The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, January 11, 1899, Page 2, Image 2
1
. ; . ? i .: I
. 'i . (,! ' : i . !" a nj? ..'.'iii r : ;.. I
; : ? ? i !
wc' ; ; '? ? illili ; mi-i . i
. ( . ., I . i. ? . M , Wi I ! tt??*?- eil ;lli'
v/ ?: i, ! ?i.,- h.- pli .nv ..r ?.". i
lOlk i: : r i*?Mt LM\ideji .JerSe}
. . I!..! i n ?(iii- liv :. riiil
?.'.arili'?i '?:-;r:? ?Vilich iii call daily ?/al hei
wi i, .-. i UM I a lili* 11 . iii I ? . III . I'll
: 'arr. Tn :ili ! in -. 'i'iol inns
?Vu: si i('i a"-11'ul I.V answer no. .\::t
;. ! :: il po-it i vi ly I Ila*, ?ill ii.'- i
if.' wi ? I?, o . i \ : *. : i < - * J of every lain
fiWti .? i'. <!. mi i i '.'.?.-i will I li mw "I
. i ! - ? ii! :ll i' 'll I Oil IV I li .'. ?lili
?.?'i'll i ' lin -.. .i\ . . ur l.ii ?ur-.
.'I li V . ."..ll ? I ? I x * ? I" -'"IV illili -li
.vi:: a ' i .v. ;!:i rn.-i i ; | .?...? i i n-1 io!
flo ill.? 1. ' III u- IL'i.t il (hr il.nu.
I'.I'I:. .vlio OH r? 11 ? Vi il s tr? i- fpr osi
nih tit . ?'iitil ?' i.i- l'?tn n\c rltikc
? or shall v ' make .? united :inil d?
- :ifiini . . (lori in r.u-i- our iiwii >u|
- in .IIV.IIMI.IIU'II. and lim- in.iK
.'.Lu ' '."i- an iih.-nlute surplus
I M't' no !?i.? . l'or our farmers -.iv? I
uj?)j t i l ut. i j.I.ni .nul stick l" i
.cgardl?s.- il tho pri?e ol' col foi
Don't deludo yourself-with thc ide
your neighbors. will tl i mi it is
I hoir cotton acreage and therefore yu
im ','...!>" yours in tin; I?OJHJ of
Ai a i.* a y >"<! price. There could bo ii
greater mistake oT judgment than thi
at. the sirlti-.li l'armer s<> acting wi
lim! to his cost at tho omi "I' tl
HC?SOII.
If Georgia ruade no cotton this yea
thc ?uss would doubtless I.-' made ii
: , tin yearly increased acreage i
rich cotton lands hrnught into cult
/ation wc st of the Missouri rive
vVo had bott ?M' prepare ourselves for
1 :i . i" ried i : mw priced col. Ul, f'
!.] outlook promises imthing ids
being prepared, weean l etter emin
u l. a e ulam il > -
Tor '?'>'.'< years wc have relied un cn
ion alone with which iii pureba
'.yorythiug ?Is.. I ? u r i i? / thal fin
we have made not lc? thin JIM nt:
OOO of bah s, wini h nt ;. moderate esl
tat -, fully s>ilit.(Hi.i,oiin. What li
. 'tai of this vast amount "!' moue
ll i! kept at hollie. Wiltllil hil
: . us one of tlie riches! States
: .i i ' nionV lt nus all gone to p.
ii farmers and manufacturer.- of ?'
north and east for supplies of vario
kinds, every item of which wc cou
and should have produced within u
s borders. Suppose we had tun
. n'i lu.ono,DUO hales in the past
.ear-, and in addition had prod nc
::1 the supplii - tint we have ho tip
from other States, i- it not -elf ci
?i. nt thai. v. .. w mid I ie l"tti i oil
!f IUO.000,000 I I it? Wi tri :it pn sen
The emin pro j . t ::- : i !.:. Stal
'titipi- includi 'i. '? ? now ?.ul .i ntl
o\ jr > lOO.Oi.n.tniu. ?md ih< fanners
'??orgia ought, alune to have bc
ie.her by this vast amount, had th
vu been deluded hy the all colt
f ilkley
Look around you in your ?iftt n
communities and note the success
farmers of your acquaintance; invi
ably you will lind them tu !". the n
who have di versified t heir crops ?
.raised their own supplies. No St
nr section can prosper thal relics
tircly on one crop Kan-as trici
with wheal, until most of her fal
were mortgaged, and she was o
saved from utter ruin, it is said,
the "hen and the cow." Now,*?
?diversified farming, she is again
the road to prosperity.
I write as a farmer to farm.'
.knowing and appreciating the d
multics in the way, but I believe t
can all be overe?me by a persist
and determined effort in the right
rection. I by no means advise
abandonment of cotton culture,
.M ! V'\
. .? | I i I ! , I 1*1? ! . ' ".' -
'. ld j : ? ' j . ! ? : i i ? i _? . ? 111 .
: ?mi ? ! . i :.. s i" I i
I iiii: H 'i -i ? . . 'I ! ' ' >'\
ii ll i,-, ? li ni 11 i - ( .. I ii
' ? i u I : 11 . .: ; . > > . ; ; i 'i . . j . 11 < . t i ? I
V': ; ,
H i ? li .. . - in i!?. pow; .nut .-..ri'
H rit li? r 1.!i-i ti M 11* ??I s i M viiiir
! II ll lll<- 1.1 i I il i i A I I r '.' . Of I - I" J . I ll ll I j
m iii ! s i !ii< -iili' ul' i lu- .? mw.- ;.t
III' -I l'lHl?i |l|i?V\ ?ll'.'. TIllMI ?M< ji lli'
lil) !i ? I li ll) li\ r 'iCrCS In I III! OW
.??.-i'll ?Ti.?i- a- u'ioiunl i ira s, |?'?la
. ngarram* inilli'l rte .\ Tl . . t
t liai . I . 111 l<l nnri'.?. ami ti" HMM.-, i II
otloti. r. ._. ?i <? I? - - ol' who may advi-c
'...H tn tim ? Hillary. A crop lil??- this
will y.ivv \oi| iii ncrcs lo tim plow,
and thal j>. ?'iioni:h I'or north f tcprgia,
I li - m.' I? in Iii i?i il Ii' atl'l soul li I ?i orgia a
|."\ ii!'?!, HI?'- might ic cult iva'?il in
?? i ti m a mimi p a-.
lilt y i - lui lc ? a.?no a- pus- ilili-. I ? * 41
usp alf t li ? - li . i Un liiailc fertilizer; ilia?
\ nil .- iii : < t i ??'/ri lu i- lu t ?vei ii i iii . ami
I \ i H 11 H .' liiiii
.** i " p loi \ i ii*.- Itncliaiiillcs, axhclvcs.
llames ami other tiling- iii il you e re.
aili! I."ii?il m.il.i :i home on rainy
Never i.'" lo town with an emp?y
wa; . hut alway- t arry -ometIlilli; lo
-..ll it only a hiaii ol' wood.
l?uy uolhiu<.' on credit il" yon can
possibly avoid it. Helter sutler some
privations than co in debt.
ll' we wanbi he independent and
prosperous, we must farm un thc lines
suggested. No other roads will lead
us out ol' thc woods in which we arc
now almost hopelessly lost-hut. if we
will follow the course I have endeav
ored to blaze uni. we will in n short
time he a happy, prosperous and con
tented people.
In the laudable cf Tort to become
self sustaining, all must lend a hand.
Thc merchants and the landlords can
greatly aid in thc good work by not
iit.-i-tiug that their customers and
tenant- shall plant a large cotton crop
in order to gol supplie-. This course,
hitherto pursued, has resulted in
.really increasing thc culto* acreage,
to the si rion- injury 1 may ?-ven say
almost ruin -ol'all hands concerned,
li' they would try the opposite course,
? Xtending aid and credit only to those
wini make their fond supplies, how
di Hereat and how gratiflying would be
thc result. 1 appeal particularly to
thc merchants, who. by their insist
ence ?m a large cotton acreage before
credit would bc extended, have prac
tically 'killed thc goose that laid the
golden egg." Let them ''face about"
and refuse credit to their customers
win? may contemplate planting a large
cotton acreage. If such a coarse
.-liould bc adopted and carried out, it
needs no gift of prophecy to foretell
that a vast amount of poverty and
suffering would be banished front our
Stale.
1 ant inore than willing to help on
this good cause by every means in
my power, and the greatest reward
that lite conduct of this department
could oller mc would be thc satisfac
tion of feeling that I had aided, even
though in a very small degree, in re
storing to thc suffering farmers of
Georgia, that plenty and prosperity
which they once enjoyed.
t>. li. STEVENS,
Commissioner.
One day when a celebrated bar
rister was on his way to Westminster
Hall with his large bag full of briefs;,
he was i tn pudr oily accosted by a boy, I
who asked if he was a dealer in old
j clothes. "No," replied the barrister,
I "these are all new suits."
i - A school master inquired of one
I of his pupils on a cold day in winter
? what was thc Latin word for cold.
"I can't remember it at thc moment,"
said thc boy, "but I have it at my
fingers ends."
- During the year ending Septem
ber, 189S, 1,258 criminals were sen
tenced in Iowa.
4 lill I h -inti .- I - i> i
lill il ... -1
Till ll ii A'-ll I
nt.-., v. nil high
ii unii - - m .. i
. :. ^ m -i i
li, i-l.-.I
"I li i - I -
i- .iii-l iii'iti
?Ali'- t ntl . H'
..- ., ?, v. A 11 ' 11 .
!. -II 'I ". - li i'll
. 11 ' . 11 it ray.?.
. Iliilf. I||i t<
?i il
. hit
I Mill
. I . . . I I ? 11 M ' WI- . I I - H' i l'-ll . > ?
,| K ..uti ..-.!....
i ?. ?. l-l i ?, i 'i . . i - fui a - u : i-i : -.
I':.. real i ii- ii- it- ii?-? -?i ii'-.v1'? i' m
, ::-! I tv,.- t h it : . : h.- ??ti\ hut . jiiipi'es
Silin lin- ?-itv . I,- in : built I"! a pf
|i.i-f. inuit; !... srrvtMl ir. hilt -till
.I III'.? -II |i.| I!II} i-l-. ivii" ! i . ?I
. . r i _. i f i. * I -h- ii i. ni i'm- v*. I ; ? . ; ? - ? ; . . -1 ? i I ? *
t ? (lori - of i" \v m. n, :i- il it h ni
i.i iii handed ilowti in trust. Tin- iu
r-1-ll-?hlf -'lill l|i?ll|iliat I'S, till' sCllsiblt! '
i ti liai *i ku li I ini fancy, al least.) has
In fu deposed. Ami whir cunt ri vi - io
r?,ii'i? i lu- ma inn 1.uni" i - t lu -, t h.it
. wry where one ?uni,-, at enhir thal is
ool mali maile. hut uatiiral; ii pun
Link walls lli;it are deep e.-irihly
brown, rjeli willi a dialing ol'??amp
11 e>.-. I ile.'? ?I wit li tn*? - u p Ul -Ul faces,
originally "I painted sturen, lin: ?ame
inn - 1.1 tilt- ope*! land-cape, in mc.it
val let.V the yellow ni' clay hanks, thc
svviirihiiit'ss ni phiuuhi'ti Itolds; the
ilm-e att i u i'? I u'_'? ul s h nd i ii ir of wa
i. i'm, ;i ri.iiul .' ? i. . most c i III nu i ri ni
ail \ mi will see tl n in i -tal. ihlt
?h. tnt
t.'?>l'?riie_'.-, aiul nt :i?!ii"-i any weather.
Add . i h mg inore, a certain solemn
LTi'iui ?heii from very plentiful name
less sin nhs ali tiver thc cly J which
lilis the ? yr.
In such a lawn, when settled both
by Kreuch ami hy Knglish, it is natu
ral that the difference should survive.
There arr many houses made in the
shape of a plain box, set facing a gar
den, and with an end to the street.
Verandas like decks are added to each
story, enclosed by shutters, and the
roof may bo covered with old, hollow,
ml t*les. lo the garden will be a
Veritable crush of growing things -
bryonet, spiked and formidable pal
mettos, shining evergreens, shapeless
bananas, and. with a half dozen kinds
ol' December blooming Howers, roses
growing as if wild. A high wall of all
iron fence encloses, its gateway twice
tin* height of a man.
There is the other .-ort, thc great
house built hy the Kuglishtnun, and
nally co leeived for the high position
ol' its owner. Knill as for executive
mansions, with the shed like (planers
for -lave-, with a massive front of
columns, from the shadow ol' which
the plainest eiti/en might speak with
sume authority, with rich and solid
trees in regular line- inside imnrison
ing walls, these places, since they lack
Two heans eau make a love .u?.iir. but it
takes thu?, al least, t<? make a linnie, and
tm? .a th in n-.u i Iv that ?u a baby. The
vonni; married couples that start out in lite
with th?, nlea th a . tiildivu are nuisances,
and that they ?ii? n?>t want and will nut
have them, ?ire thc kimi that you read
a>?i?ut every day in the nt wspapcrs-in lite
divorce coliunn. A bonn with?.ut children
is nm :i linnie God and Nature never in
tended that there should lie a place called
lit nu v th.u did not resound willi the patter
of childish footsteps
Then- ar? tens of thousands of homes
that are childless beca usu <u" the ill-health
of th?, wife ami wiiiiUl bt- mother. There
nrc tens ol thousands of other homes child
less because the little ones have died al
most aa soon as they were born. In bnth
CHM's I>r Pince - Favorite Prescription is
a govert inn remedy. lt acts directly on
thc delicate ami important organs that
make wt fi hood and motherhood possible.
It makes them well, strong, vigorous, virile,
anti elastic l! do< s away with the danger?
of maternity. It banishes the usual dis
comforts nf thc expectant period and
makes baby's advent easy and almost pain?
less. li insures thc little new comer's
health and an ample supply of nourish?
ment. The prospective mother prepares
herself for maternity by taking the "Fa
vorite Prescription" and gives her child a
fair start in life by giving it a strong and
well developed body. Thousands of homes
that were childless, to-day echo with
babies' laughter, and bless this great medi
cine. Thousands of women who were
weak, nervous, despondent invalids, are
to-day happy, healthy wives and mothers
because ot this medicine. Medicine deal
ers sell it
Constipation kills slowly-but U kills,
Dr. Tierce'* Vlcaaont Pellets cure it.
i ..jj O' iii." i iii,> \ I, i ?-i . I Vi ii ri fi .4 i
. i ;
. .ii. I Util-. '
..I . . it ,: ?
?. -"i ii. -II I ho Way 'ii.-!-- -ti '
i.. a ,.!,"-.. . f v lit,
I ?'? ? ari . !?'eh<'?. ?inti ul i : ci a?-,
.t low. iiii|) ?inc I liai, i- t!..- ri VIT limits
tin? cl .>.. i v' i . 1 it ? ti ati'l id' \\?.?!i' sky.
iiL'.iill-t which tlc ?l(aj . nf a .'.-?'!
with hart! tu ist ?. ?i i"n? ?. igncli placed,
li irk? I III' picture. A' )'. ' 'nimm r. nil
Ail, ./tis, r.
Kapui Mri-.'.mili'.'
I i '.-.v hu..'.!." ? i I ik?' j "-i tn liri.' nu .'
I> d y im ..ir lind .-iii ..;. l r j ? Mn
han mini, :i i? nj I Ul 'i. ..li.?' '? fd j a-I? rjt
"ii a iMiiJi'l ? I?ari . Ili-fntv falling "il
,nl" '1 ii :i III j i ii Iii' -ai?! hi' -au a I *-t 1 III
tri <. ('.. nilly "ii" ?II "?.'.''ii :i|i.m; six
I'illliirl !. ir. ii? away ll" full asleep
? iittil .it'ran.i'il (hat hf hail cone tn
!i".i\ "ll ?;lW ri g |l IS ?li'lli'.'r a lill V.'ull
ilvifiil m.tiiy .?!' i lu in ll ii hail nu
. .'. ,it i'i.iii'ia|it inii <>i tillie hut I." felt.
!i rat In r i hau h new, thai i lay.s and "lays
h ri {'I ....I aii? lil' lt h" Wilki! hp.
The e.lind Was ju ?I pa-.-ing the
I palm i ree Muhammed had i em asleep
aleiui four seconds.
S.um one told tin above story tile
other idght. after tin talk had chanced
mi psyeulogy. mesmerism, thought
t ati-fcrretici'- th>- occult in general.
And then one young fellow of 2~i or
thereahouts told his tale.
"1 had a dream the other night that
since 1 had it has kept nie awake
thinking. It was a mixture of the
Faust idea arni <>l my one uia-ter pas
sioii money 'jetting lint the Pact
that it was over sn i| nick ly is thc part
thai has puzzled tuc most.
'"I had jone through a pretty hard
day. iud before dressing to go out that
evening I thought I d lie on the couch
f'?r a in i II nt i - lie fuli leuglit on my
hack ami '.et a good rest that way.
A? I lay there 1 noted that thc dock
on the mantel was just .-triking seven.
"I fell asleep and die lined that the
devi! had conic to nie and said I could
have all the money I wanted if I
would he content to die on my lilith
birthday. Ile told moto think the
matter over and he sat down in my
Morris chair, and picked up a maga
zine, read it for a long time. In about
au hour's time I told him that I would
accept. Ile rose, put a packet of
money on the mantel and told me that
as often a.- I desired money I had but
to look on the mantel and the amount
would be there. And then he opened
thc door and went out.
"I was thoroughly cognizant of thc
fact that I was only ?.5 years old, atid
had five years yet to live-yet in that
dream I lived them. 1 did not go tilt
pace-I behaved myself-but lived
sumptuously -took care of relatives
and friends-traveled all over thc
world. I even fell in love, but die
not ask the girl to bc my wife, because
I had always in mind the fact that I
was to die as soon as 1 was IUI year.'
old..
''Year after year passed ami I saw
no more of my friend, the devil. A;
id'ten as I wanted money I found it
ami 1 took it with no misgivings as t<
my ultimate future, inasmuch as 1
knew i hat the life I was leading was
above reproach.
'Thirty days before my thirtictl
birthday I went to my lawyer and sav
that my will was in perfect technica
shape. And then I concerned mysell
no more in respect to my death ihau J
v. aid to the purchasing of a nev
? collar.
"On tho night before my thirtictl
j birthday ? gave a stag affair to abou
20 men. I wai as gay as any mat
there, and the ijuip and jest and st?r?
had gone around. Then my noares
intimate got up and proposed ' mj
health, lt was drunk, and I was call
ed upon for a speech. I ro.se, glass ii
hand, .hist asl got to my feet thi
clock in the hall chimed out midnigh
- 1 was thirty years old. 1 tried ti
raise my glass on high, but it fell witl
a crash to thc table. The lights dancci
in front of nie, the men's faces fadct
away, a big black pall came down rfbt
blotted everything and I felt raysel
falling, falling, falling-and then
awoke with a start.
'"I looked up at the clock on th
mantel, it marked five minutes aftc
7-I had boen asleep five minutes am
had lived five yeats."
That was the man's story-you cai
believe him or not, you can reason ou
its meaning or not, just as it bes
suits you.
Ile merely told the tale as illustr?t
ing how short a time as computed b
human reckoning it may take to ?ive
cycle of dream life.
And maybe that's what's meant b,
thc Scriptural phrase: "A thousan
years in Thy sight are but as yestei
day when it is past."
Well, it's worth thinking over
whether you believe it or not I-Phi
\ adclphia Prcu.
I'tVlitj ..f Him I .ni-fr.
Vf- . j|..,?- . I II.- ..?
I I' - . I. I . V l il .
. < : : \.
I > 11| : i. - ,| <;. ? Wi: - il > - 11 - ? i j
?il .\ ..: I u ' \i-.i: ! ?i I. say - t ':, ; .. i ?I i
.'.? i < > li i - iii 'itut i,?} Vy lilli li u.i- I
. -i \ > - i y i i y i ? -Iii ., . ?? j i - '
I?*. I (.?igln i ..u-i .-?||.|
W hy . I.", nu i lu- i* in :: v i' i - j
j*;, il. i >.i ni. Wo ?i.Ul I OVI 11 lui. II -t tin- '
III*. ***** .? i .?.*.**? Tin? ."-Uli?* :I!MI !'..!IIII
?Iii cor.? (Inn i j li ;i - i- I lu* lu?-i lies- iii ni I
I .i k 11 .lu1 bark l?ll lt. limit I.ike I f|i'
i'il?.*t' i li it < If course we 'in .di Wi
en ii tn keep it down: 1 III in lin munn
t:iiii- nearly every, tiny that I uni n<?t
engaged in .i < "Utt ami steadily bring
in tin- ea fi ?- Xevert lu les.- we hardly
botlni t li '-i-t'i ?'.nws. l'ii' i c i - a L I - u
ii tuati'l l'ir li'jnor. ivliii 'i iL'1 ili-pi ii
. ny e in t nu el. ii'iil foi? '.ari 'i- ret
-'.II-. (''?ir mn! reasnn. 'in- .onttuti;tjL
ul' t Ile peupji: l- Iieji?iitl itu iii
pcM.?afy I . : i - i 111 v- - ami the ni; ut sale.?
ave winked at ;:i"i even ebr??'oj raged',
'piie .-'tat i . di - I i j le rte.- an- afraid ni I he
Slate hua rd in selling tn ti.":- and
. : i-ti I'?erie- mil.-ide "I' I lie Stale ?ire
a fra id nf their st nil bei ut.' s-i/od if
tiny -inp t" tigers. I '..n-' j.un'. ! s
the moonshiners have a inuuupu!? ti r
l ?ie !...'. !. t rude,
'"As tn ilie milliner ol' ease-;, thal is
hardly au indication, jlecout riilinus
nf th'- euiirt have made it extremely
difficult tn bring a ease. Uefurc a
warrant is issued now a probable ea-e
under ailidavit has tu he made mit.
You've gol to show who your witnesses
are and prove hy their allidavits what
they will swear tn. which gives the
friends nf the defense opportunity tn
direct the evidence at the linul trial.
The detection of fraud on the part ul'
ntlieers led tu restrictions. l p iii
North Carolina tho moonshiners used
tn work this trick: Ki nd i tig thal a
case was guim: tn he brought against
him thc moonshiner would .'JU tn the
nlliiM r and acknowledge that lhere was
a clear case against him, and give the
names of some of his relatives as wit
nesses, say ing they knew enough io
convict him ami would ask that the
nther witnesses In* dismissed as their
being summoned was unnecessary.
The officer, having made his fee by
bringing the case, would comply and
when the ease came up fur trial these
relations would know practically noth
ing aud thc moonshiner would get, oil'
There has been a great amount of
fraud in bringing eases and in forging
claims lately both in the States around
here and bordering on the upper Mis
sissippi and thc departtneut has been
compelled to adopt a lot of red tape
not used heretofore. This is a hard
ship to many good and faithful men
in the service by causiug delay in ?e
cognition of claims and extra work in
making out reports, but probably it
cuts off a deal of rascality. For in
stance, in my report now I have to
put down the exact time 1 leave to
make a raid, how long I am out, ex
actly what I did. In short I have to
be painfully accurate and exact in
everything." - (irecncillr Ar< tc*.
.. - mm ? m - - . -
What Denomination
Jay Cooke, in IStil?. mid the writer
thc following: ''One day when I was
putting government bonds upon the
market, I was greatly annoyed by the
clerks telling me that there was an
old man in the office who would do no.
business with them and must see me.
To get rid of him I went out. Ile
said :
" 'Mr. Cooke. I have three thou
sand dollars in gold in this bag. I
can't do anything with it iu thc town
where I live; they are circulating
grocers' checks and everythiog else
for money, and I am frightened be
cause I think I will be cheated if I
dispose of it. Will yo i tell me on
your word of honor if these bonds are
sound and right ?'
"I replied : 'If they are not right,
nothing is right. I nm putting all I
have in the world in them.'
"After further conversation the
man concluded to take them.
" 'What denomination will you have
them in?' I asked.
"This was too much for the man.
Ile had never heard that word used
in connection with business. He
sc.atchcd his head, and said:
'* 'You may give me five hundred
in Old School Presbyterian, to please
the old woman; but ? will take the
heft of it in Baptist.' "
How to Prevent Pneumonia.
Yon are perhaps aware that pneu
monia always results from a cold or
an attack of la grippe. During the
epidemic of Ia grippe a few years ago
when so many cases resulted in pneu
monia, it was observed that the attack
was never followed by that disease
when Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
was e.sed. lt counteracts any tendency
of a cold or la grippe to result in that
dangerous disease. It is the best
remedy in the world for bad colds and
la grippe, livery bottle warranted.
For sale by Hill Orr Drug Co.
_ K .?^?_I g Po? infants and Child!!
MSC ^^^'j.t-T'
*** -! ?lwevs gough!
?j AN'c?ciablviPicparationfarAs
il sifiitlating Ll!2Foo:lcu(iHc^ula
Ijiig Uve ?Stoi:;;^ CH! Dowels cl'
SHOES TO BEAT THE BANU.
W E don'l have lo talk through i>iir huts lo SHJI our Shoes. Tho Shofwuillthi
MM ve* if >oii will on y t?ko th? irouhl? io look at, them. t?aality ami I'riea-t do
work. We just stan? iwddo and ti rio. Yon don't have to buy from usjiwbeca
wo grin Wo have to grin, H ny way, because, wo can't help it. Whun ourSb.os
almost double be?t >enr's we don't bave to look Nad-eyed ami Imposed upon, luxa
we can't. h?? come en to the place where tho bruin lout fe.?t in Auderwiti I'nutity
shod, ami Sf we can't Sime you and your family, yo.ir HOU John ami his family,
be because yon rather go barefooted.
1?. ?. - '.Ve eau also "Shoo" th? Inner-man with such substantials m DEAJ
PATENT t'LUUKaiid J K NO. 2 COKKKK that will make his mauili water!
clothe comler'ablv tho leus of Hie outer-ioaii willi a I'irst Class, Capital ;uin; ijj
{Ionian's PAN IS lor Sixty Cents that will just elevate ibo sup-rautiun'.nl lineup
the infantile shrubbery.
?St RATUFF!
X. Ot Parti s owing us on Note or Account will sav? them*n vn-uvai-iieil
expense l?v si Illing op Kum? heforo December 1st. If yon lee ?ii't ?>>- I HHHI rfJ
fr??III us wo ure la king to Yl>?:. DKiN it KAl'M.Fq
IS what every persou w*i)ts and 1 can supply there. 1 make
it a point to keep pure, fresh Good?, auil can please the
most fastidious in both quality and price. Just now the hnuse
keeper finds it difficult to supply the table, but if you will gift
me a call I can help you, as I keep
PLAIN and FANCY SEQGEEIES of Every Bescriptl
My Stock of lauued doods eau*t bo Excelled.
FRUITS of all kinds in s-a on, ami when you want tn raukcii]
Cake I can supply your demands.
Fiue line ..f CONFECTIONERIES TOBACCO and CIGARS.
Just received a f esh lot of POTATOES. CABBAGE, Etc.
Yours to please,
Free City Delivery. Gk "P. T3I<jhB
O. D. ANDERSON & BRO.
Strictly in it ai Lowest
Possible Prices.
Two Cars Texas Red Rust Proof Oats,
And all the country raised Oats vou want. 'I'liesehj
go, no matti r what Calton soils at.
Pure Wheat Flour Rock Bottom Prices.
We can give Country MerehantH clone ligures on
CHEESE. OYdTERS.
TOMATOES, SALMON,
SAKDINES and
TOBACv O.
Everybody known we beat the Town on SHOKS, and we propre to ii
our reputation.
BAGGING and TIES guaranteed prices.
;5B5r* Send us your orders.
YOUTH for Business,
?. S3. ANDERSON & BRI
THE OLD, RELIABLE
Furniture Stor
OF
e. F. TQMJY A. SOI
Still in tile Lead !
They have the Largest Stock,
Best Quality, and
Certainly the Lowest Prices !
OTHERS try to get there, hut they miss it every timev
New, beautiful and select Stock of Furniture, &c, arriving cve^
and at PRICES NEVER HEARD OF BEFORE.
Here you have the Largest Stock ; therefore, you eau geo 'ust ?bj
want.
Here you have the Best Grade of Furniture ; therefore, you
Goods that will last
Here you have the very LOWEST PRICES ; therefore, yac ^
big money.
t?f Come along, and we will do you aa we have been doing for
forty years-sell you the very best Furniture for the Tory lowest prie
B8U The largest Stock in South Carolina and the Lowest P"<*|
Southern States.
New Lot Baby Carriages Just Received.
C. F. TOLLY <?? S0|
Depot Street, Anderson, S. C.