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CHANGE IN YANKEE SKULL .Prof. McGee Says it Has Altered in the [Last Hundred Years. Sews and Courier. -WASHINGTON, June 23.-';The Amer ican skull is changing in shape; it is growing bigger, the jaw is shortening, and . the facial angle is approaching more nearly to a right angle.' So says Prof. W. J. McGee, of the bureau of ethnology, who has made a more exhaustive study of this subject than any other living scientist. ''My proposition is fairly well illus l:trated;by the portraits of presidents of ths' United States," said the Professor yesterday. "If you will look at a much indoors and wearing hats out of doors, but the absurd fashion of the nightcap affected by our ancestors had much to do with it. "The stature of the American is in creasing-a remark which applies also to other leading peoples of the world. The everyday Yankee is too big for the armor worn by the mail-clad hero of mediaeval history-a fact which has been proved by the simple process of trying on the protective garments of old-time knights. The feats of the ?eries of profile portraits of the Chief j most famous athletes of antiquity are Magistrates, from Washington down, outdone by our college boys. It is a you will find that the facial angle matter of common observation how shdws a steady development. The American women are increasing in forehead of the Father of his Countiy size, so as to vie with the men in had a considerable slant backward, stature. There is every reason, I and the same characteristic is shown think, to suppose that this physical *?n the extant likenesses of other early development will continue through Presidents, whereas recent occupants centuries to come, and the typical of tue office exhibit quite strikingly Anglo-Saxon of the futuro will be the rectangular cranial formation. taller, brawnier and more active than ''This same progressive ?literation is bis prototype of to-day. , observable in portraits of- other cele- "A progressive development of the ferities, following them down through nerves is accompanying the physical the last century, the shape of the head growth I have described, and this is a changing gradually from the retreat- matter of no small importance. It ing type to the full-forehead conform- may he said, indeed, that the progress ation of living statesmen. At the of a people is measured by its advance same time the jaw'of the typical in this respect. Capacity for pleasure American is perceptibly shortening and for pain increases markedly from and the face is becoming less progna- the dull savage to the vivacious Cau tious. In other words, the lower part casian. I might carry the discussion of the face no longer projects so far as into various matters of detail referring, it formerly did. It is easily under- for example, tc the hand, which be stood that the shortening of the jaw comes more useful as the culture of a and the straightening of the face are race rises. , directly connected witt the improve- "Thus among whites the forearm is (inent in the fora of the top-head, better developed anatomically than U "It mair be said in a general way am0D? negroes and Indians, and our iihat the human skull is improving in own hands are superior structurally to shape and increasing in size. As to tbose of our grandparents, owing to the latter point, we observe that the the circumstance that they are exer crania of modern dissecting rooms are CIS*d in a Sreater var?ety of ways, decidedly better developed than those "0ur feet are getting smaller, owing found in any ancient cemeteries or to the habit of wearing shoes, which tombs. Evidently this increase has fcends to reduce -the foot to a single been going on progressively century unifc> as one might say. Of course, after century, and we have been able the normal foot is a fivefold apparatus, to ascertain by exact measurements and has muscles for the separate con that the skull of the Incas of Peru are tro1 of each of the toes. A man who larger than those of prehistoric Peru- goes barefoot habitually has a control vians who lived at an earlier date. In over his toes that is unknown tous, like manner we have been able to com- and the same Principal is illustrated pare ancient with modern crania in ^ a babv> which is able to pick up other parts of the world, and similar objects actually with its toes. Thus results ai? obtained. The skull of an lfc would appear that the human foot, average Egyptian of thirty centuries contrary to the example of the hand, ago had a capacity of 93 cubic inches; 18 retrograding structurally and be the capacity of the negro cranium to- cominS bardl7 more tb?n a single claw, day is 96 cubic inches, and of the so formed as to be walked upon. j Anglo-Saxon 105 cubic inches. Physical development and culture ''The interest attaching to such data ?? together. It is well known that a as these is very great, of course. We Caucasian can do more work than any find that there is a progressive in- savage. He is stronger, fleeter of foot crease of cranial capacity among all aod more enduring under stress of peoples of the world and a decrease labor or hardship. Furthermore, he among none. Hence, generalizing, 'recovers from wounds and sicknesses we may say that the size of the human to wbicb tbe saTge succumbs. Corn brain is steadily becoming greater-a Panson of longevity tables running fact, obviously, of the utmost impor- back t0 old Pompeii shows that we tance in its bearing upon the future llve mucb loD?er tbaa did tbe ancients rrospects of the race, inasmuch as or even our own not distant ancestors, brain expansion necessarily implies and old a8e COMES LATER- OFL the augumented thinking power. Anthrop- whole> mankind is steadily developing ological study has disclosed the fact and improving in all directions, not .that the peoples which inhabit the withstanding the disheartened howls -earth are cultured in proportion to the. of our Pessimistic friends." | -sire of their brains, and, although a J?EXE BACHE. big brain does not always imply the Blood Poison and Cancer Cured by B. .possession of superior intelligence in B* B. Trial Bottle Sent Free. j an individual, there is a marked re?a- Deadly Cancer of the face, neck, .tiou between brain- size and thinking legs lip, eating cancer or sores, cured "ewer where a Urge aggregate of pe, & BVc ^/Seg'&d??H .sons is considered. virulent poison, which causes cancer, "This, however, is practically self- out of thc blood. This is the only -evident, inasmuch as we find that cure and B. B. B. is thc only remedy -among the lower animals those species that can do this. In the same way B. _. , , lt_ , . . ? . B. B. cures Blood Poison whether m .which have the largest brains in pro- herited or acqilired? producing ulcers, .portion to their size are, as a rule, the painful swellings, blotches, pimples, most intelligent. Keptiles, which are copper-colored spots, falling out of the .extremely stupid, possess remarkably bair> 80reV? ^ tbroafc or tongue, . . v_? j scrofula. B. B. B. has made nun small brains, as might be expected, dredg of permaneDt cure9) and ?fi a while the big herbivores, notoriously thoroughly tested, powerful Blood dull-witted, have very inferior cranial Remedy. Cures where all else fails, capacity. In respect to brain-size, Tested for 30 years. To prove its if a man be represented by 100, the ?T;P;"ers' wense,od a .samPle , 1 , v ' . bottle tree to any one who writes tor gorilla may be put down at 3o, the ?fe Large botfcies for saie by all drug orang-outang at 29, and the chimpan- gists for $1, or (> bottles (full treat zee at 28. It is seen from these fig- ment) $5. For sample bottle address ures how vastly superior is tho think- ?Iood Balm Co-> H80 Mitchell St., . r .i i ?i Atlanta, Ga., mg equipment of the human animal, 1- - ? -- merely as indicated by bulk, to that - A hole in his right heel enabled of his cousins, the antropoid apes. a negro workman in the diamond "One curious result of the short- field of South Africa to secrete and ening of the lower jaw is that there is steal gems to the value of $273,000. no longer sufficient room for all of the Tbese be expressed in small parcels of teeth which nature supplied. Conse- fTits to a cousin in King William's quently the wisdom teeth are being Town> ?Q thc extreme south of Africa, crowded out and, because they are no from wbicb Place both recently de longer wanted, they are being made of parted for England, such poor material as to decay at once, A diseased stomach surely under usnally on making their appearance, mines health. It dulls the brain, kills .... - . . o i i energy, destroys thc nervous system, From this fact an inference has been aod 6p7ed?8pos?s t0 insanity and fatal drawn, very absurdly, to the effect diseases. All dyspe, tic troubles are that human beings will become tooth- quickly cured by Kodol Dyspepsia less some day. Of course there is not Cur*. It has cured thousands of ^l. v ti a ~~ c~ cases and is curing them every day. the slightest reason tor anticipating T . ,. b , . 6 * ? Its ingredients are such that it can t anything of the kind. In the same help curing. Evans Pharmacy, way it has been suggested that our _UJ)o you " ^ the ^ descendants are hkely to be bald- who waa goi t0 have a t00tb pallcdf headed-a conclusion drawn mainly liT , , ... . . . . " , " , ... .... j, I dont think deutal parlor is a from the fact that baldness is decidedly JV KM o-i u <T. 41 good phrase. No ? Drawing inorc common to-day than it was a , Mit." m .... room would be better. oenturyago. My opinion is, however, i , t Tj_v?"_t "/! Uc, Mr. and Mrs. li haekamp, hlston, }that baldness has reached its max.- "Hles: ?0oe MUni\? ?oug|? mum, and that it will not bc more rurc 8aved fche life of our little buy prevalent in the future than it is now. when nearly dead with croup." It is an affliction due largely to living Evans Pharmacy. Enemy of Con: Crop. The corn crop of the South is threat ened with total loss by the destructive onslaught of the larger cottou stalk borer, a new enemy that has come to devastate the fields of growing grain. Many letters have been received by State Entomologist Scott from farmers in all sections of the State, and he has received <?uite au interesting collection of the worra and the stalks upon which he finds his existence. The worra is hatched from the eggs of a moth that lays on the young stalk of corn. The period of hatching re quires little more than a week, and the moment the new-born pest opens, its eyes in thc new world he begins boring his way into the heart of the stalk, killing and poisoning the life of the plant. State Entomologist Scott, in an in teresting interview this morning, tells the full story of the worm and the remedy that must bc applied to save the crop from destruction. Entomologist Scott, in speaking of tbe worm that is so destructive, says: ' The larger cornstalk borer is a large white caterpillar, dotted with dark brown spots, which bores into corn stalks preventing the growth of the ears iu young corn and weakening older stalks so that it is readily blown down. It frequently occurs in such numbers in corn fielda that one stalk of corn may bc riddled with twenty or thirty holes. "This insect is quite well distribu ted over the Southern States and fre quently becomes very troublesome, causing a loss of 25 to 50 per cent, of the crop when it occurs in large num bers. Aside from corn it also attacks sugar cane, sorghum, and gama grass or semain grass. "The adult insect is a moth which deposits eggs on young corn soon after it comes up. The eggs soon hatch and the young larva* bore into the stalk from the ground to the third joint and tunnel usually upward through the pith. Corn stalks affected become distorted and do not form ears. i There is a second generation of this insect which bores into th? well grown stalks and so weakens them that they are frequently blown over. This second generation passes the winier in the old corn stalks ready to produce a spring brood to attack the next crop of corn. "Thc remedy for this insect consists entirely of preventive measures. Since the caterpillars over-winter in the old com stalks they can be almost entirely destroyed by burning these stalks in the fall or winter after thc crop is gathered. "Our method of pulling the fodder and leaving the stalks on the ground, j or even cutting the corn and leaving the butts, affords the very best condi- j tions for this insect to hold over the j winter and continue to multiply year after year. The stalks should be dragged off. collected and burned dur- ! ing the fall and winter. ! "'Again, corn should not follow corn on infested lands. A system of rota tion of crops should be adopted, so j that corn will not be planted on the j same land two years in succession. The same is true of sugar cane and I sorghum. Also swamps in which gama grass is growing should be burn ed over every year to destroy thc worm infesting this grass. If these preven tive measures are followed farmers j need not suffer from attacks of the pest."-Atlanta Journal. In The Police Court-Tried and Judg ment in its Favor. Some time ago Judge Andy E. Cal houn, judge of the police court of At lanta, had occasion to pass a sentence that was gratifying to him, and if people will take his advice much suf fering will be alleviated. The judge is subject to nervous sickheadaches and dyspepsia. Here is his sentence: "I am a great sufferer from nervous sick headache and have found no rem edy so effective as Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy. If taken when thc headache first begins it invariably cures." Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale by Wilhite & Wilhite. Sample bottle free on application to Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Co., Atlan ta, (ia. - Thc salary of the State treasurer of Colorado is $0,000 a year and he enjoys thc distinction, which treasu rers don't usually get, of having a higher salary than the governor, the governor's salary in Colorado being .$5,000 a year. Thomas l?hoads, Centcriicld. O., writes: "I suffered from piles seven or eight years. No remedy gave me re lief until DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, less than a box of which permanently cured me." Soothing, healing, per fectly harmless. Beware of counter feits. Evans Pharmacy. - A correspondent thinks that there is something in the American air that inclines people to chew. Men chew tobacco and women chew gum. It is probably because America is a free country, where people do pretty much as they chews. Our baby has been continually troubled with colic and cholera infan tum since his birth, and all that we could do for him did not seem to give more than temporary relief, until wc tried Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diorrhoee Remedy. Since giving that remedy he has not been troubled. We want to give you this testimonial as an evidence of our gratitude, uot that you need it to advertise your merito rious remedy.-G. M. LAW, Keokuk, Iowa. For sale by Hill Orr Drug Co. Liquid Fuel. Thc Sun has announc-id that thc practicability of us&g liquid fuel ou naval vessels is to bn tested on the torpedo boat Talbot, which will conic from Norfolk to New York, where a year will be spent in conducting prac tical trials with different inventions for using petroleum as fuel. It is easy to see that if petroleum may be satisfactorily employed as fuel its usc on torpedo boats will be especially ad vantageous. It is particularly desira ble on torpedo boats that their prox imity should not be revealed by the sight or the smell of smoke. Wheo combustion is perfect on vessels or locomotive engines using petroleum fuel there is not a trace of smoke. It would also be a great advantage to cruisers or other war vessels that are shadowing a hostile fleet to employ a fuel that would not betray their pres ence, for smoke gives ample warning before the vessels from, which it issues come into view. The great advanta ges asserted for liquid fuel are the absence of smoke and the large econo my effected in the storage of oil as compared with coal, and these advan tages are most desirable on warships. It has been found that a much longer duration of supply may be obtained from a given space stowed with petro leum than from the same space stowed with coal, and also that a ton of oil will do as much work as two and a half tons of coal. There seems to be no doubt of the superiority of petro leum over coal as a motive power for engines, provided that it may be ap plied adequately and without waste of its utility. There is nothing new about the use of liquid fuel on locomotives. This fuel has long driven the trains on the Trans-Caspian Railroad, and it is also in use on thc Trans-Siberian. Oil burning locomotives are in common use in southern California, and they are fed from the petroleum deposits that are worked at Los Angeles. Some of the locomotives on the rail road from Bcira, east Africa, to Salis bury, Mashonaland, which was com pleted only a few weeks ago, use oil fuel. All trains passing through thc Arlbueg tunnel in the Alps, six miles long and connecting the Swiss and Austrian Railroad systems, now avoid smoke by using petroleum. It is also used to some extent on the under ground service in London, on the Paris suburban trains and most of the express trains of the Great Eastern Railroad of England, in spite of the fact that it is more expensive than coal. It has been introduced also with success in some Lancashire mills. Sir Marcus Samuel, who is said to be still the only exporter of oil in bulk through the Suez canal, has the great est confidence in the future of liquid fuel, and believes that it will not ouly come into common use on locomotives and steamers, but also that it will be employed for fuel in smelters, as the intense heat that it is capable of gen erating reduces the' most stubborn ores. In a paper which he read re cently before the society of arts, he said that a locomotive burning oil will maintain the same head of steam up the steepest gradients, but the same feat cannot be accomplished with coal, where thc mere firing of che boiler with fuel serves to damp ths furnace. The investigations to be carried out here and those that are iia progress abroad are not for the purpose of as certaining the value of liquid fuel, for that has been demonstrated, but to test the utility of thc various inven tions for applying it. There are a number of these inventions and methods. Sir Marcus said in his paper: "A vast field is open for the ingeuuity of engineers in devising other methods for thc utilization of oil. In fact, almost daily discoveries are being made of means by which liquid fuel may be utilized to greater advantage than any yet discovered, and it would surprise me very much if, with practice, the methods em ployed do not continually improve." Turning from the subject of liquid fuel, it is interesting to refer to the facts mentioned by Sir Marcus, show ing thc prejudice that formerly exist ed against thc transportation of oil in bulk, due largely to the common belief that it was a very dangerous business. A part of the opposition, however, was offered by competing carriers, who were against the introduction of tank steamers. It was some years before steamers carrying eil in bulk were allowed to pass through thc Sue/canal at all, and there was not a port where obstacles were not raised when any attempt was made to introduce oil in bulk not an accident has occurred. Thc government would not permit tanks to be erected on the island of Singapore, but compelled the company to discharge its cargoes on the neigh boring island of Freshwater. More liberal ideas arc now entertained. At Bombay, where permission to land thc oil was not given until two years ago, the tanks arc now placed right among the shipping and thc oil is pumped into tank cars that are run alongside, and thus petroleum is sent to all parts of India.-Neto York Sun. - Some men can make a little mon cy co a long way. A mechanic re cently drew a copper cent out into 5,700 feet of wire. He Kept Hie Sent. A man who had not been to church for a very long time finally barkened to the persuasions of his wife, and de cided to go. Ile got thc family all to gether and they started early. Ar riving at the church there were very few people in it. and no pew openers at hand, so the man led his family well up the aisle and took possession of a nice pew. Just as the service was about to be gin a pompous-looking old man came in, walked up to the door of the pew and stood there, exhibiting evident surprise that it was occupied. The occupants moved over and offered him room to sit down, but he declined to be seated. Finally the old man pro duced a card and wrote upon it with a pencil: "I pay for this pew.'' He gave the card to the strange oc cupant, who, had he been like most people, would have at once got up and left. But the intruder adjusted his glasses and with a smile read the card. Thf.n he calmly wrote beneath it: "How much do you pay a year?" To this inquiry the pompous old gentleman, still standing, wrote ab ruptly : .'Ten pounds. The stranger smiled as though he were pleased, looked around to com pare the pew with others, admired its nice cushious and furnishings and wrote back: "I don't blame you. It is well worth it." "The pompous old gentleman at that stage collapsed into his seat. You can't cure dyspepsia by dieting. Eat good, wholesome food, and plenty of it.-Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests food without aid from the stomach, and is made to CUBE. Evans Phar macy. - With all the gold we are sending abroad just now we are sending people who know how to distribute it. When winter comes 'he vital forces of nature are low. and the tree stands like a solitary monument to the dead sum mer. In the winter of life, active men experience a similar lower ring of vital ity. In some the effect is startling. They loose their grip on life. They seem like monuments of 7\ a buried past. At this crisis there is need of a medicine which will nourish and build up the body, and increase its vital power. Such a medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery. It enriches the blood, purifies it, carries off the clogging waste of the system, increases the nutrition of the body, and produces a sound, healthy condition with abundant vital power and physical energy. David Duggins,* Esq., of Joues, Ohio Co., Ky., writes: " When I bedail taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I think I had nervous or general debility of three years' duration. I took three bottles of the ' Discovery.' During the time I was taking it my sleep became more refreshing and I gained fifteen pounds weight, and also gained strength everyday. It has been six months since I took the medicine aud I still have reasonable health. I am willing to have you publish this, and also ray former letter, if you wish to, and if it proves* to be of benefit to any afflicted person I will feel well repaid." There is no alcohol or other intoxicant in "Golden Medical Discovery,-" neither opium or other narcotic drugs. The dealer who offers a substitute for the "Discovery" is seeking to profit himself, net to help you. Insist on hav ing 1 ' Golden Medical Discover}'. ' ' Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free, on receipt of stamps to cover cost of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for edition in paper cover, or 31 stamps for cloth binding. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. - DEALERS IN - Fine Buggies, Phietons, Surreys, Harness, Lap Robes Whips, and All kinds Buggy Fixtures. Just received another shipment of Bar ber's Fine "New South" Buggies that we want to move nicely and quickly for cash or good paper?. These are nice, nobby, alick, new stvle Roods that will please you. Sold under an absolute guar antee. This is tho bright and beautiful season that inspired the poet to write, "In Spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love " Now, if you want that pretty girl's "fancy" to turn in the sauie direction buya "New South'' Buggy from us. We want you to have one. Von rs truly, VAN DIVER BROS. & MAJOR. If you want Bargains go to. CHEAP JOHN'S, The Five Cent Store. IF you want SHOES cheap go to Cheap John's, the Five Cent Store. For your TOBACCO and CIGARS it's the place to get them cheap. Schnapps Tobacco. '?7tc. Early Bird Tobacco. ."Tic. (Jay Bird Tobacco. 35c. Our Leader Tobacco. 27Ac. Nabob's Cigars. lc. each. Stogies.I for ftc. Premio or Habana.:> for f>c. Old Glory. 8c. a pack. Arbuckle's Coffee lie. pound No. ii Coffee 9c. pound. Soda 10 lbs. for 25c Candies 'ic. per pound. CHEAP JOHN ?3 ahoad in Laundry and Toilet Soaps, Box and Stick Blue in fact, everything of that kind. Good S day Clock, guaranteed for five years, $1.0f>. Tinware to beat tho band. JOHN A, HAYES. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and wliich has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of - and lias been made under his per ?Ff?^-f?- sonal supervision since its infancy. '&??*<?4? Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment. What ss CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drop i and Soothing- Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhcea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething; Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tl ie Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Signature The M You Haye Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY 8TRCCT. WCW YORK CITY. To the Unshod, Bare-oacked, and Hungry Population : HEAR us for oar cause, for our cause is your cause. It is unseemly for a gres and powerful nation to shake from its feet its sandals, to divest itself of its clothing and to scrape the bottom of the flour barrel in its efforts to eko out a living on blackberries and melons. We are no Filipinos. What, then, shall ye wear and wherewithal shall your appetites be clothed ? Verily, if ye would walk in pride, like the strutting peacock, ye must FEEL like strutting. No man putteth on a paper-bottom Shoe, clotheth himself imsboddy raiment and eateth black Flour goeth out to parade himself as a "good feeler.'' But he that wears our all-leather ?1.00 Shoes, buys our Standard Dry Goods and eats only Dean's Patent Flour, ia a hummer with chin-whiskers, and his name shall be Rockefeller, Matbuseiah or "something better.'" We'll SAVE YOU MONEY and a peck of trouble. DEAN & RATLIFFE, THE BARGAIN PRINCES. ?S" Parties owing us for FERTILIZERS will please call in and give Notes for same at once MOLASSES, MOLASSES. IF you need a Barrel of Molasses you can't afford to buy until you have seen us. We have iust received a big lot-all grades-and know we can please you iu both quality and price. Also, new lot of Shoes, Dry Goods and Notions That we will seil cheap, and we have a few Shoes and other Goods that we are s til i selling at 50c. and 75c. on the dollar Here are only a few prices : Muscovado Molasses. 33Jc. per gallon. Good Molasses. 12Jc. per gallon. Good Coffee. ll lbs. for $l.(H?. 40c. Tobacco in 10 lb. Caddies for. 30c. Jeans Pants. 403 Shirts. 152. FLOUR, CORN, MEAT, LARD, Etc., AT BOTTOM PRICES. Yours for Business, MOORE, ACKER & CO., EAST SIDE PUBLIC SQUARE-CORNER STORE. FREE CITY DELIVERY. POE_ Fancy and Staple Groceries, Flour, Sugar 9 Coffee^ Molasses, Tobacco, A.nd Cigars, COME TO J. C. OSBORNE. South Main Street, below Bank of Anderson, Phone and Free Delivery. W. H. Harrison's Old Stand. OUR RECENT TRADE HAS been extremely gratifying and we appreciate tte very liberal patronage. We expect to make it pay you to trade with us, as we give our entire time, thought and energy to our business, and do, perhaps, the largest business, compared with the expense of running, of any Firm in this section, and are on the alert for Cash Bargains for our customers all the time. We want your Cash and Gilt Edge Time Trade, and will make it pay you to give it to us. V.'e are in position to fill all or ders for your hands at prices to please them and satisfy you. Just now we have some Bargaius in FLJOUR. MOLJASSEIS, OOFFBE1 sand TOBACCO, And -irmly believe we can save you money on anything in this line. $S3- NEW DRY (?00DS and SHOES constantly arriving. Yours to moko you a customer. VANOIVER BROS. o. D. mimi & FLOUR FLOUR ! ">i>0 BARRELS. GOT every grade you are looking for. We know what you want, and we've got the prices right. Can't give it to you, but we will sell, you high grade Flour 25 to 35c cheaper than any competition. Low grade Floui 33.00 per barrel. Car EAR CORN ami stacks of Shelled Corn. Buy while it is cheap advancing rapidly ^e know where to buy aud get good, sound Corn cheap. OATS, HA? and BRAN. Special prices by the ton. We want your trade, and if honest dealings and low pi ices count wt will get it. Yours for Business, O. D. ANDERSON & BRO. Now is your chance to get Tobacco cheap. Closiug out odds and ::uds in Caddies.