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IM MOR ls ; i PM ct. Says th \ I If } Ol Tho immortality pf tuan ?-a fact M i th MU*. I discus no sub.n . t mci . . physically. Metaphysics .?nil iltur a physics arc synim:,mious tenus with ... I believe ; o . I? tua! heaven ;.nd an <>tt nial hell I believe that a . iv part "I' lb?' inhabitants <>f both < mutrics an- furnished from this world, and from my standpoint I fear the latter country will receive most of i ur emigrants. I have a simple, un nerving faith i ti all the doctrines ami iruths of Christianity. I have three cul reasons fur my faith in the im lortality of the soul. First, my Bible says: "Wc shall ?ive forever, even those who are in their graves shall come forth, they t hut have done good to the resurrec tion of life and they that have done . vii to the resurrection of damnation.'' { believe the old Book from lid to lid; i believe it is an inspired book; 1 be lieve it is not only truth, but inspired (ruth. Its mysteries make mc believe it thc more: because no man ever un derstood or ever will understand the i?ible convinces me that some one greater than man wrote it. However, its mysteries do not worry me much: it is the parts of thc Bible that I un derstand that give me trouble. Thc hardest, slickest, steepest hill I ever tried to pull is thc page of thc Bible where the Ten Commandments arc re corded. A fellow who believes only what he understands has a very long head or a very short creed. The sci ences of theology and botany have never chimed much of my time, but I do love i" mingle with flowers and good people. The best proof of all the truth? uf tho Scripture to mois the fact that wherever and whenever 1 have had opportunity and facility tu test any truth of thc Bible 1 havo al ways found it true. Then I would bc a great fool to claim that it is not true somewhere else and further along where I have not had opportunity and facility to test it. I feel a good deal like the old woman when thc infidel told her that he could prove to her own eyes that thc Bible waa a lie. "Law," she said, "I would believe the Bible before I would my own eves.' ' 'What do you moan by that ?" said the infidel. She answered : "These old eyes of mino have failed me a thousand times, but tho blessed old Book has nover failed mc at a single point." I believe that tho whale swallowed Jonah, and if thc Bible had said that Jonah swallowed the whale, I should have expected to have met Jonah some day with girth expanded. i have no patienco with higher criti cism, so called, ncr tho insidious her csies which are born of agnosticism.? When wo go beyond the sweep of the telescope and below the end of tho geologist's pick one man knows as much as another about tho beyond and the below. If thc Biblo teaches any thing dearly, unmistakably, it teaches the immortality of the soul. Scoond, the testimonials of good men, living and dying, have long since convinced mc of the immortality of man. I have seen thc emaciated con sumptive, when death had stripped him of his flesh and robbed him of vitality until there seemed to bc noth ing loft scarcoly to bury, and yet when death walked into thc chamber to striko him thc last fatal blow in a vital spot I have seen him lift his hands and shout with his last breath, "Life, life, eternal life!" There is no testimony stronger, better, than thc oiled up volumes from thc lips of our blosscd dead. When Br. John B. HoFarrin, th?; master of southern Methodism, was spending about his last day on earth, his son, who also was a proacher, walked up to his couch and said: "Father, ought I to go to my appointment in the country and preach to-day and leave you: I might not bo herc to tell you good bye?" Thc dying father looked up into thc face of his boy and said: "Go, son, and preach thc gospel to your people, if your old father slips off while you are gone you know where to find me." Bishop Haygood, of our church, said to mc onco that he sat by thc side of Bishop Bierce and talked with him up to thc edge of eternity. His mind, said he. was clear, his eye bright; he was counselling mc about his Indian mission work. Two or three times in this last conversation with him he seemed to have swept out of the body and was gone, then again his eye would light up and he would talk with mc, and all at once he was gone. Ile did not die; like St. Paul, only thc time of his departure had come. Third, 1 believe in the immortality of the soul because 1 want to li\e for ever. Tho fact that I want to live forever is one of the best proofs that I shall live forever, for God never made a fish with fins until he had made an ocean for it to swim in; God never made a bird with wings until he had made an atmosphere for it to fly in. I do not bclicvt 'diat God cvei implanted tho instincts and longing; of immortality in the human soul until he had first prepared a glorious, un TA Ll TY e Hau.i Jones. /. 'finn uni. I cn ii i heaven Lo rm < i (!... donires and gi ve gratification io the immortal sou!. I not only believe in tie immortality <?f the soul, bul I believe iii the im mortality of I!I< body. The world ' never looked upon nor listened to a greater man than Saul < t' Tarsus, St. Paul the divine, lu head and heart ', and culture he had few peers and no j superiors. In breathing forth tho . supreme desire of his great manhood he said <>h, that I may know Him ami thc power of His resurrection " Some doubt the immortality of the body and thu r?surrection of the dead because of sollie questions that are asked. When one asks, "Suppose that a man's leg is buried in Virginia ' and his body in Georgia: suppose his : body has buen cremated and only thc few ashes in the urn remain; suppose j that he died at sea and his body has ; been fed to the fishes, how can the j body be brought forth from thc grave?" A (?crinan chemist passing through I his laboratory with some friends on otn; occasion turned aside and picked j uj a beautifully engraved cup and said: ' Gentlemen, this'is a present I prize very highly."' In handling tho cup by accident one of thc friends dropped it: it fell into ajar of acid and melted away like snow that had fallen in water. "Oh," said the un- ] fortunate friend, "see what ? have ? done; I have dropped your cup and it fell into the jar of acid and has melted and disappeared forever, and how I regret it." "Sorry it happinod," said thc chemist, "but not so bad as you think, my fricadH." He stepped to one of his shelves, took down a jar, and pickod out a piece of mineral and dropped it into thc jar of acid, and all tho silver which composad tho cup immediately settled to tho bottom of tho jar. Ile took out thc silver again and said: "It is all right, my friend; I will send it back to thc manufactory and have it more beautifully engraved than it was before." So, then, I say, bury the limb in one State, and the body in another, or burn the body to ashes, or feod it to thc fishes in the seas. God has a mineral in tho laboratory of the skies whioh, when he drops it down opon this old earth on tho morning of tho resurrection, bone will come to bone sinew to sinow, and immortal man will stand forth more beautiful in symme try, more glorious in character-im mortal soul and body. The North American Indian hoped and believed that by good conduct ho would be transferred to the "happy hunting grounds." The gods of the heathen, wbioh thoy admitted were stocks and stones, were but mediums through which they could talk to tho great im mortal Spirit, and their effort has been always not only to appease deity here, but to look to rewards from deity hereafter. A religion without immortality could not survive thc spiritual life of its author; a religion that does not com prehend the immortality of the soul ?3 neither divine nor human nor devilish-it is simply brutish-lives and stays with that which is below man, tho brute creation. When a religion or au individual closes up thc Bible and turns away from its teachings on thc subject of immortality I care not what science or philosophy or reasoning he may ap proach or employ, then he goes to a teacher who is as ignorant as himself and to a school whose curriculum docs not embrace or teach him anything more than he knew the first day ho was born into tho world. Science can name and number the stars, science can break rocks, trace the courses of our rivers, give altitude and longitude to thc topography of the world; sc i ence can atrotch its wires across con tinents, climb up and dig down, but this world with its wisdom will find that God is past finding out through such channols. Newton found that when he humbly knelt before his God he saw more and know more of his God and got closer to Him than he could with his most powerful telescopes looking toward thc heavens. No wonder men doubt; mankind stands inverted now in thc presence of tho angels. We have put gold above God, chattels above char acter and Mammon above manhood, until, as tho old fellow says, "wc arc in the bed wrong end foremost, our head on thc footboard and our heels on thc pillows." Speculation on immortality is like theorizing outside of the bible on thc origin of man. Kvolution weighs no move with mc than thc doubts of the doubters on thc subject of immortal ity. I no more believe that we will go to nothing and nowhere than I bo* , lievc wc came from monkeys and tad polos. If a fellow can demonstrate thc fact that humanity had an origin like that he might convince sensible : men that it would wind up in nothing. . Thc doctrine of immortality is so . much a part of my being and thoughts . that I would almost say that 1 had rather go to hell when I die than to ' go nowhere and bc nothing. ? ) SAM V. ?TONES. . ... . .y..\tv , ' . . ? . . lyV^ W. O.T. H. DEPARTMENT. < 'ondit',?ni by tim Indies of thc W. C. T. I', of Anderson, S. C. Kurd Times. 18Hoy at tho head of the (.lass, what an: wo paying for liquor a^ a nation?" "Niuo hundred millions annually." "Step to the blackboard, my boy. Kirai take a rolo and mea.-ure I ! i ? - ~:! ycr ?lollar. How thick is it ?" "Nearly au eighth of an inch." '"Well, sir. bow many of them can you put in an inch? "Between eight and nine." ''(Jive the benefit of the doubt; call it niue. How many inches would it require to pile these nine hundred millions in ?" '"One hundred million inches." "How many feet would that be?" "Hight million three hundred a id thirty three thousand, three hundred and thirty-three feet." "How many rods is that?" ' Five hundred and five thousand and fifty rods." "How many miles is that?" "Ono thousud five hundred and seventy-eight miles." "Miles of what?" "One thousand five hundred and seventy-eight miles of silver dollars, laid down, packed close together, our national liquor bill would make. This is only one year's grog bill." Header, if you need facts about this temperance question, nail this to a post and read it occasionally. It would take ten men with scoop shovels to throw away money as fast as wc aro wasting it for grog.-Observer. -o mm The iihrewd saloon keeper will not employ a drinking young mao for bar keeper. He prefers a total abstainer I Ho is a money-maker and wants all there is in it. He knows that a mao under thc influence of liquor is not a safe person behind the bar. It pays him to have a barkeeper who can mix drinks, but doesn't swallow them. Lever. - mm e ? God is silently but surely sifting the American people into two classes -home defenders and saloon defend ers. There are only two classes. To which do you belong? - The. Patrol. Jefferson Knew. "Here is a curious error," said the schoolboy, as he laid down his 1'Uncle Tom's Cabin," and tamed to the en oyolopedia. "The author uses tho expression 'AU men are born free and equal.' " ?'Well, what is the matter with that ?" inquired tho schoolboy's unclo. "Why, the quotation should ba, 'AU men arc born equal.' There ie no 'free' in it." "Do you mean to tell mc that Jeffer son didn't write 'free and equal' is the declaration ?" "That's what he didn't." "I will bet yau-" "Don't do it, uncle. Berne mb er yon have a family to- support, and they will need all your money. The word 'free' does not occur there; see." And he placed the big book before his misguided relative. "Oh, I know better. I will get a copy of the coastitution in one of my old books. I have heard that quoted so often I know what I am talking about." "You have heard it quoted wrong every time you heard the 'freo' in it." After they had found the good and reliable ?old book and all the rest of thc authorities, the unole ungracious ly gave up. But he hated to do so. It seemed impossible to correct that wrong impression. Tho hoy was right. Yet people go on indefinitely making a "free" and inaccurate quotation. Pittsburg 2Vcw*. Chronic Diarrhoea Cored. Thia is to certify that ? have had chronic diarrhoea ever since the war. I got so weak I could hardly walk or do anything. One bottle of Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Bemedy cured mc sound and weil? J. B. Binns, Fincastle, 1 a. I had chronic diarrhoea for twclvo years. Three bottles of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Bemedy cured mc. S. Ii. SUAVES, Fincastle, Ya. Both Mr. Gibbs and Mr. Shaver arc {irominont farmers and reside near .'incaatlc. Ya. They procured tho remedy from Mr. W. K. Casper, a druggist of that place, who is well acquainted with them and will vouch for thc truth of their statements. For sale by Ilill-Orr Drug Co. . II- > mm - - Perhaps thc oldest Confederate soldier in thc world is Seymour Garner, who lives in Wilcox county, Alabama. Though JOS years old. he is still alert and remarkably well preserved. Indigestion is thc direct cause of diseases that kill thousands of per sons annually. Stop thc tronblo at thc outset with a little Prickly Ash Bitters: it strengthens thc stomach and aids digestion. Sold by Evans Pharmacy. - A cynical bachelor says that if a young woman talks only when she really has something to say there is something wrong with her. . DeAVitt's Little "Karly Kiseis per manently cure chronic constipation, biliousness) nervousness and worn-out feeling: cleanse and regulate the entiro system. Small, pleasant, never gt'pc or aieken-"famous little pills." Kvana Pharmacy. Moiiii' Coming Soldiers. At a din nor party up-town tho other night several former I'uion >oldiers and one ex-Confederate sat down. The latter had ridden with .J. ti. B. Stuart. Ile is now "riding" about fora northern concern. The talk turn ed on the home-coming of military heines and thc southern man said: "I was asked th?-other day in Pitts 1 /nrir us we watched the welcome of the people to the Tenth Pennsylvania back from the 1'hilipines what sort of reception we Johnny Beba got when wc went home after the civil war. Whipped soldiers arc not often reunir cd to march in bodies when they go home. The Confederates ?lid not as a whole. They did not in any wuy so far as I ever hoard. They went back in twos, or threes, but oftener one ata time. You will know some day that the civil war was unlike any other war of history. When thc Confeder ates realized they wore whipped they were heartbroken. I am not making any argument for th? cause. But you must consider the temperament of a southern man to understand what de feat meant to him. "You people in the north would have recovered if the north had been whipped. You would have been at Hiehmond, if we had succeeded, with your Yankee inventions and schemes. You would have got the contracts for the Confederate States public works. Yen would have had thc contracts for building our navy, for making our guns. You would have revived your industries from our coffers. You weald have become partners in our commerce. ?U this would have been characteristic of you. - "With the southern man it wai dif ferent. He was whipped, but bc was sullen. He moped and would not play. You people had the advantage of the play, of course, but you might have given the sulker a show for his white alley if be had shown a disposi tion to let you inside his yard. But he barred the gate and soowled at you through a knot hole. And this trait clung to him f-?r years, and he awoke one morning to find some of you folks in his field, and on his plantation work i ng-h i a soil, ./hile he was starving. T en he quit looking back and went1 to work. And now when you have a trade with a southern man you do not take advantage of hi?c as yu did. "But just after the surrender he was-j in no mood to be received. The town from which he had enlisted was in no condition to tnrn oat in welcome and hurrah, even if a regiment had return ed, or any body of men. Gentlemen, believe me there was not a healthy hurrah in the whole sooth after Lee's surrender. It was nothing to brag about for sometime before that. Some of ns saw the handwriting six months before tho meeting of Grant and Lee at Appomattox. 'Your soldiers returned home in companies, battalions and regiments They were received by tho popnlaoe, j as we are now reeeiving our returning soldiery from the Philipines, and as I He recently received them from Cuba. But the Confederate sneaked back, not boeauso ho was ashamed of what he had done, for to this day we are mighty sensitive on that point, but because he had been whippad. It takes a bravo man to acknowledge a licking such as yon gave os. Wb ac knowledged it all right to you, and at homo, bot wo did not want any hurrah made about it. Our people wero io no mood io ring tho bells or tire tho guns when wc w .. home. A mao going into his old nome in the night, olimb ing the baok fence and going through the garden, making peace with the dog, knocking at tho kitchen door, is not an inspiring spectacle. That's thc way most of us went baok. "Very often there were no bells lo ring. Yon Yankees shot them out of the church steeples, sr car people had to molt them for ammunition. Wo were mighty short toward the last There were few house guns io the south during the war. "Occasionally a Confederate return ed to find his town so battered that he did not know it. He met strange faces in the streets. Familiar land marks had disappeared. Sometimes he found thc foundation of his old home, and it was overgrown with grass. Whole towns disappeared, and communities removed, in some sections of thc south during thc war. "I know many ex-Confederates to day who wore never mustered out. They bunched us and told unto go, and wc scattered in every direction. I know a man in mi State who is hold ing a Federal of?ee who never surren dered, and who was never discharged from thc Confederate service. No war ever had as many strange situa tions, as many curious results as that war."---.Vcir York Time*. - Thc average man, living for 50 years, consumes between 14 and 15 tons of bread in a lifotime. Thc weight of solid food of all kinds he consumes aggregates the starving to tal of a fraction less than' 55 tons, while on tho basis of three pints per day ho consumes 4'?i tons of liquid. Think of tho woman's toil in preparing this amount of food and drink. I . -Thc furniture van is always on i the move. Bugs in the Liquor. "A certain promoter, who is uow in Cuba,*' said a New Orleans sugar man, ' was thc victim not a great while ago of what he describes as thc most contemptible outrage ever perpe trated upon a gentlemen iu Louisiana. The outrage occurred in my private office, and ? blush to say 1 was au ac cessory before the act. You see, this promoter had been making himself very free with the premises, and I ked especially to drop into our back office, here there was always a bottle of g. ' rye on the sideboard. At first bc ily 'joined us' on invitation, but iii dly he glided into thc habit of helping himself whoever he happen ed in, which averaged about twice a day. OLC afternoon my partner, Billy, was in a confectionery store, and happened to sec a lot of candy made in the shape of fantastic bugs, beetles and Heards. It at once occur red to him that herc was a chance to entertain our unbidden guest, so he brought them to the oflice, where he waited patiently until he heard thc promoter's voice in thc outer room, nnd then emptied thc collection in thc bottle of rye. As usual he proceeded to help himself to a nip, aud was smacking his lips when Billy v/hceled suddenly around at his desk. 'You didn't drink anything out of that bot tle, did you?' he demanded, sharply. 'Why-er-yes,' said tho promoter, looking startled. 'Why?' 'Good hea vens!' yelled Billy, 'I was using that to preserve a lot of bugs and lisards from Guatemala! Tho right- w.iiskey it in the cabinet.' "Our friend grabbed up the bottle, and held it to the light, aud' there, sure enough, was a four-inch stratum of horrible-looking blue and yellow monsters, all tangled up together. 'Oh, Lord,' he gurgled, turning ashy. 'I thought it tasted queer; I'm pois oned sure.' With that he shot out of the office. We intended to tell him it was only a joke, but he got away too quick, and about an hour later we re ceived a visit from a doctor wo wanted to know ezaotly what kind of bugs were in the bottle. Ho said Col. was a very sick man. We put him on and he went away snickering. That was the last we saw of the Colonel, but he swears he will have our gore if he ever catches us outside of New Or leans._ - The prairie dogs in Texas are boing destroyed by moans of a new device for catching them, which has been adopted by a large number of the ranchmen and farmers. On one large ranch over 12,000 were captured and killed last week. Tho trap ia placed over the animal's mound and makes it a prisoner when it emerges from the hole. This pest has beeu destroying over 50 per cent, of the growing crops and grass is Tesas annually. The greatest danger to life in the city 1 nrvt ??!?? rar Tiri ?Vi ?ta OIMIO?BH nr&trr Vw.fr those silent invisible foes, the g^ims af disease. The prevalence of consumption in cities is stated to be largely doe to the frequent expectoration of diseased per .- sons,, whose T? dried: sputa r^*^" ^ mixed with the t? j J&I J dust and blown f*i \\ I a ?id I mto the air, is HA/) I fflfiffinr 1 I Whaled by some Vf 1 ( WT j g luckless man or A ypH-aJJ? woman. Saniti VT^I Eb W **on may niini 1MWE Kf?\ la mize these perils IP* IT bn(can never vte "j?i i.In i obliterate them. eam^^\ pt The essential r^figggggr B thing is to edu ' \V^?^^r-~i'?jjBI cate every per S*~ ' "~jmT3g son to thc m knowledge that tile germ can find no permanent lodg ment in a healthy body. Keep the blood pure, thc stomach; and other organs of digestion and nutrition in sound health, and you are practically germ proof. This disease resisting condition is ob tained by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden. Medical Discovery, lt purifies the blood? strengthens the stomach, nourishes the nerves, and heals the lungs. Even when there is obstinate cough, bronchitis,, spitting of blood and other conditions* -hie';, if neglected, lead to consump tion, the faithful use of Golden Medical Discovery will, in almost every instance, effect a care. "I wm* tatcen sick in Joly last year, and was not able to do any kind of work until Novena ber," writes Mr. Noel W. Orrin, of Langley. Aiken Co., 8. C. " Had been coughing up small, hard lumps of phlegm for shoat a year before I was taken down. I then called on a doctor, who said that one-hair of my left lung was gone, and advised me to leave my home ?nd go to the country. I wrote to you for advice. I took four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery: which I sincerely believe has done memore good than all the other medicines I have ever taken." The People'^ Common Sense Medical ! Adviser, /rec, on receipt of stamps to cover expense of mailing only. Send 5?i one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth binding. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, Nv Y Valuable City Property for Sale. T>Y virtue of the power vested in me JD by Deed of Tru-t duly executed by FM. Mnrpby. and recorded lu Clerk'* omce, Book FFF, if not sold at private ?ale before that time, 1 will sall to the highest bidder before the Court Hons* door at Anderson, 8. C., at the usual hours of public sal ca, on ?alaeday In Oc tober next, the Uonsa and Lot situated on South Malo Street, in the City of An derson, containing one-half acre, more or lesa, adjoining lots of tho City of An* derson, airs. E. J. McGrath, L. H. Seel and Main Street. ' Torras of Sale- Gasb. Purchaser to nay extra for papers and stamps. For for* ther information call.on J. lu. TRIBBLK. Trustee, or F. M. MURPHY. Septa, ison 11 4 Desirable Plantation for Sale. ABOUT SOO acres of Land, on Three and Twenty Creek, two ?nd one half miles east of Pendleton, on tbe road , leading to Pelear, is ons red for sale. Thar* ; are about 35 ?orea of bottom J sod. The 1 place ia well watered and well adapted to : stock-rola?ng. a&d baa between 50 and 75 ; acres cf forests. For farther information apply to J. MI?/E9 PIDKRWS, . I ?8-nm Pendleton, S. C. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has bcou in ttse for over :SO yearn, has horno the signature ot" ^-rf - and lias been made under Ins per?* (Jz J?J&^/7\+~~l?L'*, souiil supervision since its infancy. ^*<^yr, S-wtSuM Allow no ono to deceive you in this. ' All Counterfeits- Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex pertinents that trillo with and endanger the health of Infants and Childr/eii-Experience against Experiments What is CASTORIA Oastoria is a substituto for Castor OH? 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 tho Food,, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy u*.xd* natural sleep? Tito Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The; Kind You Wm Always Bought IR USS; F&V ??sr SO Ye?tr?? TMS CtMTAUB CO?ff??-( ?T ?SMttUT STCtCCTi HIM VOW* OTTwX Is Anderson, the Loading HMBWABE and 1MPLEMDSNT market of the State? Because in Anderson SillifiB Hardware Carry/ the Stock anti give the Prices to attract the- toads*. They do the business. Builders* Hardware, Rubber and Leather Belting, Machine Suples, Seasonable Shelf and Hea&y Steel and Iron Goods How to the front. The Wonderful Bife Hydraulic Engine. Information Freo. An early contract enables us to keep down prices awhile on THE POPULAR OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS. Dealers may talk, may blow, but the "Oliver" speaks itself the world over. It is a world beater. SULLIVAN HARDWARE C AT A BARGAIN ! ^~ ~-, J oi 50-Saw Hi Colton Gin, Fssier ai MK I BBABD HEW. Bu ? ALSO, a few Second hand Gins. The Hall Gin is given up to bfiki best Gin now built. Nothing cheap about it but the pri?e. Bm I still handle the BRENNAN CANE MILL-the only. Self-CB0a Mill nw sold. IM EVAPORATORS and FURNACES, SMOKE STACKS for ED*ra &c, at bottom prie, s, manufactured of Galvanized Iron. CORNICE aod FUNNEL8, TIN ROOFING. GUTTERING! PLUMBING of ail kinds. Also, GRAVEL ROOFING and STOVB th the best'makes. I wi CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, JFRUI? JARS-WHITE ? RUBI?, j, tho beet B^ TINWARE at any price to snit the wants of our customers. JJ For any of tho above will make you pri:ea that you will buy of a^B ''? ask your inspection of Goods and prices. Thanking all my friends an?ed tornera for their liberal patronage, Respectfully, | - JOHN T. BORRISI:: P. S.-Bring your RA.GS. . |?? o. p. M?DBR?ON & BRO, r; FLOUR FLOUI L: GOT every grade you are looking for. We, know what you wan j. we*ve mt the prices right. GanVgive it to you, but we will sell yoi grade Flour 25 to 35c cheaper than any competition. Low grade 11 $3.00 per barrel. : ... V. i ? Car BAR CQRN and stacks of Shelled CW Buy. while it ? ct ?cl advancing rapidly^ Wo know where to buy and get good, sound Corn q01 ' OATS, HAY and BRAN. Special prices by the ton. "r< We want your trade, and if honest dealings and low puces coi will get it You? for Business,. ?JJ ?a O. AW?BRSOM & BB ?ii B?- Now ii your chance to get ^Tobacco cheap. Closing out od' endatoCfcdol*. \