University of South Carolina Libraries
GENERAL NEWS. - Bids for $3,000,000 of the bonds cf indebtedness of the Philippine is lands have been called for. - In the oil fields of Texas south' erners are protecting negroes who are ordered to leave by northern and west ern men. - Frank Long, a Macon, Ga., gro cer, has made this season, according to the Atlanta Journal, upwards of $5, OOO on 40 aores of cantaloupes. - A negro who assaulted a white girl near New Baltimore, N. Y., was saved from lynohing by an officer who smuggled the negro to another town. - In Kentucky a mob broke in a jail to take therefrom a white man convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment and lynched him. - Negroes from Evansville, Ind., find no hospitality in any part of that seotion and arc ordered to move at time of arrival in the southern Indiana towns. - Joseph W. Cummin, cashier of tho Cornwall bank, Newburgh, N. Y., has been arrested on charge of default ing. He has confessed that ho is $50, 000 short. - Winchester, Va., was visited by a cloudburst that submerged tho en tiro town to the dopth of from three to six feet and caused damage of thousands of dollars. - Geo. B. Hiss of Charlotte, N. C., president of the American Cotton Manufacturer's association, thinks there will be 30,000,000 idlo spindles by the first of September. - Enraged at the tardiness of thc court, a mob broke into the* jail at Flemingsburg, Ky., and hanged Wm. Thacker, a white mac, who two years ago killed John Gordon. - An unknown friend has donated $25,000 to Kev. S. L. Morris, D. D., of Atlanta, secretary of tho Home Mission board of the Presbyterian Church, for home missions. - A negro who burglarized the resi dence of the mayor of Bod Bank, N. J., and attempted to criminally as sault the mayor's daughter, was saved from lynohing by the polioe. - A Virginia man threatened to court the first woman he found pick ing berries on his land. The next day he found thirteen, and all claimed to haye boen the first on the ground. - Miss Lavina Wheeler is dead in Oakland, Cal., at the age of 102 years. She was in full possession of her facul ties almost up to the time of her death. She died, aooording to her ph > aioians, simply of old age. C?en. Clement A. Evans, of Georgia, flays there are sufficient funds in hand to begin tho erection of the "Battle Abbey" at Richmond, Va. The funds of the Confederate Memorial associ ation for this objeot are now Btated to ba ?204,470. - The governor of New Jersey has cancelled the charters of about seven hundred corporations beoauso they neglected to pay their annual tithes to the state. C The only wiched corpo ration iu^Tew Jersey is the one that fails to oome up to the cashier's desk promptly. - A negro in New York State out raged a 11-year-old white girl, and an effort was mado to lynch him, but tho sheriff smuggled him ont of town to another place. In New Jersey another negro attempted an assault on ayouug white lady. He, too, was secretly con veyed to another town and lynching was averted. - Mrs. Carrio Luce is suing F. W. Woodworth & Co., proprietors of a 10-cent store in Richmond,'Va., for $5,000 damages for getting her. leg broken in a crowd while attending a "bargain dale" in their store. She contends that the proprietors should not have permitted such a large orowd to come in. - Miss Willie Wray, a Tennessee girl, went to Mississippi and worked on a farm eight years dressed as man. Her sex was discovered last week and she was compelled to wear woman's clothing. She gave as a reason for her disguise that she would havo less trouble in earning a living on the farm. She ia a good hand and is running hor own farm this year. - New York is to have a "beer queen." A brewery worth $5.000,000, producing 500,000 barrels of beer an nually and yielding $500,000 in profit is to be owned and managed by a wo man. After years of litigation Mrs. Josephine Schmidt hhs been awarded full possession of the immense property left by her husband and sho will per sonally conduct the business. - Thero have been no Sundays on the wheat farms of Kansas since the harvesting of this year's crop com menced. Labor has been so soaVce that the farmers and their wives and children have worked on Sundays the same as on week days. The other day ten stout negro men put themselves up at auction for thirty days. The best brought $6 a dav while the sor riest went at $3.20 a day. Disease tafees no summer vacation. If you need flesh and strength use ?. "Scott's Emulsi?n summer as ip, winter. Send for frc? samplo. SCOTT & BOWNE, Cheaiifts. . 40>4C5 Pearl Street, New York. Soc and $ t .00 ; all druggists. About Man's Animal Friends. The dog is the most widely distri- | buted of the domestic animals. He lives in the lowly hut of the African savage and is the companion of the Greenland Esquimaux, the most northern inhabitants of the world. He is in fsct the inseparable compan ion of man and is found wherever the human race exists. His habitat is thus extended further south than that of any other domeaiio animal. The horse also bas a very wide hab itat. He lives north of the Arctic circle only in the northern parts of Norway and Sweden, the northers half of North-America and the north ern third of Asia never see him. Tbe most northern part of his habitat in Asia is around the northern shores of the Sea of Ohkotsk and in the neigh borhood of Yakutsk on the Lena Riv er. South of this latitude he is found nearly everywhere except in very moist and hot regions, like the Amazon ba sin and equatorial Africa acd the southern part of India. Ho thrives in the dry heat of the Sabara Desert in many of the oases, but ho would be sought for in vain in tropical Africa between the latitude of the Capo Verdo Islands and the Tropic of Capricon. When explorerp pushed northward from the Congo their native servants were greatly surprised on roaching a region near Lake Chad to find the horse io abundance. Their astonish ment was unbounded when they saw the horsemen of the Soudan on the fleetest of riding animals that had ever mot their gaze. The mule is more generally distri buted over South America than any other of the continents, being found there everywhere, exceptiug along a part of the hot, damp coast between P?rnambuoo and Rio Janeiro; and he ls abo 'practically unknown in the Gnlanas, the Amazon and Terra del Fuego. His home covers perhsps a fifth as muoh area as that of the horse. There are few mules around our great lakes excepting along their southern shores, but from tho lakes tho animal extends southward to the Straits of Magelian. His home in all temperate and hot countries is practically coextensive with that of the horse, but it does not extend nearly aa far north as the horse's range and he is not found in tho deserts. Tho range of the asB is about as large as that of the mule, but he lives in Asia, far to the northeast of the mule's habitat, and his habitat stretohes aoross the continent as far as Irkutsk on Lake Baikal. The range of tho tame reindeer has been widely extended in Northern I Asia by the tribes that number him among their valuable assets; and now he is in process of being widely intro duced into Alaska. Civilization, therefore, hss done muoh to extend the habitat of this animal to the south, but the domesticated reindeer has not been introduced into mest of tho great regions of the Arctic, where the wild animal roams at will. The range of cattle is practically coextensive with that of the horse. Cattle, however, are found moro ex tensive in very hot, damp climates than tho horse and are entirely ab sent from dry desert regions where the hors-j is found in considerable numbers. Cattle, for example, are wholly laokiog in the desert of Sahara, but they graze in tho southern part of In dia, where no horses are found. They are grown wherever grass thrives, ex cept in-some hot regions of excessive humidity, while the horse is impor tant only in regions where grain supplements grass as a part of his food. The hen -embraces nearly all the world, and its range would be aa great as that of the dog if it oxtended farth er north and south; but it is found north of the Arctic Circle only in Nor way and Sweden and is as yet laoking tn the southern part of Sonth America, Dxoept where tho Scotoh have settled in Patagonia. Travelers throughout tho most of Africa and India and in many little known parts of the world can usually idd chickens to their food resources without difficulty ; but there are some argo islands, like New Guinea, where .he hen is not found and more than lalf of Australia is destitute of this tuitnal. We Beldom think of the enormous iddition which the hen makes to our resources. It is well known that onr muntry, year by year, usually produc ?s more gold and silver than any Other sountry io the world. But the last fear Book pf the agricultural depart ment gives facts to show that the val* ie of the eggs sold in this country has i very year surpassed that of the geld ind silver it has mined sinco 1850, ex jept in one year. Nearly all our eats aro found to. the louth of Southern Iceland and New Zealand is the most southern country n which they live. They arc almost wholly laoking among the islands of ihe Pacific Ocean, excepting, the Ha sraiian group. Thore arc plenty of .hem in the Philippines, but'Choy aro practically unknown lo the myriad io andi to the cast of that irohipolago. The cat ba* been introduced into the Danish settlements of Southwest Greenland, but as a rule it is not a domestic animal among barbarous peo ples. The result is that the animal is not known in about one-third of South Amerioa, including nearly the entire Amazon basin, and is never seen in at least two-thirds of Africa. It lives in Morocco, Algeria, along the Nile and among the whites on the east and west coasts; but the vast ex penses of the Sabara and of the tropi cal interior of Africa do not know this animal. * The domesticated ostrich is not found iu any of the haunts of the wild bird, but is confined in Africa to the north and the south parts of. the continent, where be is raised, for his feathers. As is well known, there are a number of ostrioh farms in Arizona and South California, where the ani mal is thriving. The honey bee lives almost all over the world where flowers supply the nectar it requires, except in the Ama zon basin, in moat of which tho bec.in not found. The bee, therefore, is distributed all over tho country, though very sparsely in the dry and unforested regions of tho West. It is wholly absent in the cold and most of tho desert parts of tho world. The silk- worm girdles the earth be tween tho fiftieth parallel of north latitude and the Tropic of Cancer, be ing found further south only in Siam and Cochina China. In other words, it-lives wherever the mulberry and other trees on which it feeds are found in perfection. It belongs distinctive ly to the northern hemisphere, bul may yet be introduced into paris oi the southern hemisphere that are fav orable for the mulberry. How to Stand Straight. One of the most admirable point! in military discipline, says an ex change, is tho erectness of figure givei by the drill exercises. A "soldierly* bearing is proverbially a fine one The following rules, if strictly oarrie< out, will give the oivilian the benefi of such a carriage. Try them an< see. Make it a rule to keep the back o the neck close to the back of the col lar. Roll the shoulders baokward an downward.. Try to squeeze the shout der blades together many times a dav Stand eiect at short intervals darin the day-"head up, ohin in, chest oui shoulders back." Walk or stand with the hands clasp ed behind the head and the elbow wide apart. Walk about, or even ru upstairs, with from ten to fort pounds on the top of the head. Tr to look at the top of your high-out ve; or your neoktie. Praotioe the * ari movements of the breast-stroke swin ming while standing or walkin] Hold the arms behind the baok. Ca ry a cane or umbrella behind the ama of the baok or behind the neok. Put the hands on the hips, with e bows baok and fingers forward. Wal with the thumbs in tho arm-holes i the vest. When walking, swing tt arm and shoulders strongly baokwan Stand now and then during the di with all the posterior parts of tl body, so far as possible, touching vertical wall. Look upward as y< walk on tho sunny sido of the stree -The Standard. - Generally when a woman h been married five years and her hu band tells her in the night that 1 loves her she ?B dreaming. I - Next to rejecting the proposal a man she doesn't want to marry, sir? gets the most enjoyment out snubbing another girl who isn't in h Bet. - One of the most unoomfortal things about having a wife is tho ff ors her relatives are going to do y tv h. on they get through asking you lo them favors. - P. is stated that the fin< dad of chi?a day exist near Camdc md that in the colonial days the ! mons ohina maker Wedgewood in E> laod feared its competition. Chi was made at Camden from this ol ivor a hundred and fifty years ago. - The man who prediots what is happen in the next century is . alwi isfe. Nobody will feel like disputi bim while he lives, and nodody v :ako the trouble to dispute bis prod .ions after he is dead. - It ia stated that tho Cincinn whiskey combino haa been smash' This may be taken as another ill .ration of the fact that whiskey \ imash any combination into which s injeoted, . To Cure a Cold Ia Oft? Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabb 1)1 druggists refund the money ii ails tc euro. E. W. Grove's sig .uro is on eaoh box. Pr i co 25c. - A tourist without money ii ramp, and a tramp without money , tourist. - More than physical culture is [uircd to make a man strong minde - A woman isn't necessarily Iream because she happened to lontrary. - Unless a man has scored at li ?no failure he is unable to apprec ivrccess. - The proudest mameat in ? : lessful man's life is when ho tells! ?e got there. - .tiAnrwn .J ' nrfh'rJ^'iifthfil mryaiam LIVING IN PARIS. A Sample Which May or May Not DD Cvn??a?rs? Extravagant. Though my wif? aud i arc not gonn ar. els, we both like. good things, and, if not great eaters, -we both have fair appetites. In the morning when we rise wo take, an farly breakfast, tea and bread and butter; at noon, a hors d'oeuvre, meat, vegetables, dessert and coffee; at 5 o'clock, tea and cakes; at 8 o'clock, soup, Ssh, xucat, vegetables, sweets and dessert. Food is very dear in France, first on account-of i the great number of middlemen who intervene between the producer and purchaser, next because certain articles-coffee, sugar, etc.-are charged with very heavy duties. Feeding is the heaviest expense of our household. It costs us $72 a month, divided as follows: Baker and pastry cook, $8; various meats, $20; fi?h, $6; groceries, $12; irait end vegetables, $9 ; milk and cream, $0; a quarter barrel of bordeaux j wine (about seventy-five bottles), $8; two or three bottles of liqueurs, j $3. To this may be added $8 for the extra cost of a dinner that I five every month to some intimate riends, says a writer in the Archi tectural Record. Ou on average lighting costs us $-4 a month; heating, $4; washing, $8. A woman help comes for two hours every day to help the servant and costs $-4 a month. We also pay $2 a month to the floor polisher and $2 to a circulating library. That makes in all an additional $20 a month. There remains then $53.G0 per month. My wife takes $20 for her ?iersonal expenses-dressmaker, mil iner, shoemaker, etc. I keep the same for my tailor, bootmaker, shirt maker, cigars, etc. With the $13.60 which reriains I take my wife to the theater onco a month, I occasionally take a carriage drive with her or visit art exhibitions, and I present her now and again with flowers, a piece of music or some other trifling Too Great a Strain. "Speaking of names," he said, "some one told me that Shadrach was a good name for a fisherman, but Ida known if he was Earnest in his remarks. He'd Rhoda good many Miles and was Justin from the country. To be Frank, he looked like a Guy. Said he came to a river and had to Bridget." The other looked at him wearily, but rallied and came back with these few remarks : "Keminds me of ? girl I met last Eve who knew Isabel socially. She told me she was on acquired taste her name is Olive. I Owen I was a little startled and lef* the Dora-jar when I went out, but I had Pru dence and endured all with Chris tian Patience. If I. had "been Abel and Neil I'd have done so and Rosa gain only when she promised Mercy. But Mark me"-. "Nay; Marcus both." Here the strain proved too great, and they parted in silence.-Brook lyn Eagle._ . When Clothes Are Aflame. If one's clothes catch fire the flames should be quickly extinguish ed by throwing over the victim a tablecloth, blanket, shawl or rug. If ono is standing when the clothes catch, first of all pull him down to the ground to prevent the flames from rising. The next step after extinguishing the flames is to get 6ome linseed or olive oil-or, better still, some carron oil-and some cot ton, wool or sheet wadding. Cut away the clothing carefully with a. pair of scissors taking care not to pull away any that may stick to the burned parts. Cover the burned surface as quickly as possibly with pieces of linen or lint soaked in oiL When Trees Go to Sleep. Trees and plants have their regu lar times for going to sleep as well as boys and girls. They need the same chance to rest from the work of growing and to repair and oil the machinery bf life. Some plants do all their sleeping in the winter while the ground is frozen and the limbs are bare of leaves. In tropical coun tries, where the snow never falls and it is always growing weather, the trees repose, during the rainy season or during tho periods of i drought. They a1 ways choose the most unfavorable working time for doing their sleep, just as man chooses tho night, when ho cannot see to work. Prepared For Emergency. Zangwili, tho Jewish novelist, was in early lifo extremely poor.. It is said of him that when ho was a little fellow of not more than eight or nine years ho called on a builder ; and asked for a place as driver of a 'horse and cart. The builder looked down at him. "Why, laddie,'** he said, "you could not drive a horse and cart." "Why not, sir?" asked ZangwilL "Because you aro too little.. The horse would tread on you." "Would he?" said tho boy. '-Well, he'd have to get in the cart first." - T MI m } ro iviuvicts wh^ had been working ?round Ch ?rh-tito ti on the drainage sung and had life sentence-?, were pardonol by ?he governor,; They are in tbe lasi stages of consumption. - Sheriff Dukes has; ton negroos ic jail at Oraogeburg, oil impltaat?d in the murder of Mr, Phillips at Notway j or iu t* e riot subsequent thereto, bfci.l as;, ct han ?ot. captured Jim livans } ?n? it is supposed that he has sue-! Djii ivd in escaping the county. ? - Alfalfa is being experiments with ou a large ?cale at Hook Hill. Si far the result has not been eocourag I UK Capt. Rodney has a Seid of 65 aorat but the plant ha? been attacked . hy i fungus growth which the Department at VVashioaton says oaooot be succ?s? fully cured. - Efforts are being made by th< Episcopaliaos in Greenville to havi the prospective Episcopal College foi ?ouog l?diet located is thai city. Th? !pit4vpal Church in this State bas oe baud $4,000 donated to be used for fe male education, lt is proposed t< raise 94.000 more among the Episeo paliaos cf Greenville. - Eddie Smith, a white boy of 13 was killed io Charleston by failioj from a tree which he had olimbed ic order to rob a bird's neat. - The new suburban park at Char teston will be Planed Hampton park ir booor of the late Wade Hampton ami at a request of the Hampton Memorial association. The TRief?. ...of Beautify Is Captured by Bradfleld'? Kesulntor. Thousand* of young women ?TO awaking to tho ?act that Inherited comllness has been stolen away p.nd loste.-ido? clowiiic cheeks, bright eyes and smooth brows, th? tell-tale wrinkles of pain have taken the place ol these forrnerc?arrns. These are the warning' feelings! Weak, tired and exhausted tn the morning, nolUe.no ambi tion to enter upon their former pleasures. Irrit able, cross, discouraged, dull headaches, general dispirit cd feeling, steeples* nights, cold feet, poor circulation, "bearing downy pains.. All these symptoms Indicate deranged ?nd weakened or gans. Shattered nerves and exhausted energies follow the weakened condition of the female organs as surely ?a night follows.day. Save yourself from more terrible results, redeem your youth by taking 'm 1 TT Bradf?ald's Female Regulator The most strengthening, invigorating, men strua regulator in the world. . It relieves painful menstruation, profuse men struation, obstructed menstruation,. Innamrna tlon of the vagina, displacement, membronol catarrh, nervousness, headaches, et celera. Beauty of face and symmetry of form are the result of the use of these health drops. IOf dmg?Uto 91.00. Our book, Perfect Health for Women, malled fire?. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA. GA. _ Spartanbarg, 8. C. Henry N. Snyder, Litt. D., M. A., Pres Four full Collrae courses Favorable ?nrroundlncrp. Gymnasium. Atbleth Grounds. Lecture OoUreo. Library f? oHittep. Next eeoslon begins Sept. 28 1008 For catalogue anpl v to J. A. GAMEWfiLL, Secretary. Wofford College Fitting School, ' S PAKT AN BURG, 8. C. Elegant new building. Careful atten t!on to Individual student. Board and tuition for year $110. All ioformatiox given bv Av M. DuPRB, X?\p Joly 22,1903. Head Master. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ' COUNTY OF ANDERSON. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Mr?. 8arf.h A. Ball and M-n.M. T. Key?, Piala tiffs, ajainsl Mrs. Ked???y Hall, Mrs. Ad clint McConnell. E. Darkin Hall. Mrs Offline Mrs Etta Jones. William Johnson Hill, Mts Mollie Told, Mrs. EH?? A. Hall. Hewitt Hall Mrs. Nettie Pruitt, Sloan Hall. Mrs. Cora Car t enter. Mrs. Mamie Bowen. Mrs. Leila Kenn?' dy.and Guy Hall, Jay Hall, and Beasla Hall infants over tho az? o? fourteen y oars. Defend ants -Summon* lor Relief. ( Complaint Sert cd) - . To tho Defendants a'- oro named : YOU are hereby summoned and required to an' .ewer tho Complain* In this action, of which a copy Ia herewith served upon y >u, and ta serve a cony of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscribers at their office, at Anderson, ? 8, C., within twenty days after, the service hereof, ex elusive of the day of stich service; 'and if you fall to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff* lp this action will apply to tho Court for the relief demanded lo tho Com. plaint. Dated Anderson, a C., Julr 17, A.D. 1958. BONHAM &. WATKINS, . Plaintiffs' Attorneys,1 I [SCAL] jr O. C. WATKIK8, O C. C P. To the absent Defendant'. Mrs. Etta Jones, : Mrs. Ellas A. Ball, Mn.Cora0*r, enter. Mts.Mamie I Bowen, Mrs. f elia Kennt dy, and Guy ?nil, Jay Hail ?sd Bessie Hall, the list three being tn' r*nteovor ho ago of fourteen j?.ra: i Teke notice tbst th* ?u roods ?Jtd Coinplatot ! In this aetles were ft e? is tho office of tfjcC?crt or the Court or Common Pleas for Anderson County,?. 0. on '.bin July 17,10)3, and tho object of the sctloa is to trocaro a fartlUooandaeloof ? thepr*mlaesde?ertbed in tho Complaint, ?nd an occountl.Dg lor tba rents and pron a received by ..ho Defendant, Mrs. Kcdempsy Hall. BONHAM & WATKINS. Plaintiffs'Att'vs. And* non, 8 C, Jnly 17, H03 s . ?._ To tb o Infant Do'cGdants. Gny Hall, Jay Bell and Bessie Ball : . Take notice that unless you npplv to the Court, within twmty day? after the service hereof on you, exclusive of the day of service, fo? the ap pointment of a Gnarolnu otGuaidt ns sd lil em it? rei. rei tnt von in this nctlon, the ttsderEigmd ?ill apply fof the.appel, tacnt of such Guardian or Guard.ans for yoa. } OMI AM A WATKINS, Plaintiffs'A'Vys. Anderson, 8. Ci., July. 17,190.._ ' _ c-~B State of *outb Carolina, County of Anderson. JJy Ii. X. & Nance, Ju?geof JProlmte ;.> Whereas, MIna Anni? Sell Towers fcaa applied to rae to g'ant hf r ? Letters of Ad ministration on the Errate tmdeffecta of A. B. Towen*? decea?vd . ?re therefore to olte and adorion tah all kindred and creditors of the said A. B. Towera, deceased, tb be^ and appear before me In Court of Probato, to be helo nt Anderson C. H on the Cthd&y of Aupus?, 1803,after publication hare Sf. c j show cause, If any they havs. why io t?ald Administration should not be granted Givea under tay hand, this fc??d day of Joly, 1?03. IL Y. H NAXCE, Probate judge. July 22, 7.603 6 3 Notice to Creditors. A LL parsons having deroauda or ii dtuvos against tUe E?tAUf cf Mr. P. EL Mitchell, deceased, are hereby luti?ed to present tbfBi, properly prov. er?, to tho underoiaiied within tn* time preaciibrd by law, ?nd those indebted are not,Sed to maka payment,s MRS. H. MITCHELL, Adnitif*. July 82, 1003. " ALL persona having claims pgalnat tho Estate ot* Mr?. Aim?? Boo*e. sd, mo bfreby notified m preafnt'tho tato*-, dilly attested. t> the uu?4tpe!gned at 371 King Htror-t, Cbarleat?^^^Hp to 'Jeriort, S. C. ; and ul I portons a?dellod .'.?tato will teak-.; . t UK! itttrsw partid?. . / . ' LIV?XO-i'f0>f. Ivi ' o . 1 ?o trouble to make good Wolfie* J0]? i8 ? 11 have received a shipment of the H. i. H|!?Z PSCKLlrtG VINEGAR ? h^vo been soilibg thi? coated Vlne^? ycftW,an^h^yetto receive the ?rst kick, 4 C. FS&HE CRAY'S LIVE? PILL -CUR6S - Constipation, TorpidXiver, Indigestion, Biliousness, Malarial Poison, Paine in the Back, Dizziness, Headache, And all Liver Complaints. For that callow complexion there is DO better Pill made. Theta Pili* act directly on the liver, but do not gripe dr sicken. Price 25 c Box. Guaranteed to help you. 1 HAYE J?ST RECEIVED A CAR LOAD OF CORN, Slightly damaged, and can eel! you at 50q. per bushel. Wi have a lot of it cracked for hog and chicken feed at BI price. See me for OLD DOMINION CEMENT, AND BEST LIME. O. u? ANDERSON. Ort THE THE LINB FCR BUSINESS, THE LINE FOR PLEASURE, THE L?NE FOR ALL THE BEST SUMMER RESORTS Complete Stimmer Resort Folder Mailed Free to Any Address. W. A. TORE, Pass. Traffic M?r. WASKtHOTOH.D.C. . S. H. HASDwi?ir, - W.H.Tjw&O*. Gan'l Poa*. A?att. Asst. Ganfl Sfcw. Ari, w?saiH0To?.D,c aTwnajO?.T . Thia Establishment ?as been Selling > IN ANDERSON fer more than forty years. : Daring all th; t time compet?* have come and gone, but we have refrained right here. Wo have always i Cheaper than any others, ?nd during those long years we have not had one v satisfied oustomer. Mistakes will sometimes ooour, and if at^auy time found that a customer waj dissatisfied we did not rest until we bad made satisfied. This pol joy, rigidly adhered to, has made us friends, true and in?, and we can st? with nride. bet without boasting, that we h?ve, the e decoo of the peopfo of this section. We have a larger Stock of GoodB season than we .have ever had, and we pledge you our word that we have sold Furniture at as close a margin of profit as we are doing now. A provea by the fact thotwe are Belling Furniture not only all over. Andet County but in everv Town in the Piedmont section. Lome and sea us. nkrenta saved money by buying from us, and >oe and your childrea can money by buying here, too. We carry EVififtY^HING in the Furniture O.F. & 80N,>potSii The Old Roliable Furnitttr?ISw NO BETTER pifiHOS j ^y^^'^^Bjm ?Jado in^lht11 world, and .no lot ,|B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ . th a ; ca ii be iou nd, . and the surpris Iii ^^^^^^a^^wS^ ?0 per ci ht in the coat/ ' I am my ? j|jP||^^J^jjfefflHj^ft^'"* "^^Tbcii ^^j*11 ^collet .??^?^^^^i^^??? ;:1#0?? i do not sell fha* k?nd!%] ^**M,"?m, fc"g,?, ?^iiiiwa^M^i^HP?P- ? aro al right y oar credit ia good withi ' Tho beat ?eed?Orgao ia t?v wdridJs the Will move to Express otn^? Jateos? ist5 ' ? ~ ' M. -L. WILLIS. A, o; STBICEM: DENTIST. OPPIiE-Pntet Booma Offer Fi ors and S?rcnanU Bank. The opyv?ftlto cst ilieatrntea r *.!nuo?s CS.nm Te? tb. The I? P fltf-to?tn cleanly tbnu tho vi ral i ?ri lt, No bad tp?io or bri