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ETHjlJ The Proper So<-i;ti BVo?, .Auk ,l/r.>. ./fjirrwu //rti'/.v, i ?i There ia an unwritten law of et i ((uette for thc foot, ankle uni! leg. It ss of equal importance to men and wo men. lt is unconsciously followed hy roany men ami women of even the I .laines I breeding, lt. fact, most of these laws are so much a matter of custom that the public is Hitrprisod when they are violated. Neverthe less, the etiquette of tho ankh', foot and leg is of special importance, ar snoring it even iii thc slightest wa> . renders hoth men ami women not on ly conspicuous, hut -tamp them at ?ince as ill brod. If or women the ctiqiu tte of tin- foot applies not only t>? thc rein ral use id i the foot, hut to thc maller of dress mir it! I lu walking, a "ionian should put her foot on thc ground firmly, but lightly, i She should never strike thc heel first, j Thc knee should bc kept stiff at the moment of thc contact of the foot with lite ground. She should wear, in cold weather, neatly-fitted hoots- always black. The fashion of light colored spats, whioh seemed to he about to come in to general use, has been discarded hy people of good taste, and black ones are universally aaoptcd. lu summer what are uniquely dub bed "highlow shoes" arc verygcncral ly worn, as cooler and more comforta ble than thc ?doser boot. Slippers arc woru only in tho house. Satin or silk boots or shoes ?if thc ?.ame color and material as the frock are always admissible, except in thc morning or on thc street, and some times aro very elegant, but they are so expensive that few except the wealthy use them. If the boots ur shoes are buttoned, it is indispensable that none of thc buttons should he lucking, and that all should bc buttoned. If the shoes are laced the strings should he secure ly tied. Mt>'ST lltliE I'UOT. No matter how small or how pretty her foot may be, thc well-bred woman will never attract attention to it. When seated at home or in public convey- ! ance ?he will see that her feet are en tirely hidden by her skirt. She will dress her feet in such a simple fash ion that even if they were seen they are inconspicuous. She will never wear Klippers in thc street, or light-colored boots except in a carriage, and then, of course, not wi i h a dark-cesorot? ?T?WI:. Tan shoes must not bc worn with a visiting frosk or a silk dinner gown, and above all her shoes must always be immaculately neat and as near thc latest fashion as she can afford. The etiquette of the ankle is very j simple, but imperative. Thc well- \ bred woman must never needlessly j lift her skirts. 'Phe silken fringe, "f ; lier petticoat should just clear her in- | step; then the lifting ?if her dress i will be all that is necessary, oven in , crossing the muddiest streets. This rule docs not hold good for the | bicycle girl, however, for custom per- j naits her to frankly reveal her ankle j as long as it is incased in the conven- : tional leggings, high boots or golf j stockings, but it is not good form to wear the bieyele skirt unusually or J unnecessarily short. The etqiuettc of the leg is ttdd in j the following paragraphs: Women should never sit with their legs tressed. The woman who crosses ker leg? when scated in public is pos sibly more at eas?, but she rend?is herself liable to unpleasant comment. To sit decorously and gracefully is ?ot difficult, hut it is certainly rather j an uncommon accomplishment in this j day. (iood breeding demands that. J ?he should sit with her feet placed to- j gcther. or Mcally >o, on the floor, and | ker body erect. \ Will I'AltKI.KSS S1TT1X?!. Women should remember always u j avoid a careless habit of sitting, for ty years ago mothers and teachers at- j tached great imp?rtam e to instructing girls in this branch of the hreedtne of a gentlewoman. It is hardly necessary to say to a ! Judy that it is inexcusable in a mo ment of thoughtlessness for a wamali j ?o tuck her foot up under her, and be > practically sitting upon it. This un graceful act is equally injurions to her j circulation as indicative of bad man- I tiers. A woman should never sit clasping her knees with her hands. A woman should never si? twist her leg as to place her foot on the side round of a chair. Nor should she loll about on chairs or sofas. The most important rule in this linc of etiquette for men attacks thc fam ous American custom of jitting with the feet higher than the head. This is a position ui ver assumed in thc presence of ladies hy even thc most ignorant men. . (?ood breeding insists that men / shall keep their feet on thc ground, notwithstanding the temptation that desks and mantel-pieces have for thc average man. BITE. I i^ws Kt?/^m'di ii<j? Hie j 1< ? mid L< 'tr. fAc .sr. /.oms lin.ut>if. For a man to sit willi Iii-? feet ele vated in the pr? ionee <?f a woman, whether ?it lioin? or io Ins oilier, i-. the height of ba?] breed in i Strict?-! etiijuelti forbids that men should put on? foot mer the ether knee at any tino-, lt !.> considered exe???-!iugly loni form win n calling on women decorous .itt it ml?..? in thc presence ol' women ar?! possibly not th?' com fortuhlij postures, but they ?ire neces sary tb elegant society. In (?ublic conveyances, liy assuming uncoil volitional positions where wo men ?ire present, others are incon venienced. ?uni the te?t of good man ners is how little di-comfort, each no inlier of the com m un i ty inflicts un on ??ther.-. r:TH?l.'KTTK Kuli M KN. lt is very had manner* for mon to sit in a car in such a way UK to en croach on the ?pace belonging to oth ers. They should never s trete li out their feet in the aisle of a public con veyance, ?ir otherwise occupy more than their alloted space, as their care less attitude may, and probably will bc a (stumbling block in thc way of their fellow passengers. Considera tion for our neighbors is thc essence of good breeding, and disregard of their rights or comfort shows thc ab sence of it. It is considered bad form for men to complete their toilettes by turning up the trousers after they have left thc house, or having their shoes polished on the street corner. Well-bred mea finish every detail of their toilets at home. Men should remember that tari shoes ar?* out of plac?' with a frock coat. Any eccentric or conspicuous footgear is always in bad last?'. I once heard a very well-born English man say: "When I can remember what a gen tleman wears after he has left me, I am sun' ho does not know how to dress." - -- --. -- How Ute Itig (?una Work. Thc writer once witucssvtl at close quarters a target practice of the two lt-i rich rifles mounted nt Sandy Hook, and a brief description of how the mighty guns work ?md thc ''scores" that can bc made with thom may be nf interest just now. The guns are mounted on elevators, and are loaded at tte breech w?cu sunk in a shaft, where tho gunners work in perfect safety. While they arc being loaded two observers, at some distance and in different direc tions frew the guns, ore "finding" thc target, a? it is called. That this work may bc done speedi ly and accurately, engineers have de voted many months of precise work. The result of this is that two ob servers have before them charts co related with each point of observa* tiou, the guns and thc field within which is the target. Th? observers have instant communication with each other by three means which iiee?l not bc mentioned. Thc "target" being determined upon -say one of a licet of hostile ships -it is ."found" by thc two observers. Kaeh learns from his observation thc direction of the tar get. Observer A takes his own and observer li's observation and extends two lines on his chart, which give htm thc exact location of thc target, which is w here the two extended lines meet: anti this also determines, so elaborate ly has thc preliminary charting been done, thc exact direction and distance of thc target from thc guns. This in formation is communicated to the gun ners. They know, for these elements have also been accurately determined -how much the riHe must be ele vated, with a given charge and pro jectile, to carry thc required distance. This sounds complicated, but it is aa easy as it is for a bank clerk to de termine a complicated problem io in terest bj* turning to a printed compila tion, a table. b?ut the result: Having thc i nf or uiation given to him by thc observers, the gunner raises the big cannon on its elevator platform, it is directed and elevated by simpje machinery, the lanyard is pulled, a thousand poun?ls of steel hurls through the air, and the cannon is sunk iu the shaft far another charge. In the practice witnessed by the writer the target was live miles dis tant, and go small it could not bc dis . tinguished from the ocean white caps j by those who stood by thc guns. Hut not a shot which would not have 1 strm k a ship located where the target was.- .V?'tr Y?rh WurM. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. ! The Kind You Have Always Bought ; Bears the Signature'of - Ile-What would you say if I should kiss you ? She-There's but one way to find out. sir. \ Something in th? Kur Th? ears of children ar? favorite re ceptacles for small slick-', pebble**, 1 beans and the like. Insects may al?o occasionally crawl into thc eur, and fies ar.- sometimes put there by chil dren who enjoy ?he b HZ S Mig Miami and thc tickling which thc prisoners cause in their efforts to escape. Sometime!) the fly, despairing nf exit by the way bc colored, this being closed by thc ! little band, ?HI craw! in thc other di- j reciion, and il lo- chances to reach the i dr ti tn membrane bis revenge "ii bis 1 tormentor will be complete Tile < ar is usually very tolerant ol any inert substance which has found entrance, the presence nf which may be discovered only accidentally during the child's bath; and then the trouble generally begins with the nurse's at tempt to extract it. If th? body is a pea or bean, however, willahsoib moisture and swell, causing severe pain. Tin- chief danger of a foreign body in the car is that it tempts unskilled persons to try to remove it, for almost invariably the only result of such ef forts is to jam it further in, perhaps even so far as to break the membrane and cause irreparable injury to the delicate structure in the drum of tin? car. lt is hazardous, indeed, to attempt extraction in these cases, that it is almost wiser to advise that the offend ing object he left alone, no matter how much pain and distress its pres ence may cause. Certainly if a phy sician can be reached, even with some delay, the work Bhould he left to him; but a doctor may be inaccessible, or the pain, as from thc presence of a live'ineect, may be so excrcciating that something must be done at once. The first rule for removing anything from the ear is a "don't"-don't poke in the ear! Tf thc trouble is due to an insect, ic^ the child lie on the op posite side and then pour a little luke warm water into the car; the insect will ahnest always come io tho surface of the fluid and crawl out of thc open ing. Syringing thc car with lukewarm soap-wi'tcr will usually suffice to dis lodge a hard body which is too tightly wedged in: if, however, this is some thing that will absorb water and swell, we must, refrain, for the only result will bc to fasten it more securely. Sometimes a loop of very thin wire can bc slipped behind thc intruder, which can then, hy a dexterous man oeuvre, he ?lulled out. But this is one of thc measures that had better be left to the doctor, if one can be found without unreasonable delay. Indeed, nothing should bc done by eithei mother or nurse, if it ia possible tc wait. Very serious injury, resulting ir permanent deafness, has been causee by bungling efforts to extract a little pebble that was for the time bein; doing absolutely no harm, heyonc causing the mother needless alarm. youth's ( *tnuj>aniou. mm m -mwmm-- - - - The mines of the world product every vear 640.000,(100 tons of ore and coal For a short distance a lion or a tige can outrun a man, and eau maul ern apeed of ? fast horse: but the animan lose their wind ie the end of about half i mile. They have little endurance, am are remarkably weak in lung power. - The tunnels of the world are ostima tod to number 1,14-, with a total lengt! of "'14 miles. There are about 1,OOO rail road tu muds, twelve subaqueous tunneb ninety canal tunnels and forty condoi tunnel?, with aggregate lengths of abou itali inilea "Call it lying, madam, and deal wit! it a? you would with any other tempts lion of the devil," was Evangelia Moody's uncompromising answer to th woman who asked him how che shout care beraelf of her natural tendency t exaggerate - Mrs. Hallie Shiver, who lives nea Albany, Qa., has -J-.J living childret grandchildren, greut-grandsbildren an great-great grandchildren. In additio .o these, seventy-livo of the o?d indy doaeeudauts are dead, making the toti number ?10. The lM5th link in the ol lady's lineage came last week, and is th cause ol objection on her part on uniqu grounds. She asserts that, aa abe coi sider? it her duty to visit each nd.uiv once in two j ears the ever-extendin circle draws on her strength more tba she can spare. Mr?. Shiver is in her SHH year, but enjoys remarkably good heal tl - The black plague is reported to t raging in aome portions of China wit j snell violence that tho living are not ab to bury the dead. It baa been a gre many years since this plague bas ravag? Kurope; but since it ia raging ao extei aivcly in Eastern Asia, European .neil eal men are growing very uneasy. - A correspondent at Mt. Airy, N. t writes the Wilmlagton Slav aa fbllov concerning one whom he terms a "mo remarkable man :" "The Rev. Jam Needham, of 8urry County, a local mi i?ter of Ihr Methodist Church, preach* a great sermon from Acts 17-30 to s ?ari oongregation in the Central Mothodl Church here a few dayn ago. Broth Needham will be SSI years old on May : aud has been a minister of tho Gospel f more than seventy-tl ve years. He ls o of tho most remarkable men in tf ? country. Physically he is quite acti ? for one of bis age, and bis mental fact ties are dear and vigorous. He is bo attending a revival meeting, and is lov and honored by everyone who kum him. Hoi*, indeed, a fathor in Ism and in listening to him one almost ima ines that he is bearing a voice from t great beyond." .-?- . - - . Don't annoy othera by your eoug lng, and risk your life by neglectinf cold. Ono Minute Cough (?uro cm coughs, colds, croup, grippo and thront and lung troubles. Evana Phi macy. an AU Sor tn of Paragraphs. - Discouraging a good niau is thc devil's way of spiking his best gun. - Think of (?od not as one before whom wc shall stand, but as one be fore! whom we do stand day and night. ''Pop, what is the lull before the storm? ' 'Tho honeymoon, my son? A Christian must be gentle to the rude, kind to the thankless, pa tient with the ignorant, and liberal with the bigoted. A love for good books prevents the formation of many of those gross habits that defile and destroy thc character. r- The soldier who is very brave outside the battlefield makes himself the laughing stock of his acquain tances. Books that you read io your youth are thc ones that will affect your character for time and eternity. - Great souls find a joy in forgiv ing ?dense : little ones get their chief delight in cherishing old grudges. A thrill of ternir in experienced when a brassy cough nf croup sounds through tho house al night. Hm tim terror noon mang?n to rollet after (ino M 'inttc Cough Curo has been admiui-.tered. S-fe and haruiloHM for children. Evalin Pharmacy. - No gentleman will cither use filthy laaguage, or, if he eau help it, listeu to it when used by another. - If you want the favor of God, do your duty us you see it, and the r'i?l will take care of itself. - There is hope for thc boy who, whatever his failings, still reveres his mother. - There in a Sunday conscience as well as a Sunday coat : and those who make religion a secondary concern put the coat and conscience carefully by to put on only once a week. - He-Women are seldom capable of reasoning. She-Don't you be lieve it. He-Why not? She Well-because. - Mrs. Figg-Why can't you wash your face once ?D a while without my having to tell you every time ? Tom my-I'm afraid you'd think I'd been in swimming. What pleasure is there in lifo with a headache, constipation and biliousness? Thoueandu experience ihr m who could (?.como perfectly healthy by using De Witt's Little Karly Risers, the famous iltlo pills. Kvaus Pharmacy. - A paper church at "ergen, Nor way, which seats 1,000 persons, is waterproof with a solution of lime, milk and the white of e>,gs. - A hotel-keeper in a Brussels ho tel was obliged the other day to buy 80 pairs of shoes for his guests. Thc porter had decamped with that num ber placed in hi? eh?rg<t. We venture that thc greater majori ty of those people who are nor crying eo loud for war with Spain would be the la?t to take up their gun and go to the front in defense of theil country. - Patience-What is the cheapest looking thing you ever saw about i bargain counter? Patrice-A hus band waiting for his wife. A fte*- years of unsold suffering Aron piles, li. W. Pursell, or Knitnersville Pa., waa ?ururd bv using a ningle box o Dewitt's Witch Hasel Salve. Skin dis a-ea auch ss eearsma, raab, pimples an? obstinate sores are readily cured by ?hi tew io UH vern edy. Uv ans Pharmacy. - Tobacco-chewing members of tin Methodist Church in Albcrtsville Ala., have been levied upon by tin stewards for a special tax of $10aycar - She-In case wo were to have : war with Spain would you go to th front? Ile-What, and desert you No, I would stay here and protect you with my life, if necessary. - The only peddler that is neve licensed is the peddler of gossip. Sa tan. never makes the work cf his SSI vants hard to engage in. - He-To hear you women talk on would bc led to believe that an inge nious woman could make a whole sui of clothes from a hairpin. She-Nt nowadays. Lt might have been don before the fall. - The Supreme Court of the Cn: ted States rendered an opinion that rate of interest, charged by a nation: bank, in excess of the interest rat prescribed by law of the State iu whie the loan is made, is usurious, and tht the borrower may sue and recovi twice the amount of thc loan. - There are ninety thousand babi< boru in the city of New York evci year. They number two hundred an fifty a day, or one each six minute Take them out together foi an airin and the row of baby carriages woul extend up the Hudson to Albany, 01 hundred and fifty miles. - "He was married and went er ry," she said, referring to a statemoi 'in a morning paper. "Granting th: he had auy sense in thc first place, he returned, "you must have got tl statement reversed." "How do yr mean?" she demanded. " 'He wei crazy and married,' makes it sec mere plausible,*' he answered. - "When Adam," said the polit cal orator, "was driven from the Ga den of Kden to-" "Where w Adam driven to?" he asked in a wi.i per to one of his platform supporter "Dam'fino !" was thc reply. "Wh< Adam was driven to Dam'fino," fi ished the speaker, "what did he i then ?" "Dam'fino !" shouted a mi ,in thc crowd, "or you, either!*' ! bittest li ' jj?TiUht |iui-Ua:;f - ^reutt'Et economy. ^ THE N. K. FAiP.QANK COMPANY, ClOeugo. ht. Jxiiis. New York, ikfeton. Philadelphia. O. D. AN DEI WANTED Go Ku Seed Oatfi, Corn, Timothy Hay, Bran, Molasses, in Car Lots. Cnn till any size order-c ?AK HALF I Bouglit /30c. under market. Sell same. We Want Your Busi tt??u Wanted at once, 1,000 bushel Peas, Kaw Hides, green and dry, Tallo cash. Cet prices and look ut our stuft*, and your bartel Molatace. All kinds ? O. D - A soft-headed nail and a hard headed man are both difficult to drive. - "Do you want my daughter for her money or for herself ?" demanded thc old gentleman. "It's this way," stammered the young man as he tripp ed backward over the rug : "I want | her for herself, and I want her money for herself, and I want both of them for ourselves, and you certainly must* understand." i - "What do you think ? My wife's I father told me before we got married j that he would give me a handsome '. presenton our wedding day."Andi didn't bc ?f' "Well, I waited over a j week, and as he didn't mention the j subject, I asked him for it ; and all he said was, 'Why, didn't 1 give you my - "Where do you want to go?" asked the elevator boy. ' I want to ge to Heaven, my boy," smilingly an swered thc Salvation Army man who had stepped inside, "but you may put mc off at the top floor." "You must have got in the wrong buildin', miator " ro? ni ??/I t?-S ??C*f. "IPL?rS ain't nobody hut lawyers on the top floor." - "So you are really going to get married ?" asked Mr. Longsufferer. of his nephew, Charlie Kashboy. "Yes, indeed, I want to bc a fcappy man." "And that's the way yon go at it." re plied Longsufferer, with a side-glance st his wife in the next room. 'That's like trving to heat an oven with snow balls." - Bessy was lying in her crib. Presently she sat up, peeped over the side, and called out, "Papa, how do you feel?" "I feel pretty well," he answered. "I feel mad!" she cried. Of course there was a general laugh, but it died away and there was no more notice taken of Bessy. She stood this as long as shecould, and then she cried out, "I feel annoder mad!" tMuckiufc, jMtf! Innocent. "No."* said Hu? so;?!? fakir to a group nf potpie thut hud gathered around bini, "?h?r?.' is no us? talking tome about Ibo iui'oeoueu ot the countryman. Ile n:uy hwy a gold brick occasionally uv wigu a blank cheek and lose Iii - farm, but ns'a rule lie can tn Ut- r.ir.eof himself just ns well tis the towt ono and general ly a little h .lier il I knowns much as sonto IV;miers. 1 wt'til I:i"t bo .in this business, and you ran gamble on that "Why, s-iy, do you know* what happened ti? nie thu last time I was down in the country : I got pinched, that's what I done. I got my satchel ont in front of the hotel in a little town about *h) miles out east bert' itml began to ?ion fo\v tricks to draw u crowd. "After I'd made an egg disappear and pulled a few knots open for them I says: 'Now, gentlemen. Tin going to show you u trick that no body else on earth has ever at tempted. You Mee my hat here? Well, we'll imagine for the time lie ingthat it\sii Hmverpot. Out of this hut I'm going to make a hush grow U\\ and when I've dono that I'll make every leal ?rn it turu into a note. ' "What r Did 1 do it t Of course I did! But. say, do you know what come of it r Blamed if they didn't ?irrest me and linn me $15 foi raising bills, whieli the justice o^the peace enid wa? Vontiaiy to the statoots made and provided.' Knotig;!- Sahl. Old Gentleman (dictating indig nant letter)-Sir: My stenographer, being a lady, cannot take do'wu what I think of yon. I, being a* gentle man, cannot think it, but you, be ing neither, can easily guess my thoughts.-Brooklyn Life. A Snro Sign. "They seem to think he is ? grea' genius, but I never saw any sigutf of it." "H'm, you ought to see hi* auto* graph I"-Philadelphia Bulletin. ?SON & BRO CASH. ( to huve it. ll 'oin out-Short Profit?? ion)pa re prices. *X1. FLOUR, way. Lower gradea $3 UO per barrel. ness, Large or Small. ls Molasses Cune ?Seed, and all your w, Beeswax, Eggs, &c. Pay you spot Will save you mouey on Corn, Hay ieed Irish Potatoes . ANDERSON & SRO. - ''Begorra, an' it's hard to collict money these days." "Is you bin tryin' to collict some, Mr. Murphy ?" "Divil a cint ; but there's a plinty tryin' to collict from mc." - For some time, I have suffered with rheumatism and tried every im aginable remedy, without effect. Mr. F. G. S. Wells advised me to try Chamberlain's Pain Balm, telling mo that it had cured many cases of long standing like mine. I have used four bottles and feel sure that one more bottle will make my cure complete. A. P. KONTZ, Claremore, Ark. Sold hy Hill-Orr Drug Co. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. ;scd ?cii??i??? in direct JU LY 4, 1897. STATIONS. Lv. CharlCHton.. fjv. Columbia... " Prosperity.. " Newberry.. '. Ninety-Six. Ar. G reen w oo*l. " H odges. Ar. Abbev??TT Jax. Belton. Daily' V.o. ll. 7 10 a tn 11 00 a m 12 ll pm 12 22 p aa 1 25 p m 1 45 p m 2 25 p ra 2 55 p m Ar. Anderson. Ar. Green ville Ar. Atl^taTTT g aa p m ??pm 9 30 p m STATIONS. Dairy No. 12. Lv. GneenvUle..10 80 a m " Piedmont... <. ' 10 55 a m " "Willi ams ton. ll 18 a m ET. Anderson.. I. ..7777. ll 06 a ia vi Belton. ll SS a m Ar. Donnalda. 12 CO p m Iv. Abbeville."ll 45 a m I.V. Hodges.. .. 12 20 p m " Greenwood. 100 pm .* Ninety-Six. 125pm " Newberry. 2 25 p rn N Prosperity. 237 pta Ar. Opjnaihto. 3 60 n jn Ar. Oharleaton- 7771?."..I 8 CO p m ESfiBl STATIONS. , lilli aaop 7 10a Lv... .Charleston... Ar B0op|ll 00? TSa ?T80? .... Oolnmbia." 3 35p "i>3ap 9 07al215p ".Alston.2 45p 8 Sta lOOia 128p Santuc." 1 26p 7 48p 1020a 202p '*.Union." i 1 05p 7 30p 1080a ?28p " ....Jonesville.... .. 122Cp 658p 1054a 287p ".Pacolet." 1214p 6 47p 3125a aiOp Ar.. Spartanbnrg...Lv ll 45a 6X0p 1145a 883p Lv.. Spartanhurg.. Ar 1129a 005p g45p 700pAr.... Asheville.Lv' S3te ?C5p "P," p. m. "A," a. m. Trains 0 and 10 carry elegant Pullman ?leaping cara between Columbia and Asheville, anroate daily between Jacksonville BiulCincin ?att. Tra?na leave Spartanbnrg, A. & C. divinion, northbound. 6:07 a.m., 8:47 p.m., o:18 p.m., ?Vestibule Limited) ; southbound 12:20 a. m., :15 p. m., ll :87 a. m., (Vest?bulo Limited.) Trains leave Greenville, A. and C. division, northbound,5:45 a. m., 2:31 p. m. and5:80p. m., (Vestibuled Limited) : southbound. 1:26 a. m.. 4:20 p. m., 12:00 p. m. (Vestibuled Limitad). Pallman Service. Pullman palace sleeping cars on Trains 95 and BO, 91 and Si, on A. and C. di vision. W. E. GREEN. J. M. CTJLP Gan. Superintendant, Traffic M'g'r, Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C. W. A. TUBE, S. H. HARDWICK. Gsa. Pass. Ag't. As t Gen. Pan. Ag's. Washington. D. C._ ?Atlanta, Ga. GOOD TIMES HAVE COME. You can afford to indulge yourself or your family in the luxury ot a gooJ w.ccs!y new;-., paper and a quarterly h'a{ra-.'iat- o: f..:..J-. You can Ret both of these pubiica'.i.v.; ... ;. ? almost a library of Rood novels f.ir $ -, p.vr vi .r. M,/"D* VQSIH fer llAffttOQr world-famed for its brightness and t!:e iro:t complete General Weekly~'Coveri::<? a vi-I.r range of subjects suited to the tn. ter. of rr.err ard women of culture and refinement than arty journal-ever published. Subscription prie?, $4 per annum. TALES FROM TOWN TOPIC?, ft ?5^par;s Quarterly Magazine of fiction, appearing i. s first day of Marc!-., June, September tnd De cember, and publishing original noveli by t'.-.o best writers of the day and ? mass cf thor: stories, poems, burlesques, witticism:.. c.e. Subscription price. *? per arm um? Club price for both, $5 rsr?nnurru You can have both of these If yon subscriba 'KOW and a tcnux of 10 novels selected fri ra the list below. Regular price for each, cents. AU sent postpaid. Remit $s in New York exchange,*xprcsi or postal money order, or by registered letter, together with a list of t!io4o novels EClcctcd, by numbers, to TO WV TOPICS. 90S Finn Avenue, Sew Voris. s-Tim SALT; OP A ?:nt-r" tu-'c M. S. M:TX1V>. ?-1 Uti ? oestN OC Til H Kt SC. Cv A. S. Vah\V< ir-.tl. .-.ix MON rm is HAD*-*, nv ?.bris? i. nnji e-llll? bsilKTS Ul- C1IA.NU 1.. Cy tv'-.'-* AnrSJ ( Trir.ni?- -t. . ?>-A\l MOXV Kt:N'T. Cv ChiilM Sr v-? wu--. II-AS bci.tcsu ?ii- vinni-, w o> mit.'? ' ??-AN UXSI'KAW?nt.U siKI.N*. Uv i .*.:? I????.?. ?1-T)l.\r 1>U! Al?; l t. ASUMAN*. tty .! K. Vjr.r.e ??-A lir{Ai. ts DhNvl-K. Hy ?;itltK? MvKt:?vt.H<. . n-wiivr SAYS r.utnYs. nv iun.i ?titt-tte M rv, ?f?-A VlikY KI-'MAKKAI'.t.U Uv tr I?, lit,?.? *i IT-A >IA)(t:iA(.lt li)U lltjrh. |:>'lt-.f UK. Vim?., ?t-4ii?T or Tim sf..em R. ny T C. t.^a. ??-T1IK WR?)N'<; M \N\ Uv OiJtnM.j? C^vil. mn-T.lU MUHT J uk -UAl'I'lNhht?. Hy Aull? Vivi 1 ClUflm. ei-nUKSTKANCe BXrERtMCXT. Py|T?-<U.Hrt.V- ? r.q .?-O.N lilli AM AK,* O- I'ASMUN. UJ J . ' ' ? . .. .J-A MAKTVH JO l?ViV1.. 4if l^iw* t.?Vi. W. G. Mc?EE SURGEON DENTIST OFFICER-Front Room, ov?r P" ' and Mercbenta Hann- r*r"a*j? ANl>KliSON, 8. Feb 9, 1896 3S NOTICE. X Oar Load of Hoe Kentucky r 1 ?mi Mule-. whiVli be will aell oll tb>i5? ol 5 ccut colton (.'otoo und BM?, theo, ? trouble to Mmw tin>iu *o Nov y*. 1W,7 a? "'?i. ar 2, "g ? h? Sr 5 p ?. X ? ir. a > S. l8ff?<S.sf58 ?? 5 ?'S ' -?? S ? ?: n on ^3 B ^ - X >*i ?c 3 1] Ci t ??r,. X? ? 7 : s 3 - cr s-c;^^ cd 7+ a ? ; 2= r-5 ? es:" ? o 9 s g* i 5*15.3 a ? ?j s? -iii. co 3 ^. T; 3 = j. ? s. ts!I*:Isl <? ~ ? - = 5 - S'l 3 g * 5 o M g. Sci " 5 < -os ? 2. 5 fi ?r?y|?|s.*?f s, g s I [mi S &F * o? ?Sa***? . ? g.o. a.? o. SC ?M ? O g S *P ? ci .?ti GEN. R. E. LEE, SOLDIER, Citizen and Christian Patriot, A i i RE AT KEV? B??m for the PEOPLt, LIVE AGES TS WANTED Everywhere to ?bow 'ample naces and a?t ul Csubs. * ' EXTRAORDINARILY LIBERAL TERRS! Money ceo be mad? rapidly, and a vast atcoatt of good done n clrcululog ?oeof the noblest hiv toiical works published during Ute pa't i|aarte:C? a century. Active Agenta are anw reaping a rid harvest. Some ot our beat workers are sellior OVEIl ONE HUNDRED HOOKS A WEEK. Hr. A. O. Williams, Jack ion county, alo , work ed four dajB and a half and occured 61 orders. Ht aol's the book to almost every mao he meets. Ar. J. J. Manon, Mu ?cogee county, Ga-, sold 120 copia the firet five daya be canvassed H. C. ShciU, Fo'o Plato county. Tocas, worked a few boars ail .old 16 copies, mostly morocco binding. J. H. lianna. Gaston eounty. N. C. made a month's Ti ssa ID Ihren n?w? on. t~- .ul- bOOm. o.a. rjLitc, callanan, county. Texas ls selling boort ti tbs rate of 14* coplea a week. The work oo nial o o biographical sketches of tl tba leading ea ?rals, a vaat nm on nt nf biston ti matter, and a largo number of beaotiful fall-ftfe Illustrations. I tis a grand hook, and Udt?|tfi8 gentlemen who ?an give aK or aay ?uft of fu?- t lime to the canvass are bound lo malte immer.* f suma of money handling it. AD .elegant Prospectus, showing the different styles of binding, sample pages, and si) malena! necessary P? work with will be sent on rece^tof 80 cants The magnificent gallery of portrait*, alone, tn the prospectus ia worth double the nos ey. We furnish it at far lass than actual cou rf mao ti facture, and we would ?dvlte you to ords quickly, and get exclusive omfrol of the bm ter ritory, Address BIO YAL. PUBI.I8H1NO OOH PA NY. KlevenG? and alain Streets, RICHMOND, VA. VTOTIOK TO CREDITORS. .131 Ail pernoo? having deruaod* artist the Karate nf lt. M Tilley, deceases, are hereby notified t> preterir, tnem, oiop *Tly proven, to tl?? undMrsUneJ, or t# Bonham & Watkitm. Attorney, withi) tin* time prescribed hy law, n.'id thoseio debUid to rnctke oavuient J. R. TILLhY. Adio'r. Dr c ?8S7 _ .1 A SPECIAL BARGAIN FOR NEWSPAPER READERS. T?6 Twice-a-Week AND THE Anderson Intelligenter) Both One Year fair $2.00. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS I HADE mw""" DESIGNS COf?Yr1IOMT8 ?C Anyone senrilna a sleet oh anfl rtrscrlptlori maj jnlolrir RS certain ottr opinion free whether an Invention ls probatily patentante. Conimunl<ra Mons strictly eonfldentlaU Wandbook on Patents sont free, oldest aurency fopsccarlnirjM?t?,'!Vt Patents taken thrwoxb Munn A Co. ricer?* .pretal siohVf, without vlinrKO. tn rho Scientific American. A handsomely Ulnar rat ?Mi weekly. 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By a special arrangement made for * limited time only, our friends given an opportunity to take adva*' tage of this liberal proposition. llemember tho offer, THE Twit* "A-W?BK KSPDBLIC, 16 pages aweej a?d the Ar.i>sroao?r ?NTE?.hTOKSCg ? pages a week, both one year fftf only *2.00r