOTICE! Parties owing me either by Note or Account will call in and settle same without Bending to see you or writing you again, as I must have 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. le m on on e. rs. lBt be tie to or it rd KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of all dis eases. Cfll CV'O KIDNEY CURE Is fi lULCl oBuaraolBidRintdf or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles* PRICE 50c and $1.00. SOLU BY EVANS' PHARMACY. Foley's Honey and Tar cures coids, prevents pneumonia. s. g. bruce, DENTI8T. OVER D. O. Brown <fe Bro's. Store, on South Main Street. I brvv- *J5 year* experience in my pro fession, and will be pleased tu work for any who want Plates made. FllllnRdone, and I make a specialty or Ext rar ting Teeth without pain and with no after pain. Jan 23,1901 31 50 YEARS/ EXPERIENCE Patents TRADE MARKS I Desio.no * Copyrights &cv Anyone Bonding a sketch and description mn( aulcklr o,?<n>rtaln our opinion free wnethorma U?T?ntloei is probably patentable. Commur.Jon uens strictly conOden ttaL Handbook on 1'atenU sent free. Oldest avtency for securing patent*. Patent? taken th--*UKn Munn & Co. recelwt mtcUil notice, withou* charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I^.-S?aV cir cnilatlon of any oclontlOc Journal. Terms,93 a year; tour months. SU Sold byall newsdealer*. MUNN &Co.381B^'New York Uraach Offlco. 6? F BU Washington. D.O.