The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, September 13, 1899, Page 2, Image 2
A SH
.Threadier! I ? v Kev. VV
?j >is<*opJ?1 Chi ireh
Ti \ i "And tiie sea arose }>y rea- j
- m ol' a great wind that blew. So
when they liad rowed about five-aud- j
twenty or thirty furlongs, they see
.1- -us walking on the sea. and drawing
. ii unto thc ship. Hut he said unto
them. 'Il is I. lie not afraid. "-John 1
vii 1H -<?.
Tin' Sea of ij'alilee, or, as it is often
calleo!, thc i.akc of ??cnessaret, was,
: ?:inir the prosperity of thc Holy
Land, a veritable Lake Michigan.
Uer blue waters, restless and i ni pa
lieut, seemed to delight in being toss
od and rolled, and e\en lashed, into
loam and spray by the sudden, violent
winds that would literally dart down
from th<' surrounding heights upon
her sportive waves. Yet all the while
this beautiful Bea was alive with every
manner of craft, bearing the trade
from thc far K?st to thc Custom
House in Capernaum.
And never was a sea furrounded by
a more beautiful country. "Tho
^miling landscape ot Lower Galilee in
vites the easy labor of thc agricultu
ralist, liven thc highlands of Upper
Galilee were not like those of Judea,
sombre, lonely, enthusiasm-kindling,
but gloriously grand, free, fresh, brac
iug. It was herc that Asshur
had dipped his foot in oil. * ' ' In
tlie centres of industry in this fertile
land, ali then known trades were busi
ly carried on: the husbandman pur
sued his happy toil on genial soil,
while by thc sea, with its unrivalled
beauty, its rich villages and lovely re
treats. tin lieberman plied his healthy
.avocation.
Such a >e? as the central setting of
such scenery is enough to inspire en
thusiastic admiration. But the beau
ty of thc sea and thc loveliness of thc
surrounding hill and dale and moun
tain peak, arc thc minor attractions
of this lovely stretch of water. Thc
precious jewels of this sea have caught
the gaze of thc world, and have
brought thc beholders with loving rev
erence upon their knees. It is the
lustre of these jewels that is thc
crowning charm, and these jewels aro
the footprints of Jesus along tho Gal
ilean shores. The central, brilliant
jewel is His footprint in tho middle of
thc sea-shining to teach us a lesson
of faith-assuring us that amid tho
storms of lifo our Saviour is ever with
us.
No spot in all the world is so per
fectly surrounded by the loving and
miraculous works of God as this Sea
of Galilee. On the north coast, He
fed the five thousand. On tho east,
He quieted tue spirit of the maniac,
and restored his mind. On the south,
he fed thc four thousand. Gn the
West, He healed thc sick, restored
sight to the blind, and made the lame
leap as a hart for joy. In the sea
itself, He taught the thronging multi
tude, making thc boat His pulpit,
while tho very waves felt His presence
and obeyed His voioe.
Now it is upon this hallowed sea that
we behold the disciples, separated
from their Master, wrestling with ono
of those frequent wind-storms of Gal
ilee. Darkness had overtaken them;
their journey was but half ended; four
more miles of toil against wind and
wave were before them. No doubt
they longed for the presence of Jesus,
no doubt they thought upon His di
vine powers, and missed His sweet
companionship. It is only natural to
suppose that such thoughts were in
their minds, and that His name was
upon their lips. Little did they
dream that in the darkness and storm
His actual presence was with them.
His outline, when first seen moving
along the troubled waters, startled
their sennes; then eaoh one persuaded
the other of the reality of the appari
tion; fear then sei/.ed them that a
spirit was their visitor; the supernat
ural held them spell-bound. In the
crises of the storm, the stroke of thc
oar lost its vigor, thc steersman slack
ened his grip upon the helm, the wind
and wa,-es began to exercise' a mas
tery over the little craft, when Jesus,
io this hour of peril, called forth, "It
is I; be not afraid."
Oh, the joy of that moment, to re
cognize their Saviour and Friend,
when life seemed lost! Oh, the joy
of such an assurance that .His power
to save teas infinitely grsc.icr than the
?tower of wind and wave to destroy.
We oannot wonder that it is stated
that "the disciples willingly received
Him into the ship." Neither do we
wonder that the waves obeyed thc
Master's voice, and joyfully sped
the little crew to land.
In considering this wonderful scene
in our Lord's life, let us find ground
for courage against coming storms
and tempests. By God's graoe, we
may even now hear hiv voice and see
His form in some tempest that may be
spending its fury upon us.
First: How prone we are to see in
the tempests of life, apparitions,
when really they are manifestations
cf the presence of Jesus, our Lord,
This is thc secret of many of our anx
ious and even harrassing fears and
RM ON
. 'J.1. Caper? in GI'?K?C
. Anderson, S. (
v 2, 1 H?)?).
'lark foreboding-. Tin- world .-till
irreligious enough t>- speak of chauce
and fate and luck, with reference to
our destinies; yes, the world is yet
too far from her '?od to realize that
Ile, indeed, is the infinitely tender.
? loving, jealous father, who plans the
I smallest details in His children's daily
j life.
i And ?o it happens that in our voy
i ag?- over life's sea. when restless
I waves threaten our very existence-in
i t hat fearful hour we see an apparition.
Wc see, as we think, the hand o? fat*
writing our doom-"the odds," as thc
world expresas it, turned against us.
This apparition holds us spell-bound;
there is no strength or courage within
to enable us to advance: despair sei
nes thc heart-shipwreck is imminent.
Ah, it is at this crisis that .Jesus
draws near! But to the discouraged,
to thc faithless, He only appears as a
shadowy thing of dread. So fear
clutches the heart; the form of Jesus
is taken only as au omen of bad luck;
in despair, with fate against him,
many a noble soul has surrendered
his life's bark to the fury of the
storm, and gone down-a lost soul.
Ob, had such an one listened for
thc voice of .Jesus, the omen of fate -
as he took it-would have proven to
bc .Jesus, standing by him, calling
out: "Bc not afraid! it is I! Itte l!
ready to strengthen you, uphold you,
yea, to quiet the storm, to save you!
Only take me into your life's craft."
But, alas! here is where we need the
lesson. We are disposed not to be
lieve that Jesus has to do with our ev
ery care and trial. We arc tempted
to see in our misfortunes only bad
luck or chance or fate, rather than the
form of Jesus. And he who sccs fate
or chance instead of .Jesus must bc
filled with fear. His every stroke of
the oar must be made with trepida
tion-thc future must be dark, with
only the light and wisdom of his own
genius to furnish thc brightness of his
life. Oh, dear friends, away with
such faithlessness that cannot discern
thc form of Jesus in thc very fiercest
storm.
Jesus is with us, I repeat, in our
every caro and trial. The eye of faith
can never lose his lovely form. Let
us take up these, lines of Hurlburt's
and make them ours:
"We will not weep, for God is standing
by us.
And tea? will blind us to the blessed
oight;
Wo will not doubt, if darkness still doth
try us
Our souls have promise of serenest light.
We will not fsint, lt heavy burdens bind
us,
They prcas no harder tban our souls caa
bear:
The thorniest way Ilea still behind us,
We shsll be braver for the past despair.
( th, not in doubt shall be our journey's
ending;
Bin, with its foam, shall leave- us at the
last:
All its best hopes in glad fulfillment
blending,
Life shall be with us when death is past.
Help us, O Father ! when the world is
pressing
on our frail hearts, that faint without
their Friend;
Help us, O Father! let Thy constant
blessing
Strengthen our weakness till the joyful
end."
Ah, beloved, there is no darkness
that can hide the soul from itsoSa
viour; there is no tempest so loud and
fierce that can hush the voice of Je
sus. He can ever be heard above the
din of the storm: "It is I!" There
is no power strong enough to tear us
from Him. As St. "Paul would put it,
there is nothing that "shall be able to
separate us from the love of God,
whioh is in Christ Jesus our Lord."
If wc feel his absence it is because we
fail to discern him with the eye of
faith. Our sight is so imperfect that
wc take His presence for some .appa
rition, some omen of luck or chance or
fate.
With thc lesson cf the text before us
let us learn to look for Jesus as the
storms of life grow fierce and more
awful. And let us feel well assured
that He is with us, and therefore we
cannot suffer shipwreck; for know this
well: He is always master of the situ
ation. It is for us to hear His voice
and take Him into our life's bark.
And mark me well: not until we take
Him in, and also give him the helm,
shall we cxper'ence the calm and rest
after tho storm. Db we not miss
muoh of peace in Ufo because we will
not trust the beim into Jesus' hand?
There is much half-heartedness in the.
faith of some of us-who may see Je
sus in the storm, may hear His voice
-but feel unable to yield up the boat
to His guidance, to sit at His feet, and
despite threatening elements, to sing,
"My Jesus, as Thou wilt."
So that boat is ever on troubled
seas-and there is no rest and peace
of body and conscience and soul. My
friends, believe me, we should have
no storms in life, for Jesus is ever
ready by His actual presence to har
ness the highest waves and make them
our silver-wreathed sea-chariots to
bear u- peacefully ami joyfully on to
our Fatherland.
Here, a/rain, i> a mighty assurance:
that the power of Jesus to save is in
finitely greater than the power of wind
and wave, in the sea ol life, to des
troy. There are times whoa the soul
seems threatened; when thc power of
the Devil and thc power of temptation
seems inlinitc. As measured with
these powers, faith seems as a thread
that is anchoring the >oul to its ??od.
It is at this hour that the soul sinks
in the storm, that faith seems but a
dying -park. The elements around
thc soul seem too strong to permit thc
presence of Jesus. The powers of the
world sectn mightier than the powers
of God. Oh, at this hour, the life of
the soul is drowned in the tempest of
unbelief, uttless thc frail vessel is de
livered into the Master's hand.
Behold Jesus, your King, as He
stills the storm and proves Himself to
bc supreme in power. Again, behold
Jesus, your King, as He drives Satan
from before fl im! Can you encourage
thc fear that your trials and tempta
tions can destroy your soul, in defi
ance of the infinite power of Jesus to
save?
Away, away with such a fear! We
have in this scene before us every fear
and dread anticipated. The very ele
ments which threatened thc destruc
tion of His disciples, He converts into
His willing servants. So with us in
life. The things with which we have
to contend, which sometimes seem to
threaten our souls are forces, great
forces, necessary forces, as the wind
and ocean to the craft, which can be
used, aye, which are to be used and
must be used to bear us on to God.
Yes, the secret of life is to bc found
in the picture before us. Peace comes
to us when Jesus is at the helm.
Life's sorrows and cares are as waters
and winds of peace, bearing us into
an eternal port. Our streugthened
eyes are no longer deluded by phan
toms of luck and chance ; they "behold
the King in His beauty; they see the
land that is very far off,"
"And cairn and peaceful is our sleep;
Rocked in the cradle of the deep."
rn? O mm
He was a Mason.
A well-known Chicago publisher,
speaking of scenes and incidents in
th.'.t city in the trying days after the
big fire, said: "The great fire was a
thing of the recent past and the down
town portion of the oity a scene of thc
greatest confusion, About i) o'clock
in the ovening, while on my way to
my home in the west division, I was
accosted by a man of respectable ap
pearance, who asked me to give him
the price of a lodging.
?"Fin no? a beggar,' said he, 'but
I'm in hard luck. A man told me
that some Masons were in session over
this way. If I could find them, I'd
be all right.'
" 'I hmnpoQ to know a lodgeroom on
Canal street, where there is a meeting
to-nighv," said I. 'Come along, I'll
take you there.'
"The place reached, I conducted
him up a long flight of stairs and
knocked at a door.
" 'I'm not a Mason,' said I to aman
who seemed to be acting iu the ca
pacity of a guard, 'but I've run across
ono of your fraternity who seems to be
in hard luok. I take it you'll be glad
to do something for him.
"Congratulating myself on having
done a good act, I pushed my chance
acquaintance forward and retreated
toward the stairway. A whispered
conversation ensued, when tbs guard
exclaimed:
" 'You re not. a Freemason!'
" 'No,: replied my late charge, 'but
I'm a stonemason out of a job.'
"The roar of laughter that issued
from the half open door made me wish
myself a Mason. As it was, I hurried
ly quitted the place."
Eczema Cured by B. B. B. Sample
Bottl? Free.
Ha.J you itching, burning, sealy,
crusted, or pimply skin, blisters con
taining pus or watery fluid, skin red,
and on itching heat, with or without
sores, on legs, arms, hands, neek or
face? Then take B. B. B. which will
oure leaving the flesh free from blem
ishes, sores, eczema or itching of any
kind.
Any form of eczema is due to dis
eased blood. Get the diseased blood
out with B. B. B.. and you are cured.
B. B. K. is perfectly safe to take by
old or young, and acts as a fine tonio,
and cures when salves, washes and
other remedies fail. Children are very
frequently afflicted with eozema. Sores
discharge and a yellow orust forms
upon the skin. Give the child mild
doses of B. B. B., and the sores will
soon heal.
B. B. B. for sale by druggests at $1
{?er large bottle, address Blood Balm
Jo., 380 Miiobcll St., Atlanta, Ga,,
and sample bottle of B. B. B. will be
sent by return mail.
- Vermont has in anticipation the
biggest reception ever held in that
State, when it welcomes Admiral Dew
ey The celebration will he held in
the admiral's native town. Montpelier,
and will last several days.
- Spain has bad 31 wars in the last
100 years.
The pain of a burn or scald is al
I most instantly relieved by applying
I Chamberlain's Pain Balm, it also
beak the injured parts more quickly
than any other treatment, and without
the burn is very severe does not leave
a scar. For sale by Hill-Orr Drug
Co.
W. 0. T.U. DEPARTMENT.
Coin I nc ted hy tin- ladies ol thc W. C.
T. C. ol' AndeiHOU, S. ( .
To argue that a man may take wine,
and retain a right frame of mind, is as
bad as to argue that he may take poi
son and not die.-Seneca, the Roman
philosopher.
- ? . -
The struggle of the school, the li
brary and the Church, all united
against the beerhouse and the gin pal
ace, is but the development of the war
between heaven and hell.
^ Total abstinence is positively safe,
while moderate drinking is unsafe.
! Were all the drunkards removed from
I the world, and moderate drinking still
permitted, in a short time the sots
would be as abundant as now. The
habit of moderate drinking is the seed
bed of a new and heavy harvest of
drunkards.-H. W. Adams.
Temperance advocates certainly can
score a point in the "terrible example"
j furnished by the death of a Buffalo
j infant of fifteen months from acute
I alcoholism. The parents of the child
had ignorantly given it a quantity of
clove wine, and thc dose proved fatal.
The imbibing of alcohol in later life
without perceptible evil results seems
to bc largely a matter of getting the
system used to poison.
- - ? m -
Temperance societies would do well
to get a copy of Mr. John Morley's
late speech before the British Parlia
ment. In attacking the conservative
policy he deals with the drink prob
lem, ungloved. Ile declares that to
the philanthropist it is known as a
deep root of private misery; the mag
istrate finds in it a source of social
disorder, and no statesman need to
look more than an inch below the sur
face without finding in it "much more."
He especially arraigns it as a disturber
of honest politics. No condition of
the day so seriously threatens every
party and every policy as this traine,
which, as he says, throws its weight
of millions upon millions to this or
that side solely with reference to its
own perpetuity and profit. He says
of the English brewer, as we have long
said of the American saloon-keeper,
in war or peace he knows but one
party, and that is the one which will
favor the saloon; he knows but one
platform and that is immunity to
trade. He is cither expansionist or
contractionist as are the legislative
friends of the saloon. He will vote
for the flag or its rival as the interest
of his rum barrel may dictate. He
has but one country, it is his saloon;
but one standard, it is his license to
sell. He knows but one policy, and
that is to sell more liquor. He boasts
that for every $5 raised to maintain
law and preserve order he will put
down $500 to protect' the undisturbed
immunity of the har. The liquor
trafile, says Mr. Morley, has no inter
est in any question affecting the wel
fare of the State; but no detail of leg
islation is insignificant to him if it
affect his barrel or his jug.-The in
terior. _ ._
In The Police Court-Tried and Judg
ment io 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, sick headaches
and dyspepsia. Here is his sentence:
"I am a great sufferer from nervous
sick headache and have found no rem
edy so e?eetive as Tyners Dyspepsia
Remedy. If taken when the headache
first begins it invariably oures."
Price 50 cents per bottle.
For sale by Wilhite & Wilhite.
Sample bottle free on application to
Tyner'sDyspepsia Remedy Co., Atlan
ta, Ga.
- It is not surprising that the plan
?or a billion-dollar iron and steel trust
has failed. A billion dollars is a good
deal of money. Counting one a sec
for eight hours a day it would take a
man a year to count a million, and a
thousand years to count a billion; or
a thousand men counting one a second
for eight hours a day, could together
eount a billion in a year. One hun
dred silver dollars make a pile a foot
high. A billion silver dollars would
make a pile 2,000 miles high.'
If you eat without appetite you need
Prickly Ash Bitters. It promptly re
moves impurities that clog and impede
the action of the digestive organs,
creates good appetite and digestion,
strength of body and activity of brain.
For sale by Evans Pharmacy.
- June bugs aro thiok in parts ol
Germany this year. At Brody sohool
children lately gathered 25* hundred
weight from a sixteeu-acro field.
Some one has figured out that this
means 1,270,000 June bugs.
Hot days followed by cool nights
will breed malaria in the body that ia
bilious or costive. T -okly Ash Bit
ters is very valuable ai this time foi
keeping tho stomach liver and bowell
wen regulated. Sold by Evana Phar
macy.
- She-"He says ho loves me; yet
he has only known me two days."
Her Friend-"Well, perhaps that'i
the reason, dear."
"They are simply perfect," writes
Rob't. Moojn, of Lo Fayette, Ind., ol
DeWitt's Little Early Risers, the ''fa
mous little pills" for constipation and
all liver ailments. Never gripe.
Evans Pharaaoy.
Tliut Long-Forgotteu Picture.
''.John iiillus, I fouud thi.s pboto
gra])h in the inside pocket of an old
vest of yours hanging up in thc closet.
I'd like an explanation. Whose is
it?"
"Can't you sec it's an old picture,
Maria? What's the use of stirring up
memories that-"
"I want to know whose picture that
is."
"Kather a pleasant-faced girl, isn't
she ?"
"I waut to know her name."
* that couDte
is th<
nu
"Whose is it?"
"It's the portrait of a girl I usc to
think a great deal of, and-"
"Her name, sir?"
"Well, you sat for it yourself, Ma
ria, about nineteen years ago; but, to
tell the truth, I always did think thc
'pleasing expression' was a little over
done. Put on your spectacles and
look at it again, and then compare it
with the reflection in that mirror
over there and see-what are you
getting mad about?"-T/d-Mts.
-,m) m m
- A curious case is reported by a
German dentist, Dr. Muhl K?hner.
One of his patients was a woman of
24, whose right arm and right side of
the neck had been paralyzed for two
years and a half as a result, it was
supposed, of a fall and broken arm,
and he filled several of her teeth and
extracted the much-decayed third
molar or wisdom tooth of the right
side. The patient returned next day
to state that her paralysis had dis
appeared.
- A family comprising seven per
sons left Scranton, Penn., thc other
day, the whole party traveling on one
full fare railroad tioket. There were
the mother and her three pairs of
twins, none of the children being up
to the half-fare age of five years.
DfcPlBttB
DISCOVERY
KEEPS
LIMBS JtPPlESg
W JV
A Trae Teaptruc? Mafldat 1 ' f
Caatalalag Nrithcr I ,
Alcohol, j
Whisky, V /
Opium, ^Sj. f
or other Narcotic. V y \
Gives Strength to the ?y^^
STOMACH, S?
Purity to the V>*??^
BLOOD, \f
Life to the LUNGS. \ ?
Valuable City Property for
Sale.
BY virtue of the power vested in me
by Deed of Tru^t duly executed by
F M. Murphy, and recorded in Clerk's
office, Book FFF, if not sold at private
palo before that time, I will sell to the
highest bidder before the Court House
door at Anderson, S. C., at the usual
hours of public sales, on tialesday in Oc
tober next, the Honse and Lot situated
on South Main Street, in the City of An
dereon, containing one-half acre, more
or lees, adjoining lots of tho City of An
derson, Mrs. 13. J. McGrath, L. H. ?esl
and Main Street.
Terms of Sale-Cash. Pure baser to pay
extra for papers and stamps. Forrar
thor Information call on
J. I J. TRI BB LE Truste?,
or P. M. MURPHY.
Sept 6, 1800 ll 4
Desirable Plantation for Sale.
ABOUT 300 sore? of Land, on Three
. and Twenty Creek, two snd one
half miles east of Pendleton, on the road
leading to Pel zor, is offered for sale. There
are abo ot 25 acres of bottom land. The
place ia well watered and well adapted to
stock-raising, and has between 60 and 75
acres of forests. For farther Information
apply to J. MILE9 PICKENS,
8-3m_j Pendleton, S C.
Valuable Plantation for Sale.
Try A ACRE9, more or lesa, on Boa
J ( TC verdona Creek, in a high state
of cultivation. 30 aerea bottom land, 30
in pine woods, 14 in pasture, 100 In cotton
land. 3 houses on it. Bounded by Rev.
Georga Rodgeru, A. M. Guyton and oth
ers, will sell on easy terms. Purchaser
to pay for papera and s tana ps. For fur
ther particulars apply to ll. Berry Wil
liams, Guyton, S. C., or
MISS LIZZIE WILLIAMS,
Anderson, 8. C.
July 12,1899 3 _
Georgia Land for Sale.
Iha?? Three Hu ntl red Aerea of Land
for sale-75 acres in bottom, GO of
that in a high sUi? of cultivation. It lies
on a creek and brancm-good banka 16
both sireamn. My house la aa s-roora
house, and a well of fine waler comos np
through piaxza. Three wood framed ten
ant houses, one store-house, grin-boose
and machinery and engine. Plenty ol
good outbuilding*. Ia a good convmuni
Ry, handy to Churohea and Schools. It
Hes five milos. Southwest of Ctooearlllo.
Something over 200 acres In cal tl vallon.
For further Information callion W.H.
Frierson, Esq., write me, or ceil and ase
the land. * M. H. DUNCAN, -
Aid, Franklin County, Ga
Aug S3,1999. 9 4*
Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has bceu
iu use for over .'50 years, has horno the signature 0f
- and has been made under his p?r
\jC4^2!fijt~&U's sonal supervision since its infancy.
^i^t^K *'&?C?U/14 Allow no one to deceive you in this'.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex
periments that trille with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children- Experience agra inst Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
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 Diarrhoea 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.
The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAY!
^ Bears the Signature of _
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over SO Years.
TNf ?INTAUneOMMMT. TT MUMI&V .TOUT. H?* ?MM ?ifTT.
PORTO RICO !
YOU can get the
GENUINE POETO RICO MOLASSES PROM US
AI?O,
La^kfbrd Horse Collar,
Guaranteed to prevent or cure galls or sore shoulders.
SHOES. HATS, DRY GOODS. NOTIONS, BK
At CUT PRICES for the next thirty days in order to clean up andi
room for New Goods.
Big Line of Groceries of all Kinds
AT LOWEST PRICES.
WS?P Try us one time.
MOORE, AOKER & CO.,
EA8T 8IDE PUBLIC SQUARE-CORNER STOE|
- -.---.-.-Fi
AT A BARGAIN ! .
One 50-Saw Hall Cotton Oin, Feeder and Conta]
BB ABB* HEW.
ALSO, a few Second-hand Gins. The Hall Gin is given up to fal
best Gin now built. Nothing cheap about it but the price. i
I still handle the BRENNAN CANE MILL-the only Seif ?
Mill now sold. M
EVAPORATORS and FURNACES, SMOKE STACKS fer En jj
&e.., at bottom prie:a. rnsnafestsrsd of Galvanised Iron. ?p
CORNICE aud FUNNELS, TIN ROOFING, GUTTERING!
PLUMBING of all kinds. Also, GRAVEL ROOFING and STOVfl
the best makes. B
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, FRUIT JARS-WHITE RUB?
the best. j
TINWARE at any price to suit the wants of our customers. ?
For any of the above will make you pri:es that you will buy of ml
ask your inspection of Goods and prices. Thanking all my friends aofi
tornera for their liberal patronage, Respectfully,
JOHN T. BURRIS!
P. S.-Bring your RAGS._' ? B
FOR
Fancy and.
Staple Groceries,
Flour, Sngar, Coffee,
[Molasses, Tobacco,
And Cigars, *
COME TO ?B. C. OSBORNE.
South Main Street, below Bank of Anderson
Phone and Free Delivery. ? W. H. Harrison's Old StA]
THE YEARS .
COME AND GO ? ?
AND with each successive year there also comes, amidst a flourish of truf8
the announcement that some new OIN ia born, "another Richmond in th? Sa
and every time this announcement la made, lt is qualified by another and va ?<
portant, that either one or more valuable features are patterned exactly like t
Old Reliable Daniel Pratt Gin.
How many times have you heard that "our Gin ls cs good as the Daniel Fr .
causa we build one a good deal like it." No. doubt some Gina are sold
strength of snob assertions, but ask those who bav? bought and used them 91
are the equal of the DANIEL PRATT GIN. But still the yean roll on, tbi <
Pratt Gin not only holds ita own but continue? to add new laurels to those i a
won. ED
Our GIN SYSTEMS and ELEVATORS are the most completeapd up-to- .
the market* Wo have in a took at Anderson ia our Warehouse alx Car I
GINS, FEEDERS, CONDENSERS and PRESSES. Also, all kinds of RE 19
Call?n writ?to I
F. E. W ATKIN?, Anderson J n,
0. B. ANDERSON & BRO.
JD ?UK-J U Xt.JTJLJV-/ KJ JI*
SOO BARBELS. |??
GOT every ?grade you sra locking for. We know what you waa e
we've got tho prices light. Can't ?ita it to yoe, bat we will sell y m<
trrndz Flour 2t> to 35o cheaper than any competition. Low gw.de ao
W.00 per barrel. l0;
Car. EAR CORN and stacks of Shelled Corn. Bay while it is < Qq
advancing vapidly. We know where to buy and get good, sound Con
OATS, HAY and BRAN. Special pricer by the ton. *
We want your trade, and if honest dealing? and low prices ci 10
will get it. Yours for Business, <fr<
O. Uv ANDERSON & Bl ^
. tgw &ow is your chance to get Tobacco cheap. Cooeing out o A
ends in Caddie*. . ?T