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BY CLINKSCALES & LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1: 189i>. VOLUME XXXV-NO. 19. THE BEST STORE ! In every line of business there is always ONE BEST. There can never be two. In the Clothing Business of Ander son there is one Store that is better than all others, because it's a SPOT GASH STOKE, and it's the place for you to trade if you wish to save mOney. It has been our ambition to make our Store the best of its kind. We have succeeded. If you will come into our Store we can show you exactly why we are able to save you money. The advertisements we publish will probably sound like bragging*. All right, let it be so. You may call it bragging, or whatever you please. If we can save you money on your Clothing, Hats and Furnishings, that's all you need care about. That's what we can do. That's what we are doing for lots of people. We sell our Goods for strictly Spot Cash. We keep no books. We have so bad debts. Our way of doing business is fairer than that of any Store we know of. If you make a purchase ' here and you are not satisfied, we will give you YOBS H?HET BICK If 10? WANT IT I Men's Hats. BOYS' KNEE PANT SUITS. Don't wear that old Hat when you know you can get a good Fedora here-one that is Union-made and not out of a job lot-for a o ollar. You had bet er make up your mind J to come here at once. Our Fall Hals are all in, and we want you to inspect the most complete line in Anderson. Hata from 25c. to 83.00. Shoes. One lot Double Breasted Suits ages 8 to 14 years-extra well made. A good bargain at. .$1 00 We handle only a One Price Shoe -all styles, one quality, one price, and that is $3.50. The nest time you want a pair of Shoes come in and see ours Notice the way it is made, how far the leather is turned over on the inside cf the uppers, the daintiness of the stitches, the graceful shape, the way thc back seam is covered, and in Tan Shoes the soft bi own colors. Compare all these thing?, not only ?th other 83:30 Shoe?, but with Shoes at a dollar more. Then buy the Shoe you think is st worth your money. One lot Double Bieasted Suits ages 8 to 16 years-strictly all wool, double seat and knees. The Credit Stores* leader at $3.00. EVANS' price.$2 50 One lot Ve8tee Suits in mixed Che viots-ages 3 to 8 years-an extra value, for.$1 50 A complete line of Knee Pants for Boys at 25c, 50c, 75c and $1.00. Single and Doable Breasted SACK SUITS. ? In Plain Goods, Blue Sorge, Blue or Black Clay Worsted, and Blue or Black Herring Bone Cheviot are the correct things, though a few Fancy Worsteds will be worn. We have these Suits at 95.00, $7.50, $10.00, I $12.50,815 00, and on up to $20.00 J if you wish. B. 0. Evans&Co, TRW SPOT GASH CLOTHIERS. WHITE FRONT. A Letter From (?eu. Wheeler. NASHVILLE, TENN., Oct. 20.-Tho following letter lins boen received from Gen. Joe Wheeler, in tho Philippines: Suntu Roto, lalo of Luzon. September in, 1800. Van Leer Kirkman. My Dear Young Cousin: I have now seen much of thc country and the peo ple in that part ol' Luzon for about 50 miles north ol' Manila. In every town there isa magnificent stone church and a convent or monastery. The insur gents have a great antipathy to the priesthood of Friars, and they have dismantled many of the churches. The value of the church und monastery of a town seems to be equal in many cases to tho value of all thc; other buildings in tho town. The more 1 talk to the people, the mon; 1 am convinced that tho insurgents are actuated, in a meas ure, by a spirit of communism, and in their talks, their most serious objection to tho church seems to bc thc fact that ecclesiastical organizations own so much of tho property, and ono of Agui naldo's most earnest demands is that tho church property bo confiscated. There is a general impression that the insurgent army is made up very largely ot people without property, and that people who have property de sire tho Americans to control, so that they can have protection and feel that their property is secured to them; but I find that there is sonic fear or appre hension among some of the wealthy that if Americans control and give uni versal suffrage the power of the wealthy Scopie would bo taken away and their old on property very much impaired. I think that if the wealthy people would be assured that they would be protected in their property rights by the United States it would have a very good effect. Tho Friars and priests arc charged with all sorts of oppressions and mis demeanors; but it must be remembered that Friars and priests aro very numer ous, and in so large a body, there will bo found every possible phase of char acter nnd disposition. Some of them are, no doubt, oppressors of tho people, exacting in the collection of rentals from tho lands, indulging themselves in many ways and leading lives very different from what should character ize tho lifo of a priest; but there are very niany good men among them. Tho statement that I have seen that 70 per cent, of the people of Luzon can read and write is a great mistake. It may bo true of many, but it is not true of those in the rural districts and the percentage of illiteracy in tho other islands is much greater than in Luzon. The appearance, mode of life and method of performing work are to-day very much like they aro described in the Bible at tho time of and even be fore tho Christian era. The people dress very much ns they did two thousand years ago. To-day I spent some time in watching natives cleaning shucks from rice; tho method of shelling and cleaning is primitive and no better than used 2,000 years ago. Everything can bo grown, but oranges and bananas aro not so good as in other localities, thc reason no doubt being that they seem to give them no cultivation whatever. Cottee is grown which is said to bc superior to Mocha. Rice is tho principal product and a failure of that crop would cause a ter rible famine, as the people depend al most entirely upon it for food. Sugar is the principal crop for export. The greatest amount exported in an> one y oar was 201,081 tuns, which was in 1803. Corn grows very rapidly and the cars reach their full growth about 00 days from tho time of planting. There j is a great amount of very valuable, I timber in these islands and many va rieties of beautiful hardwoods under , native names such as mahogany, black walnut and ebony. Gold, copper, coal, iron, sulphur^ lead, building stone, petroleum and guano I are found. There are many different tribes liv ing in these islands, the only ones in active rebellion being tho Tagalos. This tribe occupies some eight prov inces in the neighborhood of .Manila, and their association with Europeans has made them more civilized than other tribes. Wo nro now seven or eight miles from Porac, where an insurgent force has been stationed for some time, but around hore and through this vast val ley the people are actively engaged in planting rice. I have been riding around tho outskirts of this place and the fields are dotted with men, women and children planting rice. I am confident that a brigade of cav alry could easily travel through a great part of the island. The Suez canal brought thc Philip pines much nearer to Europe and has greatly increased their commerce. The exports of hemp have greatly increased. In 1882 44,205 tons of hemp were ex ported, which bas increased until there were exported in 1807 112,785 tons and this output can be largely increased. The shipments of coffee gradually in creased until the year 1880 when thc amount exported amounted to 7,337 tess, and from 1860 to 1800 the ship ments averaged about 6,000 tous a year, but from thi ' :me they have fallen off. I learn the -Oilowing about cotton from reliable sources : The cotton tree is found growing in an uncultivated state in many islands of tho archipelago. Long staple cot ton was formerly extensively cultivated in tho province of Illocos Norte, when many years ago large quantities of good cotton st nd's were exported. This industry still exists. The cultivation of this staph; was, however, discouraged by tho local gov-1 ernors in order to urgo the planting of ; tobacco for the government supplies, i It has sinco become d?ihcuH to revive ; the cotton production, although nn : essay, in pamphlet fomi (for which a j prizo was awarded iu Madrid) was i gratuitously distributed over the col- ? ony in 1888 with that object in view. | Nevertheless cotton spinning and weaving are still Curried on on a re duced scale, in the Illocos provinces .(Luzon) west coast. Wild cotton is useless for spinning l as tho staple is extremely short, but perhaps by hybridization and careful attention its culture might become valuable to the colony. The pod is elliptical and tho cotton which burst from it at maturity is snow white. It is used for stuffing pillows and mattresses. It is a common thing to seo wild cot ton trees planted along tho high road : to servo as telegraph posts; by tho ? time the seed is fully ripe every leaf j has fallen and nothing but tho burst- j ing pods remaining hanging to thc ! branches. I With regards. Sincerely yours, I JOSEPH. WHEELER, The State's Watered Liquor. BARNWELL, S. C., October 20.-Tho monstrosity produced by Tillman's per version <?t tho Gothenburg plan of liiiuor selling is resulting in general political nausi'u oven among tho faith ful, except as to those whose stomachs are uusually strong und 1U0 proof against political and moral putrescence ot' all kinds. It is remarked ns somewhat peculiar that Ouzts, who has anatomized tho dispensary skeleton with tho minute ness or! detail ot' Dottie in his account of the London plague, bas not touched on Hie watering of the liquor. Col. J. .1. Brown, of this pince, and another wrote a letter last your ortho your Indore to Commissioner Vance, inquir ing as to the trudi of the report that they watered the whiskey before bot tling. Vance replied, "Yes, it was true, but that the water was chemically pure, being carefully boiled before adding to the liquor," Ho said, "They added one barrel of water to every four bar rels of 100 proof liquor.-' Tho natural question that then aros?? but which Mr. Vance never solved was, Who got tho profit on the 100 gallons of water to every 400 gallonsof whiskey so treated? In the board of control's accounts with the .State did they credit the State with the surplus so'gained, or, if not, where did this immense sum of money lind lodgment?-??pedal to News and Courier. This Settles lt. As each century draws near its close there is much controversy as to when the next century will begin. For more than a year past there has been a lively dispute over the question whether the twentieth century will be gin January 1, 1000, or January 1, 1901. Newspapers and Magazines have pub lished innumerable communications on this subject; it has been discussed around thousands of family tiresides and by many debating societies. Strange to say, the disputants have been about equally divided between the two dates. We say this is strange, for it would seem to bo a very easy matter to de termine when a century begins. It is cause for congratulation that the Chicago Tribune has made a publi cation which will go far toward Kettling this mooted question. The Tribune appealed to Professor W. H. M. Chris tie, director of the Royal Observatory, at Greenwich, for an authoritative statement ns to when the next century will begin, and has received in reply the following cablegram from that eminent authority: Boyal Observatory, Greenwich, Lon don. October 21, l!S99. Editor of the Tribune: In reply to your inquiry I beg to in form you that the twentieth century begins on .January 1, 1001. It has been generally agreed to call the first year of the Christ ian ora Anno Domini 1, not A. D. 0, mid consequently the second century begins with A. D. 101, 100 years after the beginning of the tirst year, nud so on for the succeeding centuries! The question was fully discussed at the Century dinner at Glasgow on April 15, 1870, when tho Lord D eau of tho Guild, after quoting various author ities, gave his decision as arbiter that the nineteenth century did not com mence till Jnuuary 1, 1801. An account of this meeting was printed for private circulation at the time. Yours faith fully, W. II. M. ClIKISTIE, Astronomer Royal. It appears, then, that the scientific world is agreed that the twentieth cen tury begins January 1, 1901. Suppose wc let it go at that and re joice in the assurance that wo, will have a whole year duo ns from the nine teenth century after the present year has gone. Fitzhugh Lee on Cuba. WASHINGTON*, October 2!).-Gen. Fitzhugh Lee, who is in the United States on a vacation from his post in Cuba, is in the city on his way South, lie is accompanied by his son. To morrow night Gen. Lee expects togo to Richmond to witness th?; launching of the Shubrick, but will return to j Washington on Wednesday. In an in terview be says the people of Cuba are ; steadily improving under the existing ; protectorate of the United States, ami ! are slowly, but surely, rebuilding their ? war-wasted homes and repairing their ? crippled fortunes. Life and property I are secure in Cuba, owing largely, he I said, to the salutary restraint exercised i by American military authority. He thinks the time not yet ripe, however, for a purely Cuban government. "Cuba," said Gen. Lee, "is improving. Tho Cubans are tractable and quiet, and tho revolution has given them self assurance and self-reliance. Their impulses are generally in the right <li ; rection, but, of ?-ourse, both in thc the i ory and practice of self-government ! ?hey aire, whoiiy without experience. There is anions certain Cubans a <leep seated prejudice against some mon, who, the Cubans think, oppressed Cu bans under Spanish rule, and if given a free rein the Cubans would make sinnt work of thom. Tho United States Government is pledged to grant inde pendence to Cuba after the island has been pacified, and I believe that prom ise, .should be fulfilled just as swiftly as we can in reason and justice; * "The industrial situation is improv ing and money is gradually going into Cuba, but nothing like as fast as it would if investors were sun; that prop erty would remain safe for veals to come ami bo protected by a Govern ment strong enough to enforce law and order." Gen. Lee declined to discuss political affairs in Cuba and whether or not the Cubans ?Iesirc<l independence or annex ation. How's This. Wt? offer OHI- Hundred Dollars rn WA rd for any CAM rf Catarrh ma cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Curo. Wo, tbft nnderslgnrd hare known I?.... Cheney for Ibo lut IS years, and believe him perfectly honorable Jn all business transactions and Anno dally sJtle to carry out .?ny obligations in aile by their firm. WRT A TRUAZ, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. W ALPIN?. KINN AN A MARVIN, V.'riol. paie Drug gists, Toledo, O. IlaU't Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the bioo.1 and mucous surfaces of tho system. Tmtiraoniala sent free. Price 76c per bottle Solil hv all druggist* Hall'?. Fncily Pills are the best. - Among thc passengers who ar rived at New York on night of October 24th, on tho Ward liner Havana, were General Fitzhugh Leo and Colonel E. G. Rathbone, in charge of thc postal service in Cuba. STATE NEWS. - Tin; Spartanburg poultry associa tion will hold its show this year from December '-'o' t<? :J0th.inclusive. - Tho annual report of tho city treasurer shows that the expenses of the city of Spartanburg for the past year were $58.010. - ThelStnte Pharmaeeutal Hoard meets in Columbia next Tuesday and Wednesday tor tho examination al'ap plicants for licenses. - At the baptism of John Hoik a child whoso parents lived nt Fort Mill, live grandmothers and greu.t grand- : mothers were present. - The tux assessments for lin South Carolina show an increase of (500,000 over last year. Over $2,000,000 of the increase is in person! property. ? - Miss Lily Lander, of Clifton, was accidentally shot by her brother win n he was carelessly handling a pistol, j Thc hull entered the check. The wound ! is md considered dangerous. - A young man lost his life the other day near Mount ville. While ginning ho was caught by some part of the machinery and Butlered internal injuries, from which lie died. - Five hundred thousand pounds of tobacco have already been sold in Darlington county from this year's crop. The prediction is that the sum total will reach four million pounds. - J. C. Wilkinson, of Barnwell coun ty, grew this year 75 pumpkins on one vine, weighing from 20 to 50 pounds apiece. Tho man who can come near that must be "some pumpkins" of a farmer. - It is announced that.a York county man has a bonanza in supplying game cocks for Mexico, one rooster of that county having whipped about forty battles and won ten thousand dollars for his owner. - It has transpired that under the war revenue bill Converse College will have to pay io per cent of the' legacy left to it by Mr. Converse, toward pay ing for the* war against tho Filipinos, a clear loss of 810,000. - Thieves broke into tho store of Simmons Bros. nt Hodges, and then set tire to tho building to conceal thu crime. Ono negro was tracked to his home by blood hounds and is now in jail at Greenwood. - The. people of Marion have pre sented Lieut. Victor Blue with a silver loving cup. Lieut. Blue is nt his mother's home in Marion enjoying his honeymoon, as he was married a few days ago to a young lady in New Jer sey. - Thc Stale Board of Control has de cided not to interfere with the beer dispensais until their terms of nflicu expire. These; terms vary in diff?r ent cities, but by .lune next all will bc up aud the privileges will then cease. - Joe. Alexander, a colored convict who escaped twenty-one years ago. came to Columbia last Saturday and was recognized and arrested by Ser geant Swearing. Ile will have ? to serve out his term after his long taste of liberty. - Spartanburg and Greenville coun ties have long been wrangling over thc boundary line between the two counties. Tho dispute has at last been settled hythe courts und Spar tanburg wins. - Mr. Alfred Taylor, of Taylors sta tion in Greenville county, had 25 or :ii> acres in corn on the Kooree bottoms this year and the average yield was about TH bushels per acre. On on?; plot, tin; yield was at thc rate of 1?? bushels per acre. - One day last week a negro work ing at the factory had otoo run over by a truck and the end mashed oil". The poor fellow picked up the piece, ot llcsli and skin and ate it saying, "I ain't gobr let nobody have my meat." It is needless to say that be enjoyed his diet.-Clinton News. - The reported shortage in tho office of County Superintendent of Education Rombert of Sumter county turns out to bc a mistake, and was caused by a clerical error in his books, which has been discovered since tho report was made by the grand jury, much to thc gratification of thc; officer and his friends. - T. E. Younger, a salesman in a store in Spartanburg, has been lodged in tho Spartanburg jail charged with forgery, lt is claimed ho forged thc name of W. II. Swain to a ?400 check on tho Central N.? mal Bank and sent a negro with a nc o collect thc same. The bank refused to pay thc check and by this Younger was entrapped. - The. next meeting of tho Baptist State Convention will bo held nt Gaffney, S. C,, beginning Wednesday night,* November 29. The Baptist Ministers' Conference will meet Tues day night, November 28. The Con vention sermon will bc preached by Hov. H. B. Buchholz, of Chester or by Hov. W. T. Tate, of Willamston, his alternate. - Blind tigers arc made out of a va riety of material, but it is seldom that a dispensary constable develops into one. Yet ex-Constable, Harvey C. Hill was Indore Magistrat?; M an ld in of Oreen ville accused of Kellin f,' whiskey. He owned up frankly, pleaded guilty, aud failing to pay his $100 line, went to the gang for thirty days. - Mr. F. M. Cudd, of Sandie, near Worthy's ferry, brings us a specimen of thu Koon cabbage that just takes tho rag oil'the bush in the cabbage linc, it is as large as a cotton basket, about three; feet in diameter and weighs nine pound*. Mr. Cudd says it heads in the winter and is a tim; variety. He says lu; has a garden full of them.- Union Timen. - The members of the (Jennee Horse Swappers Convention are expecting a large crowd at Walhalla on next Tues day and Wednesday. Thc object is to encourage thc raising of better stock, to get thc people together to trade their superfluous stock; to ex change their ideas upon thc different subjects of raising stock, growing va rious crops, and permit everybody to have a jolly good time. - N. T. Pitman, a wealthy merchant of Oourdin's, 8. C., was shot and killed by his brother, A. J. Pittman, in thc Calhoun hotel, Charleston, on Wednes day. Thc dead man was 05 years old. his brother 50. They were for merly in business together in Charles ton nuder thc name of Pittman Bros.. but had failed. They met nt thc hotel by appointment. The survivor refuses to tell thc cause of thc trouble, but it is supposed to bo financial. - Yellow fever continues to thrive at Now Orleans, Miami and Key West, Florida, and-other points. (inicial News Items. - Forest tires ar?' raging in West Virginia ami millions ot feet ol lumber have been destroyed. - Smallpox is prevailing in many sections ot' (? corgi U, but th?' disease is very mihi and generally n?> scars ur?' lett. - A terrible epidemic ot' dysentery 1 is sweeping over .lapan; of 50,000 per- i sons attacked np toSeptember 14, near ly 12,000 have died. - Tb?? Virginia Military Institute ot' Lexington, Ya., has been closed 'ttl days and tho 2"iO cadets furloughed, because of tho prevalence ?d' typhoid fever. - A market gardener living near a western town says the most prolitn table crop ho raised was lettuce, his sales ol' this vegetable grown lintier glass and marketed during the winter season bringing him in nearly si,ODO each year. - Hear Admiral Schley lins positively announced that ho is not only not a candidate for the presidential nomi nation, hut that he won ld declino th?? nomination if tendered. He says ho is hut a plain sailor in tho service ?d' his country. - A Now York business man, now under arrest, is said to have made more than S 100,000 by removing cancellation marks from war revenue stamps and selling tho stamps t?> employes of big establishments. Ho. was, of course, in favor of the indefinite retention of th?> war taxes. . - Tho greatest sale of wool ever made in Indiana wna closed at Craw fordville, Indiana, on October 24th, when McClure, Graham ?iv: Kouudtree sold tt> tho Manchester Mill Conman}', of Manchester, N. IL, over ?iOO.OOO Itounds of line wool. The clii> was anight at from 18 to 22 cents. - Tho Vanderbilt millions have boon divided as follows, according t?? tho will of the late head of that family: Cornelius, .Jr., only one ami one-half millions, Alfred fit*tv millions, the other sons ami daughters sev?'n and one-half millions each. Cornelius was cut on account of his marriage, but Alfred will give him six millions to make his share equal to that of tho others. - Artist Elliott of Washington, 1). C., who is making tho statute of Sen ator Z. IL Vance, informs the commit tee that it will be completed by March or April. Th?' unveiling will occur May 20th, North Carolina s State holi tlay. It is proposed that all the nation al guard of the State shall parado and that there ?hall be a largo body of Maryland and Virginia troops and of Confederate veterans in attendance. - On arrival of tho Twenty-Ninth volunteer infantry at Honolulu, on its way to the Philippine Islands one of t he waitera on the vessel became sick but refused to take medicine or reu ive tin* attention of tho physician. The commanding olliccr ordered tho phy sician to visit thu patient, when it was discovered that thc waiter was a wninan in male attire and was going to tim Philippines as the representativo ?d' American newspapers. - At Muncie, Ind., Miss O oldie Coch ran, aged l-l, struck a burglar in her room, u few days ugo, with a silver backed hair brush, and th?; unknown man will ?lie as the result. The man was detected i'arryiug a valuable clock from the residence, when tin- girl com manded him to drop the time-piece. This he did, and. closing the door, turned upon her. when she threw the brush, striking him in the temple. Ile fell t?i the liner and hus remained un conscious since. - City Councilman J. L. Reilly, of Cleveland, Ohio, has fallon heir to!?80, ()()(). Four years ago. while in San Antonio, Tex.. Mr. Reilly stopped a runaway team, probably saving tho life of tho driver, a wealthy farmer of l'aimer, Texas, named .lohn Wallace. His ann was so badly injured in the struggle that for a time amputation was thought to be necessary, but even tually it healed. On Saturday Mr. Reilly received notice from Sail An tonio'that Mr. Wallace buddied and left him a legacy of $?0,000. - If you aro a good guesser, or have any inside facts on tho cotton crop for tH'JO-1000 there is a goo?l chance to make 81,000. S. Munn, Son & Co, a larg?' c?)tton brokerage establishment of New York, doini; business nt .">'' Reaver street, makes the ofter of this reward. The estimate of tho crop thar, will be used by the linn in selecting the winner will be the one that will be nonie up by the New York Chronicle. The person guessing nearest to thc Chronicle's estimate will get tho money. All guesses must be mailed by noon November 25, and addressed to S. Munn, Son & Co, statistic depart ment, ?O Heaver street, New York. - A peculiar theft is reported from live milcH down the Augusta road. Mr. Rmi Ward had about 800 pounds of sued cotton lying in a pile in the Held, and Monday morning about day light som?' one drove a two. horse wagon into tho Held ami took tho entire pilo. The wagon went into the Fork Shoals rend, but no further trace of it has been found.-Greenville Moun taineer. - When a child is lazy his mother discovers that all his ancestors on his fa'thor's side were that way, too. THE REASONS WHY ?gg^^^Wfcfc^ You will buy your STOVES of jBBMBj? JOHN T. 3UERXSS. --^**MHWB&B^ int. Beoauee I cive you honest QoodB at ^W^ftSj^SmBH^^^Bnl 1,1(3 "oweBt possible prices, nnci I make true ?jaflMlBjffWtffi 2nd. It in a foregone fact that I am the WBBBKEI^ lending fltovo dealer in thin Hection. \^^fflg[*|*^^*^S^^?TO :$rd. Wo don't blow, but our prices do >^j|f "7^ DmVt full to see our Coon in Show Win OUR OROClKGUY, Ti fi and LAMP DEPAUTMENT IH now complete,*u)d ar. tho right price?. Our Stock ls too numerous to Itemize, like some do, hut fornxamplea nice Decorated Chamber Set. nine pieces, for ?2.25 per set; four-piece Glans Set and six largo Tumblers all for 252. No Coupon required. Call and see for yon mel ves. Your trade solicited. .JOHN T. BURRISS fi. K.-All partita owing mo by Note or Account will plea-e call in and sottle at once, and save the expense ol' sending to see you. _J- T. B. Is a Little Thing when it Begins ! THE longer you put it off the harder it is to cur?. The longer it lasts the more serious it becomes. Let it run on and there's no telling what the end will be. The worst case of Consumption was a little Cold once. x Axe M1JN 1 Will stop any Cough when it first begins-. It will stop most Coughs after they get bad. But the best way is to take it at the first sigu of a Cold. It ought to be right at your elbow all the time. Tar Mini Is the BEST REMEDY for COU3H3, COLDS, HOARSENESS, acd all diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Don't buy any other kind. 50c. HILL-ORR DRUG CO. THE HOUSE-KEEPER'S TROUBLES ! DURING the Fall and Winter months the House-keeper has no little trouble in supplying the table with samething to eat. We can help them if they will only give us a call. We have a choice and select Stock of Family and. Fancy Groceries. Our Stock of CANNED GOODS can't De excelled, aud if you need any CONFECTIONERIES, FRUITS, NUTS, etc., wc caa supply you. TOBACCO and CIGARS a specialty. If you will honor us with a visit we will appreciate it, and make it mighty interesting for you. Free City Deliver}-. Gk F. BIGrBY.