The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, February 08, 1899, Page 2, Image 2
Ol R SOLDI!-:
< .) 1 HMM' ( ' U S t < > 1 H S S?
t . . ',,:>>'
?v?-i-iii?du>. ?-Jai,, -.' At ri
w i'.ie. J ?in. -1. thc commander ol ' ?. |
i Second South Carolina \ .dunleer-,,
w .- notified t;.:i rep??rt with i?'-.II
I any to th- provost marshal ol' Ha
bana pr..-, ince. Maj. Hassell li. Harri
The prospect or- ak in the
ni :, ?tony ol camp cleaning and drill
in j was liaijed with satisfaction by
j] -... II. and ihe ojliccis wore no less j
I . i ..i. particularly as iii their solee
t. ; i compliment was, not only im
;.. 1 but pointedly: ox pressed:
\S\> wore si s ? j g ii od iq take o li argo -I
.'. iowa <?! (Jticmadqs, indicated "ii
t :nap nf (.'nba as Manahan they
.in ijie and ti..- sallie > but llio portion
ti. xi thc sea hears the hitler natue
'I he Ano rican sqldl.e.r pniiioiiuces it
"'Maryagna apo he has liol nundi
difficulty in remembering that name,
i .:. : he t'uban populace call it "Mar
i 'W. lt i - . 111 i I < - mar the . 'amp
. thc ?south Carolina Kegiuicnt and
iii, it In miles from liai.ana. There
a" -?ve ra I -Heels closely built Up,
hilt the town spreads over a ooh.* id? r
al ie an a. being .; mib' and a half
t The walls in many places are
br ' i ann crumbled and soin?' ..!' the
h ; i'.di ti fis might number their age hy
? ... l.tuvies, t'- judge by ?-.\ pern-pees,
le.'.t then-are ?ohio residences indioa
I ? ii ii luxury- i?iie-.-tqry alni covering
a-, acre "f ground. Among these i
ti.-! .me ol' I. i eil. I .ec, now occupied
ir? iiiin ami hi- family. The most
formidable looking building is tin: old
Spanish jail while there is a church,
willi ii s Tour rusty bolls ?ni ibo four
si ies of i lie tower. Several .hotels,
without sleeping accommodations, a
temporary "sub-treasury" of I'nelo
Sam s. two new L'overnment'warohous
Cs, a railroad station, army hospital, j
ami about ."?.. American and Cuban !
rum mills constitute the "public i
buildings.
I hiring a light rain on thc evening
of thc li 1st we pitched our camp in the i
mud at the north end of ?Quemados,
commanding a (itu- ocean view and thu
can:]> of one division of this corps, j
(hi Sunday morning, simultaneously i
with: thc experimental opening ol':
every saloon in town, wi-took charge, j
being promised a reinforcement of ?il ?
men .ii tho morrow. As the soldiers
are shut nut ol' Habana, this town is
tho -tamping ground for the Seventh ;
Anny Corps, and the fact that when I
ih>- Spanish built jails they were made
of magnificent capacity was appreei- ?
ated ;ast Sunday. The experiment was j
sufficient; hereafter saloons will bc |
closed Sundays.
When application was made to pro
vost headquarters for written instruc
tions-running a town on tho Kassian
or Chinese plan being somewhat out of
my line- 1 was told that instructions
might come later, but whatever 1 did
would bc right, "you can do no
wrong." Of course, there is no trou
ble with thc natives: they are perfect
ly obedient, and I have not seen one
under thc influence of liquor, but hun
dreds, perhaps thousands, ..f Ameri
cans, childly toughs, have followed
th anny to this province. Those
who had the capital have opened sa
loons, while gamblers and fakirs a?'C
rushing their trades: then, besides
the soldiers, there are ."lilli civilian
teamsters. With the barkeepers of
the American cities' tenderloin dis
tricts catering to titi- das- of custom
ers, there is considerable satisfaction
in holding a "royal straight flush" ev
ery deal and being indiff?rent to any
kind of bluffs. There generally is
room for American money here, and
there must be splendid openings for
legitimate: investments, lt is to bc
hoped that they will quickly conic and
occupy thc field, not leaving commu
nities to bc "Americanized'' through
the impress and influence of these
buzzards and carpet-baggers.
The rules for thc preservation of or
der and protection of thc soldiers in
spite ol' themselves are very strict,
and methods of enforcing them severe.
They are allowed to drink beer and
light wines, and anyone selling a sol
dier whiskey or other liquor may have
his place closed, temporarily or per
manently, as the provost officer in
command may 'decide, or he may he
put in jail by the .-ame authority. As j
a rule, soldiers arc not allowed in Cu
ban saloons, wdierc rum and acqiiadi
cute are the chief drinks. Two drinks
of the latter makes thc American
crazy for a day, producing afterwards !
something like nervous prostration.
Cubans seem to drink it without trou
ble. Hut then, as an old resident here
an.t an observant man remarked, "for
eigners know how to drink; two can ;
split a bottle of wine and go home:
tho American, as we soe him in the
saloon, wants to drink a barrel-he
rarely kflows when he has enough:"
Hut there-I did not intend to write
anything that might be entitled '.Ten
Pays in the Barrooms ol' Two Coun
tries.-'
The most important work of tho
company to guard ab?.ut half :> mil
lion dollars of American money. 'This i
is in the paymaster's office. There !
are no vaults, and tho money would bc j
ll IX (TBA.
(Ml : i ! ( ^ I H ' 111 il i 1 ' > S.
.Sr./'. .
i II secure without :. formidableguard.
Corporals limn-on ami Antibus, with
-ix men. arc doing tin- werk l"r the
first week, living in the treasury.
. i o\ eminent warehouses ami Gen.
Lee's resilience an ti., other proud
neut places guarded, tl.o latter being
chi? Hy complimentary ur to keep -ol
uh r- .it .i distance.
Sorgt. T. I! Carroll, with -even
men. is ea tn pei) at 'nra/ io. a village
with a blockhouse and two saloons, a
mile from '?nemados, i.ut nuder the
.iaiiui jurisdiction. And it is right
lo io that Company I '.?ann- t-? have
raptured th-- 'ir-: blockhouse taken bj
the Seventh An,.y Corp-.. Midnight
Sunday, a iiies-enger brought word
that tin- blockliOU.se, which wa- on an
estate near a private collcgi lor ladies
had been occupied by tl.. Americans,
who were, accord i tl/-' t.. tho -i noa nt .
' a raisin ln-11. 'barricading tin open
in/ ami defying authority. A patrol
wagon quickly reached tin- place. Thc
holders ol' the lort Iud a _..i lin ig
ami re Cu sud t" give it up. barring ti e
little heavy window on thc in-iu ?. \
lillie kin Ul si; i- all righi ?iga i ii s i bullets,
bill lin- window L'oiildii t -tami ch inks
of ."?U pounds fd i". !... lt .raved in in
I wo minute- tin- bm. - loll .v.. -i t lo
rocks ami to,.I. 11.-- ton/I. - "?' t ... .;
fia t. Two .,; t h rei eiaiim-i i id:
American -ai!"l- and other.- di?
charccd soldiers, ont they ?ill went :?.
jail.
lt is ;i pity lin- histories ?d' -onie ol
these old buildings cannot be readily
ol.taine.i. When in thc ? pmimrm.
jail. with walls a yard thick, every
room a fort by itself, you would like
to turn back the pages ol it- history
during the centuries win n tin- -.'.ord
has been in less merciful hand.-. In
thc great cell to the right now iii-.- an
American thc murderer of bi-oom
rade in arms. To the a lt ..! tl. > a
trance is the room where nairn - ol
prisoners are recorded bofmc. tin .\ arc
thrust behind the heavy non door-.
Here is a bronze ?ul; stand, 'bi . tm
side the ink bottle: tin- other peppi i
box covered sand hobicr. recalling to
tho present generation that blotting
pads were not always in existence ami
that sand was unce used to absorti
ink. ( >n the oppositi side ot' tin
building is another entrance, when
ogress was had to the upper storj by
spiral stairs. The centre post ol' thi>
stairway, extending to the ceiling ol
thc second story, looks like a braiil
that had been twisted, broadside al
ways outward, into a li litre corksi tew
closer examination .-how.- thc houri
and half thc outer part ol' ?i tree haw
been carved away, with what inu.-l
have been infinite labor, leaving tlii:
spiral, hollow column.
Half the space once devoted to of
lie i als has been partitioned oil, am
here a school for sinai! children ts ii
full blast Puring school hours yoi
couldn't miss it il' you passed wi th i i
:i block. According to custom, tin
children study aloud, each seeming n
lm trying tn read laster than thc otb
er. No wonder it is a fast talk i nt
race ! Their methods are so difieren
from ours; all tim corners ol' the roon
will bc occasionally occupied by lilli
tots who have missed their lessons o
misbehaved. The teacher, a youie
man. tempts Americans t i' pull'' bin
for disorderly conduct, he ?torin; soa
the pupils.
Our boys sec strang'' thing's sonic
times. ( hie of tim patrols, a youn
fellow from ridgefield county, on emu
ing oil duty yesterday reported seri
ously, mysteriously and wonderingly
'Capt., 1 just saw a man dressed u
in woman's clothes and shoes, and li
had on something over his head.
Thinking some malefactor or convie
might be attempting tn escape, 1 quoi
tioned thc soldier, and I soon astmi
tained front the description of th
''woman's clothes" that Triar Tuck wa
abroad.
Thc ancient cemetery at I Maybe,
short distance from this town, has rt
ecntiy become a place of great intel
cst to soldiers. A few evenings ago
saw a sergeant of the Second Sont
Carolina volunteers coming into cam
with a skull in one hand and a ri
bone in another. Orders have no
been issued excluding soldiers fro:
the vicinity. As I understand, if tl
rout for lots in a cemetery is not pal
for a certain time, the graves arc di
up. the bones being thrown out ar
scattered around, to make place ft
new occupants. Hut they do not wi?
these boms removed. Under tl
surface strain of earth there is a sol
rock many feet thick, ami. as grav
digging is a slow process, they aro di
ahead of the demand, or, rather, blas
ed out. for they are all blasted. Tin
are made in trenches, six or scvi
feet wide, the rollins, laid side 1
side, ".are only lightly covered wit
earth when first interred. When
trench receives its quota, all the can
is then thrown in and tjte craves mar
cd.
An instance of tin- acuteness
Uncle Saurs route agents was sho\
a day or two ago. winn;: letter a
. tri -sid to "So-and-So. <'... 1?, liaban
Cuba," was delivered to the i coy
. ? .
1 '< [jiu J ? ' -t IJHU'kc'i ' i.' -. ? 1 ' ? " ' .. j
. ?!... postal people ./ '.-ii. .: : ul
it >lt?<ui'i coull: I" titi' < '.!. . li'..1.: ;i!
ni-;iit.
I -end, u:iiic?- atlotuei e vi'ri pods I
<)1 open cotton picked from i bush I'!
feet higb. growing out pf ii.- centro ol
u cactus lio?ig< in i?uemados. I up
pose tho tSt'tff'x readers know all ki rd H
?d' flowers are in lull bloom '.ere that
. corn and tobacco, -weet ? ulul?os,
.'taiiyah's," ogg plants, etc.. aro
.-Towing in various -lave-. Wc iee
I ibo vegataldos in every stage except
j tho last- "ii the table.
W. Iv. ?i.
I ii ad narteiSecond South Caro
lina l.cgiineiit, Camp Columbia, Ha
bana. (,'u ba, dan. To-day bas
been tho holtest day wo have yet bad;
lb reto)ore lhere has been a .-till wind
blowing, but t" day lia.-* been as sultry
a- our -lune day.-, line hardly thought
he would experience such a day in
.I annul y.
Tbc N iiiiii lllinoi.? boys arc again
our m i'/li hors. They have moved
. ' . ick "I us, oin guard lines touch
ing. We aro'glad i- have il.cm u
oiir ni :.t door neighbor.*, fiver at Sa
vannah they were the ones closest to
us. and our relations were "i th.
t'rii nd I i.e.* t naiur? Tiley have always
shown lheiu-eivo.-i in be gentlemen,
ami Lave always ihqm.'ht ;i great
d al ' !' thc j,qy.. from tho ('altin lt" |
S tate1.
li..? u .1 - :i < Iii . I a pe: i ?I ..'ich t
lb ea in pi se veral 'lay s ago bj one ot'
. dir neigh! ir front the Ninth, staling
that o l'i i.ruao 1.? thc Seeimd South
Carolina would pass iii review in
Washington. 1>. c. ?-jo.far. Col..Jones
knows iioihing oj this review. Ho ba
il..: . -t received uti} orders t" that ef
fect.
booking over the l"> r> of Cuba
yesterday we caine acres.* thc following
paragraph .
"A reporter for tho T!im& of Cuba
- i sit - tho camp every day. and muster
out is lin ail absorbing topic. Tho men
eal with it. sleep with it. and drink
with it, out at the eales. Une of their
number applied tu their Senator from
his State la-t week imploring him to
obtain a disc' arce for the private w!.o
had had a plentiful supply of occupa
tion as she is managed in (.'nba. The
Senator replied that ti" discharges are
being considered on account of the
plan- now alnio.-teompleted fur sending
the volunteer rcgimeuts back to a ren
dezvous for muster out. This glad
tiding has caused great jubilation in
thc regiment, where that happy mis
sive was received, and the men are
gathering t heil machetes and the oth
er Spanish and Cuban relics together
for linal packing, and have thrown
their Spanish grammars and transla
tion books into the cactus fences,
and are looking forward to the day
when they will again mingle with their
friends at homo and resume their for
mer avocations."
This is glad news to us all if it is
. oily true. We will all look forward
with joy when the transports will be
gin to arrive in Habana harbor to car
ry us back to thc States. We have
.-cen enough of service of thia kind.
There is no pleasure in "sunning
rocks" and digging sinks under a
tropical sun. We have had no trou
ble from tho natives, and are likely to
have none. All the military work we
have :.> do is to do provost duty
walebing I'liitod Stales soldiers. We
all feel that weare able to take care of
ourselves, but we want a discharge
before we begin it. Think of a grown
man having to get a pass from division
headquarters before he can go into
Hal-ana. or a pass from the colonel if
he will go accompanied by a commis
si..nod officer. This kind of treat
ment makes a man a menial, and un
fits him for lifo after the army is dis
banded. As I can gather, it is.the
desire of the great majority of thc
men to return to a climate where the
sun is not so hot. May thc day has
ten, is our prayer,
There was a slight rain last night,
and one of tho tents having tho guy
roj.es too tight the pegs were pulled
up. The occupants of tho tent
thought some of the mon had been
guilty of pulling them up. Some one
then accused one of his comrades of
doing it. This he denied, and a
".-crap" almost followed. Tho men
in thc company met just after dinner
and organized a court and proceeded
to try thc one accused of pulling the
? pegs. Kach side had its lawyer. Thc
"State's attorney" was a corporal from
another compauy. The jury brought
j in a verdict of not guilty as to thc de
! fondant, but recommended that the
i prosecutor bc tried for attempting to
get up a "scrap" in tho company. The
! trial comes off to-morrow.
Sergt. McMillan, of Co. M, who has
been confined to thc hospital for some
time with mumps, is with his company
again.
Co. M has had an addition lately.
Trixie, a small Cuban dog. or perro,
has conic in as a mascot. She has
already forgotten that she at onetime
belonged to [a Cuban, for she never
\ misses an opportunity ol running af
, ter one and trying lo take :i piece out
j of his -alf.
The men have ju-t undergone an
other vaccination. lt is beginning to
a -litfi/. .* ' I' f l:?.' ! "\ - -ay at
ti., j rather ! ??v -ii.a?m \ ' hah
uti ot Kur v ?OM-i o nil.o.
Th ero ure twenty ?at mm- from
this regiment in t!.. hospital with
IllUlllpS.
('amp Colunbia. IluhunuCuba. Jan.
'll. Th<- men of tin- regiment uro
circulating another petition ask i ni;
our representatives in Congress to usc
their utmost influence to have the
regiment mustered out at an ?'arly
.lute.
There are several reasons set forth
why this should be done. Tin-' men
are mostly funner.-, and would Ii*'' io
get out in time to piaula crop, or they
will bc left high uud <iry when they
are mustered out. Then. too. there is
no chance to suv.- any money, and
there are those at hon..' who ure
d?pendent upon these men for sup
port.
Airain there seem- lo 'rn- nothing
hero to do but to sun the rock-. There
is nothing that can be done. There
i- provost guards at every crook in
the road, and cotise.picntly nothing
can I"- loamed of the people or of the
country except in a very small area.
The men arc uot allowed to visit the
city at ail.
Another is that must of the tuen
have trot enough of anny lite. Tiiey
are realizing that il is most dcinorul
i xi li g to them and they wish to <|tiit.
Then. too. this climate is not healthy,
ami t'Ley do not care to expose them
selves to needless danger, when there
is absolutely nothing ut stake.
1 would have given the text ol' the
petition, lou I could not secure it.
Tl:e-e reasons were gathered from
reading it. They arc all reasons
that have the ring of truth in them,
and should be considered. If the
men were allowed to go around and
sec something of the country and
thereby learn something they would
not mind staying herc for sixty or
ninety days, but as it is, they want to
go home.
The petition is being largely signed.
In some companies very nearly every
man in them have put their autograph.
Fully two-thirds of the names in the
regiment will be on it when it is sent
to Washington.
This afternoon thc writer had an op
portunity of seeing a native funeral,
or rather seven of them. He got u
chance to join a detail to go to the
city after supplies. Ile took off his
non-commissioned officers' stripes and
joined the detail as a private. That
was tho only way he could get off.
While in thc city seven different pro
cessions passed him. In all of them
he saw no women, the processions be
ing made up of men and boys. All of
these were of the poorer class. One
would be surprised to see a funeral
procession go by. The collin is car
ried upon the shoulders of four men,
with a sipuad of about two dozen men
and boys accompanying the remains.
These are laughing and talking and
sometimes drinking and smoking. On
none of those this ufiernoon did there
uppeur to bo any sorrow. These bod
ies ure laid to rest in the cemetery
where their habitation, is rented.
When the rent runs out, if it is not
promptly puid, the bones ure broken
up and thrown in a pile in one corner
of the place. The -rent must be paid
or the bones will not be allowed to
rest. S. F HANK I'ARROTT.
ma % m ? -
lt is truly wonderful that Lon
don's vast population of ti,21)l,(5l?7,
located on only 15113 square miles,
should have in 1SP7 so slow a death
rate as 17.7 per one thousand. This
rate is not greater thau that ol' a fairly
healthy rural district. Kngland well
deserves the name -he hus received as
the birthplace and home of sanitary
science and practice, thinks the Lon
don Lancet.
When Baby's 111.
When the little loved one is sick, when
its brow is fevered, its pulse rapid, its
features pinched with pain and there are
great blue circles under its eyes, the mother
hovers about the bedside, and with anxious
eyes tries to read thc meaning of every ex
pression upon the physician's face.
A woman may save herself almost all of
this worriment about her children if she
will but take proper care of her womanly
health daring the period of gestation. A
child horn of a mother who is thoroughly
healthy in a womanly way will almost
unfailingly be healthy and robust. Dr.
Tierce's Favorite Prescription acts directly
on the delicate and important organs that
bear thc burdens of maternity. It make's
them well, strong and vigorous. It heals
all internal ulceration and inflammation.
It stops debilitating drains. It fits for
motherhood and insures a healthy child.
Thousands of happy mothers have testified
to its merits. No honest dealer will urge
you to take an inferior substitute for the
little added profit it may afford him.
"A laity told me that Dr. Tierce's Favorite
Prescription was good to take when with child,"
writes Sirs. Annie Simpson, of No. i.t. Chelms
ford Street. Lawrence. Mass. : "I wits suffering
terrible pains, and was linallie to fret nbout the
house without being in misery. 1 began toking
Dr. Pierce's favorite Prescription and the first
bottle greatly relieved me. 1 toole three lioltlcs
before my b?bv wan l?orn, nt which time I .suf
fered very tittle. Tin- baby has been healthy
since bi i th, and is now three mouths e>!d and
weighs fifteen pounds. When my older child
was I,..rn I sneered terribly. 1 don't know how
to thank Dr. Cit ree enough."
They dou't simply give temporary relief,
but ave a permanent cure-Dr. Pierce's
Pleasant Pellets for constipation. They
nc ve i gripe, tine little ''Pellet." is a
gentle laxative and two a auld catharic.
( ellon Plant Produc?s.
Loss than VM years ago the seed of
the cotton plant were considered as
practically worthless.
To-day the seed are used in manu
facturing several different varieties of
food products, the production of these
articles is one of the South's greatest
i ndustrics.
Now it is announced that other by
products of this plant besides cotton
seed oil, oil cake and meal for feed,
and hulls for fertilizer are being de
veloped. One of these is the use of
th?' fiber of the stalk for the manufac
ture of bagging.
According to the Scientific Ameri
can, a machine has actually been per
fected for working the stalks into
bagging. Some of this cotton stalk
bagging has b.'cn tested and pro
nounced excellent for the purpose.
"It is strong and clean and dues not
readily ignite. Five tons of imod
stalks will yield about 1,500 pounds
of first-class liber. At this rate the
anuna! crop will produce all of the
bugging needed to wrap the lint and
leave a surplus to be devoted to uthor
purpose's. It is predicted that ma
chinery for inuking course mattings
from the liber will bo produced shortly.
The Scientific American expressed the
opinion that if the experiments, which
arc now being made with the liber are
successful it will not be many years
before thc industry will assume gi
gantic proportions."
The Chattanooga Tradesman in com
menting upon this also mentions that
"tin? root of the cotton plant is being
experimented with for its chemical
properties. The root of thc Egyptian
cotton plant yields a drug that has the
properties of ergot, and thc root of
the American plant, under chemical
munipulatiou. has yielded u similar
product. This has not yet been fully
developed. A difference has been de
tected in the properties of the roots
of different kinds of cotton, long sta
ple and short staple, hence it is prob
able that several drugs may be ex
tracted from the different varieties
of roots."
With cottou stulk bagging and cot
ton root drugs among thc possibilities
of the future, it would seem that every
portion of this great Southern plant is
of vulue. If the staple itself only
brought ubout two cents more per
pound the Southern farmer would in
deed be blessed.-Honiton Post.
The Terrors of a Real Blizzard.
A great deal hus been said aud writ
ten ubout those blinding storms that
sometimes sweep with resistless fury
thc western prairies, but without the
experience no one, however vivid his
imagination, can fully picture to him
self such u storm, much less realize
all that u blizzard means. j
The penetrating wind, roaring and
howling, shifting quickly from one
point to another, whirls thc sharp
particles of snow into the traveler's
eyes and nostrils, blinding and smoth
ering. It often obscures in a few mo
ments every vestige of tract, render
ing travel difficult and dangerous.
The wolves and foxes that roam the
prairies, rf far away from scrub or tim
ber when a blizzard bursts upon them,
burrow ut once into the drifts and
there abide till the storm is over.
The grouse, or prairie chicken, fly
ing swiftly, presses its wings to its
sides and plunges head first into thc
snow and there is perfectly sufe.
The Indian of the plains if caught
away from his tepee (tent) scrapes
away the snow with his foot and wrups
his blunket closely aboi ' him, creeps
into thc hole he has made and is
quickly drifted over.
But the white man caught out on
the prairie often becomes utterly be
wildered, wanders around until com
pletely exhausted, sinks down and
, perishes with the cold.
Ko Time to Fool Away.
The world will be glad of the as
surance that there arc some men in
the humblest walks of life who can't
be bought with the clink of gold. A
Hoosier who lost his wife a few weeks
ago was waited upon a few days after
the funeral by a man who introduced
himself as the agent of a Cincinnati
medical college, and he went right to
business by remarking :
"Mr. Blank, neither of us has any
time to fool away. Your wife is dead
and buried. I want her body for the
.college. I could snatch it any dark
night, but that's not my way. How
much cash will buy thc body ?"
"Digc'cr up at your own expense ?"
"Yes."
"How much'll you give ?"
"Fifteen dollars."
"And the coffin ?"
"Oh, that's no use to mc."
"Stranger," said thc widower, "you
skip or I'll shoot. If you think I'm
fool enough to throw a $40 coffin in
these hard times you haven't sized me
np k'rect. Let the old woman stay
thar. She isn't costing anything for
board and lodgings, and there ain't ?
penny out for repairs."-Nur York
Sun.
-- "1 am losing flesh," said the
butcher, "?as the dog stole a sirloin
steak'.
?Vcgct?blePrcparatio?forAs
si?hilatiiig ibcToodandRegula
liiig thc Stomachs aiulB?weis?f
1 NI AN ?S / C HI Ll) K KN
Promote s Digestion.Cheerful
ncssand Rcst.Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mirerai.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Jtaa'pc af OU BrSAl'iUELPITClOIi
J'umpfan Sa J. '
?lx.Sauu* *
RothdUSJts -
yinitt Sn d *
Jippcmiint -
J h Oirbo/iattSoia. *
ft?rm Strti -
Clarified Sugar -
Wnif/ymit f?ara".
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Fcvcri sh
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
. At b mootbs old
J5 DOSES-35 Cr. IN rs
itXACT COPVOF V/HAPPEB.
CASTOR
For Infants and Ch.i^
The Kind You Hav
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
ll
Kiol
You Ha?
Always Bough]
THC CENTAUR COM PAT, Y. f?rwropr.
OSBORNE & CLINKSCALES
Are Sole Agents at Anderson, S. C., for
Iron King and Elmo Stove|
Garland Stoves a?d Ranges,
AIND THE
Times Line of Cook Stoves.
The above Stoves are bought in Car Lots direct from the ruauulactu
Thus we save "middleman's" profit, and alsc get cheaper freight rates,
terners who buy Stoves from us get tho advantage of this.
We carrva well-selected stjck of FANCY CHINA, PORCEI
GOODS, CHINA DINNER SP/TS and TEA SETS. Just the thiug
Christmas Presents. Cal' ou us.
OSBORNE & CLINKSCALKS,
The Sole Agents for Iron King Storl
?er's Almanac
CALL
D ?.?ET uNE.
EVANS PHARMAC
O. D. ANDERSON & BRO. (
Strictly in it at Lowest I;?
Possible Prices. ?,
Two Gars Texas Red Rust Proof Oats, Hf1
And all tho country raised Oats you warn. Tjje?ebSH1^
go, no matter what Cotton Bells at. [Hal
Pure Wheat Flour Rock Bottom Prices, fr
We can givo Country Merchants close figures on- Bur.
CHEESE. OYSTERS, BT
TOMATOES, SALMON, jBDg
SARDINES and MT
TOBACCO. \mSsu
Everybody knowe we beat the Town on SHOES, and we propose to
our reputation. WB\"
BAGGING and TIES guaranteed prices. H '
#?r Send us your orders. S,aD
Yours for Buslnees, ? ? bu:
THE OLD, RELIABLE I>:
Furniture Stord
OP
Still in tlio Lead !
They have the Largest Stock,
Best Quality, and
Certainly the Lowest Prices !
OTHERS try to get there, hut they miss it every tim?.
New, beautiful and select Stock of Furniture, &c, arriving eferjj
and at PRICES NEVER HEARD OP BEFORE.
Here you have the Largest Stock ; therefore, you can get mst wi
want.
Here you have the Best Grade of Furniture ; therefore, yo?
Goods that will last
Here you have the vSfy LOWEST PRICES ; therefore, yen af
big money.
S6T* Come along, and we will do you as we have been doing f?r
forty years-sell you the very best Furniture for the very lowest prto
S?. The largest Stock in South Carolina and the Lowest Pri#|
Southern States. *
New Lot Baby Carriages Just Received.
C. F. TOLLY ?& SOI
Depot Street, Anderson, S. C.
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