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TO OUR FRIENDS AND PATRONS : WE wish to take this method of Informing you that we have one of the largest best selected and? Cheapest line of Dry Goods . To be found in this city. We have so near all grades and prices of slick, new? Shoes ! That we feel confident of pleasing any one in search of Shoes. Just received a large and splendid line of? Trunks, Valises, Telescopes, Grips and Straps That are cheaper than we have ever sold same Goods for before. See us and wc will Bell yon. We always carry a heavy line of? Best G-roceries As cheep as any firm can. Our business is heavy and cur expense light, so it's plain we nan sell Goods on lees margin than some honees in this country. Your patronage is respectfully and earnestly solicited. We appreciate every dollar's worth of trade given up, and guar antee priceo. Yours truly, BROWNLEE & YAM DIVERS. HILL-ORR DRUG CO. \ Ar? yon troubled by Mites, Lice or oth&F insects wit.. your Chickens ? MEDICAL EGGS Will permanently destroy them. Do you intend sowing your stubble land when the grain is off ? : : : Try German Maillet. Do you ever drink anything soft Soda Water, Milk Shake, Coca Cola, Cherry Phosphate ? : : : : : : ' Try Frank McFall. Do you ever need fine French Candy bought fresh every week ? : : : Try Hnyler's. Do you intend carrying out your promise of two or three years' and paint that house ? : : : : : Try the Mastio. Are you weak and nervous, troubled with Liver, Stomach or Kidney Complaint ? : : : :::::: TRY KING'S ROYAL GERMATEUR. On? of our young men sleeps over the Store, and you can get anything you want in the line any time, day or night. HILL-ORR DRUG CO WATCHES! WATCHES, WATCHES, I have the Largest Stock in Upper Carolina. One Show Case seven feet .long filled with nothing but. GOLD, SILVER AND NICKEL WATCHES, At Prices that will make you Buy. IP you want a Watch I am the man to sell you, and will save you money every timo. I guarantee every Watch I sell to give entire satisfaction. A beautiful line of? Gold Rings, Silverware, Clocks, Jewelry, &c. The prettiest line of LADIES' WAIST SETS in the City. ??r* Promptness in everything. ENGRAVING FREE. WILL R. HUBrfARD. LEND US YOUR EAR ! AO LISTEN TO OUR SONG! We have on hand the largest stock we have ever carried, and our motto is to sell goods, not keep them. . . OUR line of Shoes is large and complete. Closing out a lot of Ladies $1.00 Shoes at 75c. Also a lot of Men's High Cut Bro gens at $1.00. There is good wear in both of these Shoes, and the price is dirt cheap. We don't mean to be undersold in Flour. All bought before tho rise, and it's bound to go In a hurry. 50 barrela?of good family Flour to go at ?3 -50. Tobacco cheaper than ever beard of before. Come and try our "Tar Heel" at 21c. One of the best chews on the market. We mean business, and ask you to give us a chance and we are bound to sell j u O. D. ANDERSON & 8RO. P. S.?Bring your Peas, Corn, Butter, Eggs, etc., to us. THOS. A. ARCHER. CLARENCE OSBORNE. W ARCHER * OSBORNE ISH the public to know that they have recently opened up a new line of FIRST CLASS? Cooking and Heating Stoves, Cooking Utensils of all kinds, Crockery, Lamps, Glassware, Tinware, Woodenware, &c, d that they propose selling them as cheap as anybody in Anderson. Come and see Goods and get our prices. We will treat you right. We want your trade. We it to give you full value for it. We are ateo prepared to do all kinds of TIN WORK, eh as Roofing, Guttering and Repairing. Our Shop is well equipped, and we will do your work on short notice and at rea able prices. We are keen up for business. Don't give us the go-by. ours truly, ARCHER & OSBORNE. H ? ft o fe t? fe < H - ffi fe Q D <?i C0 fe fe O o fe fe H fe H t? < > < H fe G G O fe H H fe fe > O 9 ? < Q Wd 2 M o 1-5 0 M LAND FOB SALE. SEVERAL desirable Farms of the Es tate of E. N. Adams, deceased, lying in Hart County. Georgia, and situated near Savannah River. Accessable to good Schools and Churches. Terms?Part cash and romainder on time. Apply to M. M. RICHARDSON, or W. L. HODGES, SMia Hartwell, Ga. SOUTH CAROLINA COLLEGE, COLUMBI*, S. C. SESSION begins September 2Sih. Clas sical, Literary, Scientific, Normal and Law Courses, nitb Diplomes. Special Courses, with Certificates. Board S3 a month. To tal necessary expenses for tho year, (ex clusive of traveling, clothing, and books), from 311?'} to ?15C. Women admitted to all Classed. For further information ad dress the President, F. C. WOODWARD. July 14, 18.97 3 j Senator Mayfleld's Temperance Bill. In the course of the last session of j the general assembly of the State Senator S. G. Mayficld introduced in the Senate a bill entitled "a bill to forbid and prohibit the importation and transportation, manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors and beverages in this State, and to grant local option to the counties of the State." The bill seems to us, after a careful pcrsual, to be an effort to combine the desirable features of prohibition, local option, high license and dispensary regulations. First, there is prohibi tion throughout the State, except as the bill provides. It is assumed that prohibition is the proper attitude of the State toward the liquor traffic. But if a county thinks that the sale of liquors under such stringent regu lations as the bill provides may be carried on with safety license may be taken out. The manufacturer of alco holic liquors and beverages is required to pay an annual registration fee of twenty-five dollars. No manufactory shall be allowed except upon petition of the township in which the manu factory is to be located. The bill seeks to eliminate as far as possible the social features of the drink habit, adopting in this respect the regulations at present in force in the dispensary. A strict enforcement of such provisions will go far towards a mitigation of the evils of the drink habit, and conduce in no small degree to the interests of temperance. Games and the attractions of the saloon do much to promote drunkenness and social degradation. If a county wishes to have a licen sed vendor of alcoholic liquors, one fourth of the qualified voters of such county as certified to by the county board of registration must petition for au election to decide whether or not such license shall be granted. Only by a majority vote may liquor be allowed to be sold in a county. The person licensed must be approved by the county board of commissioners, and must pay to the secretary of State the sum of five hundred dollars, in addition to giving a bond with good securities for the faithful performance of his duties. Furthermore, the coun ty board of commissioners and the municipal authorities may charge such fee for license as they please, from a nominal sum up to any amount, to be divided equally between the county and the municipal government. Un der this arrangement the State's fee of five hundred uollars might be the only charge amounting to auything, while on the other hand it might be the least considerable of the two license charges. Provision is made for heavy fines aud penalties upon those that violate the laws in this matter. The State prohibition feature of the bill will be pleasing to all earnest ad vocates of temperance. The bill puts the State out of the liquor business, and if it is to exist, the responsibility for its existence falls upon the people of the county who petitiou for the sale of it. The State permits it when a county by a majority vote acks for such a favor. Of course it might hap pen that many counties would vote for the sale of liquor. If they do so, this only means that prohibition would in all probability be ineffectual in euch counties. The bill means, therefore, prohibition to the extent that prohi bition is practicable. For pur part, we long to eco a better settlement of the liquor question in our State. Of courso there are diffi culties in the way of local option. When wc have dry and wet counties side by side, the dry counties are more liable to absorb moisture than the wet counties are to become dry. In the present depraved condition of human nature wetness is more contagious than dryness. Still when the good people see that prohibition in a county is a benefit morally, socially and in dustrially they are immensely' encour aged. Wc trust something better than the dispensary is ahead. In the vigorous and perhaps not very elegant language of Senator May field : "The dispensary is doomed. Mismanagement, stealing, rebates and other scandals have dragged it down until it is now a stench ; besides, the federal courts have punched a hole in the side of its structure that it is bound to go down." The great pana cea of the temperance evil has been anything but a blessing to us and a real remedy. Wc are fully persuaded that the public demoralization that has resulted from the establishment of the dispensary has more than over balanced the good that may have been derived from its influence upon private life. We cannot afford to adopt any temperance measure (the dispensary was never a temperance measure but from the first an industrial State en terprise) that debauches the public and strikes at the roots of civic virtue, hoping that notwithstanding the pub lie demoralization good will result to HONEA PATH HIGH SCHOOL HAS closed a most ?atlsfactory year's work to both patrons and teachers. The outlook for the next Session promises even better resulte. How to secure the best School is the constant study of the teachers. Excellent library, modern ap paratus, live methods, and trained teach ing. Next 8ession opens Monday, Sept. 6th, 1897. Board in best families at very low rates. For further information write to? .T. C. HARPER, Prim, Honea Path, S. C. July 14,1897_3_3m LAND, LAND, LAND ! V?TE offer at Privat.? Sale on easy terms in quantity to please buyers : 3.000 acres Land in Oconee County. S.C. 1,3G9 acres Land in Winston and Choc taw Counties, Mississippi. 1.024 acres Land in Upshaw Co., Texas. - ALSO, - Flour, Grist Mill and Cotton Gin, in good order for work, with ample water power if developed for a large Cotton Mill or other manufacturing purposes. 951 acres Land on Boaverdaui Creek, near Fair Play, S. C. 553 acres Land near Oak way, S. C. 1381 acres Land on Conneross and Snow Creeks, near Sitton's Mills. 1G2 acres Land, with Flour Mill, <ftc., on Conneross Creek. Come and see us at once. AUG'T. J. SITTON, Autun, S. C, HENRY P. SITTON, Pendleton, 8. C, Executors. May 19, 1897 47? Oct 1 Tbc lionc-f, reliable, 18-ycar-old?Ramblers are the best wheels to buy, and you save $ . . Lap brazed joints, fish-mouth re! forcements, " dished " sprockets aud ti. & J. tires make this the most desirable wheel made. Investigato its many advantages and ?-ati?fy yourself. Catalogue free. FOB SALE BY BROCK BROS., ANDERSON. S. C. some of the people. Any such meas ure is fundamentally wrong. We must by all means uphold public vir tue. Senator Mayfield's bill will not please everybody, but it seems to us far preferable to the present r.lmost defunct dispensary system.?Baptist Courier. A Bird's Friendship for a Boy. It is a rare occurrence for animals in a wild state to selectman for a com panion and friend, yet well authenti cated instances when this has been douc arc a matter of record. The fol lowing instance is vouched for by my correspondent, a young woman who is a close and accurate observer : Last week my brother (a lad of 12) killed a snake which was just in the act of robbing a song sparrow's nest. Ever since then the male sparrow has shown his gratitude to Georgoin a truly won derful manner. When he goes into the garden the sparrow will fly to him, sometimes alighting on his head, at other times on his shoulders, all the while pouring out a tumultuous song of praise and gratitude. It will accom pany him about the garden, never leaving him until he reaches the gar den gate. George, as you know, is a quiet boy, who loves animals, and this may account in a degree for the spar row's extraordinary actions." I am perfectly convinced that the nesting birds on my place know me, and that they remember me from one nesting time to another. I have re peatedly approached my face to within a foot of setting birds without alarm ing them. Un one occasion* I even placed my hand on a setting cardinal, which merely fluttered from beneath it without evincing further alarm ? yet no wild bird has ever evinced towards myself any especial degree of friend ship. When I was a lad I remember that a certain decrepit old drake would follow mc like a dog. and which ap peared to enjoy himself in my society. I could not appreciate his friendship then, and greatly fear that [ was, at times, rather cruel to the old fellow. ?Louisville Courier-Journal. To his "Dearest Lore." There was one young person posses sed of a pretty face, a kind heart and an all absorbing desire to do something to assist her fellow beings. After some eloquent persuasion she obtained tho consent of her family to enter the hos pital to study for the work of a trained nurse. Among the pretty enthusiast's first patients was a young man with a bro ken arm and of an attractive appear ance. The demure, white-capped nurse began to take an unusual inter est in him, and asked him one day if there was nothing she could do for him?no book she could read, no let ter she could write. The patient grate fully accepted the latter offer and the nurse prepared to write from his dic tation. lie began with a tender address to his "dearest love," and the little nurse felt slightly embarrassed. But she continued through the most ar dent declarations of all obsorbing affection to the the end, where he wished to be subscribed an adoring lover for all time. Then she folded the letter and slipped it into its en velope. "To whom shall I direct?" she ask ed. The wicked young man said amiably and even tenderly: "What is your name, please?" They have been married a little more than a year now. ? Old Milyuns?Young man, my daughter tells me that you kissed her last night. Percival Tootles?Well, if she wants to go bragging about it, that's her privilege. Bocl-ilons Arnica Salve. The best salve in theworld for Cuts Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tiens and positively cures Piles, or no pay rcqu'-^d. It is guaranteed togive perfect saiisfac\ion, or money refund ed. Prise 25 cents perbox. For sale by Hill-Orr Drug Co Broke his Leg for a Girl, "I've had an endless variety of ca ses to spice my professional life, but none of them left more lasting impres sion than that of young Boggs." Af ter the doctor had thus committed him self there was uothing to do but tell the story. "Boggs was summering in thc(Jreen Mountains. Having plenty of money he was in the habit of getting what he wanted and had encountered compara tively few disappointments. While clambering down the side of a cliff one morning with a view to reaching a trout stream by the shortest route, Boggs took an ugly tumble and broke his leg. His cries for help brought a pretty Philadelphia girl, who was with an aunt that had always lived within the shadow of one of the great hills. He was taken to the aunt's unpreten tious little house, and the girl became his nurse. I was recuperating in the same vicinity and looked after the pa tient. "Boggs took the part of an invalid until so fat and strong that deception was no longer possible. Then he took me aside, made a point blank confes sion of love for the girl, said that he needed more time for a successful wooing and wanted me to break that leg again. I could make my own charges, but the relation of sick man and nurse must again be established between him and thr. angelic little Quakeress. I resented his proposi tion and he announced his intention to return to his hotel. He had not gone a quarter of a mile from the house when he in some way accomplished what I had refused to do, and once more enjoyed the ministrations of the fair nioce. The circumstances were peculiarly favorable to a successful courtship, and I was wondering how I could make a successful interference when her father appeared on the scene. He was as practical a man as I ever met. After I had told him what had occurred, he sent his daughter home and had a brief talk with Boggs. The effect of all the old gentleman had to say to Boggs was that he might break every bone in his body, and even his neck, but could never have the gjrli Boggs pulled himself together, quit falling off of mountains, settled down to doing his share of work in the world, and two years later lits former nurse was Mrs. Boggs."?Deh-oit Free Press. The First Soldier Killed* To the Edil or of the Observer: In your edition of the 27th, under the caption, "The First Soldier Killed,n li. M. Pxrham makes the statement that Captain Marr, of the Warren ton Rifles, wiis the first man killed on the Confed?rete cide, during the late un pleasantness. He claims that Captain Marr wan killed at, or near Fairfax Court House, on the 31st of May, 1861. This is no doubt all true, and Captain Marr was the first to fall on Virginia soil; but it is also a well-es tablished fact that the first life lost, on account of the civil war, was that of a brave young South Carlina boy, James Clark Allen, of Abbeville Dis trict, S. C. The sad trgedy occurred on Sullivan's Island, February 13, 1861, three and one-half months be fore Marr was killed. "Young Allen, while hurriedly pass ing from one section of the barracks to another, in old Fort Moultrie, sud denly ran againat the point of a com rade's bayonet, which entered his eye and pierced his brain, causing death almost immediately. That is, according to the records, the first martyr of the "Lost Cause." Possi bly another Was killed before young Allen lost his life. A. R. Banks. Yorkville, S. C. ? Spudds?Young Ilarkins seems very pensive to-night. Do you sup pose that he has fallen in love ? Spatts?Oh, no. He is only breaking in a pair of tight shoes. ? Mayor Sloan, of Columbia, has instructed the chief of police to make an inspection of the hack horses in that city, and require all animals that he deems unfit for work to be taken of! the streets. We come you Singing a Song. With Victory perched on our Banners. OUR four years' experience with the DEERING IDEAL BALL BEARING MOWERS has convinced us, as well as hundreds of the best farmers in Anderson County, that they are most appropriately named?that they are ideal in light draft, ha strength, in durability and in ability to do perfect work. Perfect as were the Deering machines last year, we know that they are still better improved and strengthened for the harvest of '97. Re member that they are the only Mowers on the market that can start fr(om a stop, in any crop, without backing. Every Deering Mower sold is an adver tisement for us, and is the means of us selling another. Can our competitors say that? Remember, one thorn of experience is worth a whole wilderness of warning. For Engines and Engine Fittings, Saw Mills and Cane Mills, And for any kind of Machinery and Supplies, remember wc i re Headquar quartcrs for Low Prices. Yours truly, THE FLOWER OF EXCELLENCE. THE flower of true excellence, likewise the true eiculionce of Flour, has been attained in the manufacture of our now famous DEAN'S PATENT FLOUR. Others have triod to imitate it ; they have made vain efforts and pitiable failures to foist upon our patified customers cheap and inferior goods, representing thorn to be "just as good as Dean's Patent." Our customers know a good thing and stick to it. Once a customer on Dean's Patent, always a cus tomer. We do not sell shoddy or damaged coods because we can't guarantee them. If you are not satisfied with what you buy from us your money is ready for you if you want it back. That's the kind of business wo run. Wise buyers who wish the fairest of treatment will do well to give us a call when needing? Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats, Fancy and Heavy Groceries. ^S" You don't have to buy unless you are pleased. DEAN & RATLIFFE, The Old Reliable Satisfiers and Money Savers to the Trade, (p rasaos* THE DUTCHMAN ONCE SUNG : "Meat means tings dat's good to eat, Meet also means tings dut'a brobor ; 'Tis only mete to measure des? tings Ven Bteampoats meet the stabber." That Dutchman caught the idea on the first jump, and if you would be wiso and want to get fat and jolly like the typical Dutchman, (Mayor Tolly or our Senior,) you will lose no time to visit our Establishment, where you will lind everything that is good to oat, such as? Fresh Meats, Vegetables, Fruits and Canned Goods, Cured Meats, Flour, Meal, Sugar, Molasses, And everything necessary for seasoning and shortening. Wo handle everything to oat?the best that can be procured, and at the lowent prices. Free City Dolivory. Telephone No. 41. ?3. II. PO ORE ?s CO., City Market. DEPOT STREET Woman's Status in the South. Atlanta, Ga., July 5.?Since the abolition of African slavery there has been no change in the South so re markable as that which has taken place in the status ami prospects of women. This change is, perhaps, more marked in Georgia thau in any other State in the South. Not until after the adoption of the State Consti tution of 1868 could a married woman hold property in G eorgia. Now morc than one-third of all the taxable prop erty in Fulton County, where Atlanta is situated, a county that contains one-eighth of all the property in the State, is owned by married women, and the property of women, married and single, amounts to almost half the taxable values of the county. Women are large stockholders in many of the best banks, manufacturing corpora tions, and other enterprises in this State, and several of the leading wholesale business firms of Atlanta have women as partners. In every city of the South women arc now found by the score and hun dreds in lines of work Avhcre twenty five years ago hardly a woman was to be seen. The writer can remember when there was not a shop-girl in Atlanta, and it was several years after the war before the first appearance of a woman behind a counter in this city. The woman as stenographer, typewriter, bookkeeper, journalist, and physician made her appearance in this city much later, but she is here now in all the callings mentioned, and. in others. The prejudice against woman's par ticipation in business or professional life, once so strong in the South, is practically dead. With the increasing number of women at work, contrary to the usual operation of the law of com petition, tliTc basc?me an increasing appreciation of the value of woman's services. They are better paid in Georgia than they were ten years ago, although many more of them are em ployed. The difference between the wages of men and women in the same lines and grades of work is also dis appearing fast. It has been hardly ten years since the first employment of a woman in newspaper work in Georgia. Now there is not a daily newspaper in the State which has not at least one woman on its staff, while some newspapers have three or four. They not o?iy do "society" work, but act a3 regular reporters, and in that capacity prove highly satisfactory. Several weekly newspapers in Georgia arc owned and edited by women, and there is one daily paper, the Americus Recorder, which is being successfully, conducted by the widow of its late owner and editor. The Woman's Press Associa tion of Georgia was formed several years ago, and has about fifty mem bers. Several womeu are practicing medi THE DANGER to which the Expectant Mother is exposed and the foreboding and dread with which she looks for ward to the hour of woman's severest trial is appreciated by but few. All effort should be made to smooth these rugged places in life's pathway for her, ere she presses to her bosom her babe. MOTHER'S FRIEND allays Nervousness, and ad assists1 Nature that the change goes for ward in an easy manner, without such violent protest in the way of Nausea, Headache, Etc. Gloomy forebodings yield to cheerful and hopeful anticipations?she passes through the ordeal quickly and Without pain?is left strong and vigorous and enabled to joyously perform the high and holy duties now devolved upon her. Safety to life of both is assured by the use of "Mother's Friend," and the time of recovery shortened. "I know one lady, the mother of three children, who suifered greatly in the birth of each, who obtained a bottle of 'Mother's Friend' of me before her fourth confinement, and was relieved quickly and easily. All agree that their labor was shorter and less painful." John G. Polhill, Macon, Ga. ?1.00 PER BOTTLE at all Drug1 Stores, or sent by mail on receipt of price. a Containing invaluablo information of erice Interest to all women, will be sent to rntc any address upon application, by The BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, CU> LAWYER, 9 ANDERSON, S. C. Oi?ice Over Bank of Anderson. June 20.1297 51 3m* WE ARE NOT CONTENTE WITH past achii former elfor'.s. macy old stand) b eye, and filled wi rent things to bay This ad. will always keep you posted, c mai ket. Tho following are specials for tliii Arbuckle Coffee Raisins 5c. per pout Nico Mackerel 5Bc Rig lot Farmer Boy 5,000 Cigani 50c. pei Try our Silver Tea Finest line of Cake: JOHN I*. S.?When you come to town, And get tired walking aroun Come in to see me, Where ice-water and faus ar WITH a view of making ?3 I have decided to sell my ent: In order to reduce the immi every one to avail themselves iust what we say, and will some money, We want to get to save all you can, so here is M A SQUARE DSALINC GROCER IS the kind you can place confuiencs iu, fee you are being woll troaLd and got pure ( every time you irado thoro. That is the wi want you to feel about our Store. We will your good opinion of us every time. Evory guaranteed the beit the market affords. Try some of our English Teas. String Beans. Choapor quality Beans. Monarch Corn. C?ood Corn. Throe-pound Can Pie Peach. Two-pound fun Okrn and Tom Three-pound Can Tomatoes.... We have just received a lot of Fine PI and Qerkins ?t Mio extremely low price of '. Florida Cabbago and Beets. ?S* Send us a trial order and see how ercd free In the City. 'Pkoue 41. cinc in Atlanta, and two young women of this city are studying law. Scores of Atlanta girls, some of whom had been prominent in society, have be come professional nurses. Ten years ago the only professional nurses in Atlanta were negro men and women. Five years ago the State Normal and Industrial School for Girls was estab lished at Milledgeville. It was bitterly opposed by the ultra-conservative ele ment in the Legislature, but has be come one of the most popular institu tions in Georgia, and its accommoda tions will need to be enlarged. In this school the girls arc taught teleg raphy, stenography, typewriting, dress making, cooking, bookkeeping, and other practical sciences. Many gradu ates of the school arc earning their living. The pupils do not come entirely from families of small means. Wealthy fathers send their daughters there, preferring this practical school to ?lie purely classical colleges. The office of assistant librarian in the State library has bee*, filled by a woman during the past tnree years, and it is generally believed that at the expiration of the term of the pres ent librarian a woman will be appoint ed, the recent Legislature having made women eligible to the position. The Atlanta public library has been man aged by a woman for several years, and there is only one public library in the State where a woman is not in charge. Recently thore was a vacancy on the Atlanta board of education, and the election of a woman was very gen erally demanded. Ten years ago woman suffrage was not mentioned here, except in scorn and ridicule. Nowtherc isaWoman's Suffrage Association in Atlanta with several hundred members. There are similar organizations in nearly every city in Georgia, and a State associa tion has been formed. Some of the leading public men of the State are persistent and enthusiastic advocates of woman suffrage, and it is probable that a bill giving women the right to vote in certain elections will be intro duced at the next session of the Leg islature. It will be defeated, of course, but at the rate of progress the equal suffragists have made in this State recently the passage of such a bill a few years hence is not improbable. ??rew York Ecening Post. ? Can a death which is caused by a mosquito bite properly be called accidental ? The Court of Appeals of Kentucky has so decided, and the decision appears to the Chicago Times Herald to be very good law. A Ken tucky traveling man took out an acci dent insurance policy for $5,000 and departed on a journey. In Rome, Ga., before he arose one morning his right foot became uncovered and a mosquito h?vering near, waiting for an early breakfast, settled on the foot "at the base of the fourth toe" and gorged himself. Blood poisoning, as the doctors testified, was the result of the bite, and the man died. When sued on the policy the company contended that a mosquito bite was not an acci dent, and consequently they ought not to be compelled to pay. The lower Court agreed with the company, but on appeal the higher Court reversed the case and gave judgment for the widow who had brought the suit. The Rhlnometer, or Breath Mcanurer. The latest scientific invention Is the rhinometor. The objcot of this instru ment is not, as the vulgar might suppose, to measure money; its purpose is to gauge the estent to which you breathe through your nose. This matter, it ap pears is of far more importance than might be imagined. ?ll the lower ani mais breathe through the nose and through the nose alone. Human beings, with their customary perversity, are given to breathing through the throat, not merely when a cold in the head com pels them to have recourse to this illegiti mate mode of respiration, but from their cantankerous disposition to do things the wrong way whenever opportunity offers. Of course, they are punished for their disregard of the best animal traditions. The scientific truth is that the oxygen of the air knows better than to allow itself to be smuggled into the lungs by tho back door, as it were. It will only enter our system in the quantity desirable through the nose?the straight and narrow way. The serious predicament of the throat breathers is at once apparent, to the out come of their detestable habit they are kept short of oxygen. The conaequenoe is they become anaemic and suffer from a hundred other ills to whioh ?i sensible animal refuses to be heir. By tho use of the rhlnometer it is open to any man to know out ^.f how much oxygen ho cheats his lungs. A most excellent inotrnmont is this. It should promote common hon esty and procure humanity the numerous blessings that would result from men keeping their mouths shut.?Full Mall Oazctlc. I c. whitbfield, DENTIST. OFFICE?Front Room, over Farmern' and Merchants' Bank, ANDERSON, S. 0. Fob 10, 1897 _33_ :d ?vemonts, brat always striving to outdo out on will find our Now Store (Evans Phar iright with new paint, rno3t pleasing to tho th NICE, FRESH GOODS, quite ifae cor in New Goods at the Lowest Prlco in the s week : :. per package id. and 5c. each. Tobacco 20c. per pound. : box of 60. -a present with every package. } and Candy in the city. A. AUSTIN & CO., Grocers. d, e free. great change in my business ire Stock AT A SACRIFICE. 3nse Stock we invite each and )f this opportunity. We mean certainly save whoever comes rid of our Goods and you want chance for all. ISS LIZZIE WILLIAMS. Y STORE il like iooda \y wo morit thing . Ilije. can. ' . 124 c. can. . 8Jc. can. . 121c. can. . 8jc. can. . 8A0. can. atoett. 8Jc. can. . 8ic. can. ekele, half gallons, in Chow Chow, Mixed ?5c. oach. wel' wejeau please you. Everything deliv OSBORNE & BOLT. SI ? Tho Bank of England contains silver Ingots which have lain in its vaults since 1(?9(3. ? There are now four times as many wire nails made as cut nails. ? Texas is a great ?State. It is great enough to he an independent republic, as it ought to have been from the first, and ae it probably will be somo day if the Republican party liven long enough to fulfill its special and pairtly accomplished mission of breaking up the old Union. How largo it is in territory is shown by a writer in tho Ladies' Home Journal. He says: "Texas is two hundred and twelve times tho size of Rhode Island. Texas might invite every man, woman and child now living in the world to set tle within its territory, offering each in dividual a plot of ground 491 feet. The State would not be really crowded, for each individual would have four times tho space taken by each person in New York City. England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Italy and Portugal could be trans planted to Texas and there would still be room for a good-sized promenade. Three of the cattle ranches of Texas cover as much territory as the Sandwich Inlands, which we wore to annex four years ago." ? There are three time3 as many muscles in the tail of a cat as there arc in the human hand and wrist. Xt*a the same story. The experience of all sufferers with blood diseases is Identical. First the doctors are con sulted, and their prescription of po tash and mercury is taken faithfully, but without result. Months pass, and the mercurial dose is continued, until finally, his condition being no better, or often worse, the patient becomes discouraged and decides to change treatment. Patent medicines are then taken, but until the right one is found the results are the same. S. S. S. is the only blood remedy on the market which is guaranteed purely vegetable. It Is the only one that contains no mercury, no potash, or other mineral, and therefore is the only one that promptly gets at the bottom of all blood diseases and cures permanently. MR. JOSEPH C. MYGATT. All who are afflicted with Scrofula, Eczema, Tetter, Cancer, Carbuncles, Rheumatism, Contagious Blood Poison, Catarrh, or any other form of blood troubles, will find in S. S. S. a prompt and permanent cure; it matters not how c.eep eeated the disease, or what Other treatment has failed. Carbuncles are the result of an impoverished con dition of the blood, causing a depressed vitality and such a low state ox health that it is difficult for the system to with stand even the mildest illness. Mr. Joseph C. Mygatt, of No, 400 Han Cock Ave., Athens, Ga., says: "Icon* traeteci blood poison from dye, which developed such alarming symptoms, that my life was almost despaired of. At one time there were fourteen car buncles on my body, and my suffering was such that for months I was unable to do any work. The best physician in our city treated me constantly, but his efforts were of no avail, my condi tion growing woree all the while. "S. S. S. was recommended, and after I had taken the first bottle, an im provement was noticed. I grew better every day, and after taking six bottles I was entirely<:ured. The carbuncles all disappeared, leaving my skin per fectly clear, and I have never had one since." There is not a disease of the blood, it matters not how severe, which S. S. S. will not cure. It is guaranteed Purely Vegetable and is a. real blood remedy for real blood troubles, promptly reaching the seat of the disease, and forcing it out permanently. Books on cancer, and blood and skia diseases mailed free. to any address. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. Drs. Strickland & King, DJE1NXISSXS. OFFICE IN MASONIC TEMPLE. Gas and Cocaine used for Extract int; Teeth. Feb2J, 1S97 35 SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condonaed vc!:^.!:tl ? '.: Nov. is, ts:> 1 .'act STATIONS. lt Lv. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. i?: Ar. Ar." Charleston.. Columbia.. Prosperity.. NewDcrry.. Ninety-bue.. Greenwood. Hodges. Abbovine... folton....... ?nriersor. Qrcem ilio Atlanta.... STATIONS. Daily No. 12. Lv. ? recavillo ... " Piedmont.... " Willianiston Lv. A derson_ Lv. Bel ton. Ar. Donnnlds ,... ?jy. Abbeville_ Lv. Hodges. Greenwool.. Ninety-Six... Lv. Newborry ... Prosperity... Ar. Colombia .?. Ar. Charleston... bailylDTd?y? No. l)?No.K)| l? SU a m JO 85 a ra 11 18 a ra 11 05 ra 11 35 in 12 02 m 11 45 a in STATIONS. 12 SS ra 1 00 m 1 25 2 25 m 2 07 m 3 50 ra 8 00 m Daily! Daily ?No.U No.l? ?OOpi^lOaLv TSto ii aoa '" 9 07n 1215p .Charleston.. 10 l:v 10 20a 10 89a 10 3-1.-1 11 25a 11 45a 2 40p Ar; 80?p:ll U0a 9 23p . Columbia." 3 35p .. .Aiston." 2 45p 125p ".Su tue." 1 25p 202p ?? .Union." 1 05p 223p " .... J.m.-sville .... " 12 20p 23Tp ".Pncolet." ?12 14p 3 10p Ar.. Spnrtnnlmrg.. Lv ll 45a 883p Lv.. Spnrtanbnrg.. .Ar.11 33a 7 00]).Ar ...Asheville.Lv! S 20a 7 Sip 7 20p 0 38p (3 47p ) S0p OOip 3 05p "P," p. m. "A," a. m. Traina 9 and 10 enrry elegant Pullman iileepiiiK ears between Columbia and Ashevillo, enroute daily between Jacksonville and Cincin nati. Traina leave Spartnnhurg, A. & C. division, northbound, 0:42 a.m.. 3:4i p.m., 0:18 p.m., (Vestibule Limited); southbound 12:20 a. m., 0:15 p. m., 11:37 a. m., (Vestibule Limited.) Trains leavo Greenville, A. and ?. division, northbound, 5:45 a. m., 2:31 p. m. and 5:30 p. m., (Vc3tibul<3d Limited)[southbound, 1:20 a. ra., i :20 p. m., 12:2S p. ra. (Vestlbulou Limited). ?limnn Service. Pullman palaco sleeping cars on Trains 35and BJ, 87 and 38, on A. and C. division. W. H. GREEN, J. M. CULP Gen. Superintendent, Trafile M'g'r, Washiagtou, D. O. Washington, D. C W. A. WKK, S. H. HAEDWKJK. Geq. Ffess. Ag't. As't Gen. Pass. Ag't. Wellington, D. O._Atlanta, Qa? I Right Prices You can pay mote money for a bicycle, but you can cot secure a machine of higher grade than the Oes cent, or ooe that will pirase you better. Bicycles. WESTERN WHEEL WORKS Chicaoo New York Catalogue free ?Beut? everywhere For sale by Sullivan Hard ware Co., Anderson, S. C. FOR SALE. PLANTATION, containing HO acres. Well improved Two tenant houses. Barn and stables. New dwelling. Cheap "or casb. Apply to? GEO. 8 OGG. West Union, Oconee County, S. C. June 30, 1897 1 3m t/>?Z>Hto ?l WS o > s m o o NOTICE. ILL be let to the lowst responsible bidder? The building of a Bridge over Little Beaverdam Creek at Anderson ville, on the 23d day of July imr., at 10 o'clock a. m. Also, building of a Bridge ov*r Creek ?n Garvin Township, near Manning Hor ton's, on the: 28;.h of July int?t, at 10 o'clock a. mv Also, the building of a Bridge over the bead waters of Broadmouth Creek, in Bel ton Township, near Charlie Lewhi', on the 30th day of July inst.., at 10 o'clock a. m. Aleo, the repairing the Bridge over Wil son's Creek, in Hall Township, bn road leading from C. H. Bailey's to Cook's Sta tion, on the 6th day of August next, at 10 o'clock a. m. Plans and specifications made known on day of letting. W. P. SNELGROVE. _Supervisor A. C, 8 C. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Oo?hty op Anderson. IN COMMON PLEAS COURT. . T. Thackcr, Mrs. Amanda Coker, Miss Sarah Thicker, J. P. Thacker, Mrs. Eliza Wlllbanks, Mrs. Emma Wllbanks, Mrs Mary Ann WUl banks, Richard Thackcr, Mrs. Margartt Brack en, Mrs. Julia Graham, Daniel White, Geo W. White and . Y. Thacker, as heirs at lair of Mrs. Sarah Cox, deceased, Plaintiffs, against; George N. Broyles and Joe Berry White, of whom Joe Berry White is an heir at law of Mrs. Sarah Cox, deceased, but whose place of residence is a - known to the Plalmifls Defendants. Simmons for Belief?Complaint Served. To the Defendants George N. Broyles and Joe Berry White. YOU are hereby summoned and require! to an swer the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscribers at their office, Anderson Court House, South Carolina, within twenty days after tho service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service ; and If you fail to answer tho Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief de manded tn the Complaint. Dated July 141b, A. D. 1897. B?NIIAM & WATKINS, Plaintiff's Attorneys. [seal] Jso. C. Watkiss, c. c. c p. To Joe Berry White, absent Defendant. You will take notice that a copy of the Stirn? nions and complaint in the forego'up action have been this day Oled in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for said County, a id that no personal claim is made on you. , A WATKI3S, PlrJntiflV Attorneys. July 14, 1897_ _6___ THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ANDERSON. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. A. C. Scudday, Plaintiff, against Mary Jane Scud day, A. E Scudday, Martha Watklns, H. G. Scudday, Ella Scudday, Belle Sharp?, Harper Scudday, Jet. Piuitt, Ida Scudday, Annie B. Hodges, Emma L. Davi3, Kate M. Davis and Daisey Davis, heirs at law of II. H. Scudday, deceased, Defendant".?Summons for Belief? Complaint not Served. To the Defendants above namec. : YOU are hereby summoned and required to an? ewer tho Complaint in this action, which is filed in the office of the Cleik of the Court of Common Picas for said Couity, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscribers at their office, at Anderson C. SU S. C, within twenty days after the servlco hereof, exclusive of the day or such strvlce; and If you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, tho Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in tho Com plaint. Doted June 10th, A. D. 18D7. TBIBBLE A PRINCE, Plalnt'lTs Attorneys, Anderson, S. C [Seal ] Joiw C. WatKus, c. c c. r. To the above named Defendants : ?ou will take notice that the Complaint in this action, together with the Summons, of which a copy is herewith served upon you. were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for tho County of Anderson, Stato aforesaid, on this, 10th day of June, 1897. No personal claim is made against you, or either of you. TBIBBLE 4 PBINCE, Plainiifl's Attorneys. June 10,1E07_61_6 CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA AN A SEE VILLI 5 SHOK LINE In effect February 7,1897. Lv Augusta.. Ar Greenwood. Ar Anderson. Ar Laurcns. Ar Greenville. Ar Glenn Fprings_.. Ar Spartanburg... Ar Saluda.. Ar Hendersonvllle. Ar Ash ville. 9 40 am 12 17 pm 1 IS pm 3 00 pm 4 05 pm 3 00 pm 6 23 pm 6 61 pm 7 00pm 1 40 pm 6 10 pm 7 00 am 1016 am ? 25 am Lv A she vil le. Lv Ppartanburg. Lv O lenn Springs., Lv Greenville. Lv Laurens...... Lv Anderson. Lv Greenwood. Ar Augusta. Lv Calhoun Falls.. Ar Raleigh. Ar Norfolk. Ar Petersburg. Ar Kichmond. 8 ri am 11 am 10 uo am 11 55 am 130 pm 4 00 pm 4 0) pm 7 10 pm 7 00 am 2 28 pmi. 5 00 pm 11 10 am 4 44 pm 2 16 am 7 30ai> 0 00 am ? 15 am Lv Augusta. . Ar Ailcmiale. Ar F?irfax................^........ Ar Yemasscc.,.. Ar Beau fort.......... Ar Port Royal. Ar Savannah.j Ar Charleston.?.i 9 30 am 10 35 am 10 50 am 2 55 pm 5 00 pm 5 15 pm 6 20 pm 7 20pm 7 30pm 8 00 pm 808 pm Lv rharleston., Lv Savannah. Lv Port noyai. Lv Beaufort. Lv Ycmassee.....I ?5 pm Lv Fairfax.....? Lv Allendale.i ?...'..* Ar Augusta. 1 5 pm 2 0 pm 6 60 am 6 50 am 8 15 am 8 25 am 9 25 am 10 82 am 1047 am 12 55 pm ('lose connection at Calhoun Falls for Athens, Atlanta and all pol u ta on S. A. L. Close connection at Augusta for Charleston, Savannah and all points. Close connections at Greenwood lor all points on S. A. L., and C. A G. Railway, ani at Spartanburg with Southern Railway. For any information relative to tickets, rates, schedule, etc.. address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Pass. Agent, Augusta, Gat E. M. North, Sol. Agent. BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD II. C. BBATTIB, Receiver. October Gth, 1895. East bound M1XKD Between Anderson and Wal halla. STATIONS. No. 12. s 10 50 a in! f 10258 ru' f 10 15 m ? 10 00 a in s 9 42 am f 9 3 a in s 8 55am s S 25 a m s 8 15 a m Ar.?Anderson.Lv .Denver. ,,.??..Autun. .Pcndleton. .Cherry's Crossing. .Adam's Crossing. .Seneca-. Lv .West Union. . ..WalbalU.... Weatb'd XTXXIi No. it Ar, 3 35 m 356pm 4 ? m 4 15 pm 425pm 435pm 506pm 550pm 6 20 m 6 30p a J. R. ANDERSON, Sepcrintcndent, W. C. COTHRAN, General Agent. Connections at Seneca with Southean Railway No. 11. At Andereon with Southern Railway Nos. 11 and 12.