The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, November 01, 1899, Page 2, Image 2

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LAST S ^Preached by I >r. AV . hem Church, Sept Asaociitli' HvJ'orin TKXT: ' Say unto lier, Thou art the | land that is uot cleansed.' -hzel?. ; 22:24. lt is within thc memjiry of ihisgen- j oration when this whole hind <>r ours, ! North, South, Fast and West, was swept, by the desolation of war. There j are on every hand, in ruined homes, and stricken households and father less children the memorials of our ter rible civil war. Verily, wc have pass- j ed through the furnace of affliction- j thc gold has been tri? d. And yet in thc evils which afflict us, and the evil.i which threaten us. wc; may say cf our whole ?ountry, as thc proplmt said nf Palestine after its fearful scourge of war and captivity, "Tlu?u art a lam! that i.- not cleansed." i'h?; design of ullliction is twofold, lor correction and for punishment , -loh s. ^ for example, was not so much for pun ishmcut as for a witness lo the truth j amia testimony t<> th?! power ?if re- I ligion in the heart. Hut whatever be , the immediate design, it ought to lead us in the ced t<> a eiving up of sin. a j searching of our ways and a turning to God in a hearty resolve to abandon everything which might have incurred j his displeasure, and unless it acorn- j plish this, at least in part, we will j have been scourged in vain, lt will j bc "a land nut cleansed.'' Is not this our condition? Doubtless, brethren, there are sanctiticd results with many; doubtless the chastening which wc have n?' ? iv. ?l has wrought sanctified results ?vitti iiMiny, doubtless the af fliction ha* worked patience, and pa tience experience and experience hope iu many eases, and that grief which lies buried so tenderly iu the sanctu ary of the soul has weaucd many from an unsatisfying portion of this earth to a glorious and blessed immortality. But if wc look at the general results, and at the prevailing characteristics may we not say with the prophet, "thou art a land not cleansed." (1) Brethren, we have not cleansed ourselves from a profanation of G ?d's holy Sabbath. Instead of less Sab bath desecration than there was ll) years ago, is there not moro of it? On this subject God has given us, uot only his example, hut also an express law. That law was inwoven with the warp and woop of the Jewish economy and it was reaffirmed in thc ministry of Jesus Christ. His teachiugs did not abolish this institution; so far from that he incorporated it with tho Gospel dispensation; and by his ex ample He declares it to bc of perpet ual obligation. Thc Sabbath was j made for man, for his good and Iris everlasting well-being. Hut to enjoy its blessings, and to reap its benefits we must observe it. It must be sanc tified. Apart from any religious con sideration it would seem that men would be constrained to keep it as a day of rest. Filled up as tho week is with its busy hours and its burden of cares, and its coustant employment how nccessar some interval of repose. As a measure ? the system of human labor, how wisu and beneficent. In this view of it even tho ungodly have recognized its wisdom. And yet it is with thousands a day of actual labor. Their physical energies are taxed as lauchas on any other. Tho great rail road trains employ their hands and la borers on that day just as on any oth er. The Sabbath receives not even the homage of rest. In letter und Bpirit the Sabbath - is thoroughly dis regarded. Thia disregard is not con fined to those who arc careless of re ligion, who are indiferent to it, but the most mournful features of it is in the easR of those whoa admit tho sanc tity of the Sabbath, who acknowledge its divine authority. They know and approve the right, but they follow tho wrong. So many who profess to hon or the Sabbath, seem to think that if they go to church they have fulfilled their obligation to observe the Sab bath-that they are, after this, free to spend the day ns they like. They for get that the proper observance of thc day consists in holy resting, with its accompanying duties of prayer, medi tation and reading the Scriptures, ls it not true, brethren, that this evil in stead of diminishing is a growing one in this country? Has there not been a decline in this matter from thc prac tices of our fathers? It may be said that thc yearly number of immigrants who flood this country aud who come to us with their national customs and ? with their loose notions on this sub ject, may serve to explain this change for the worse Well, that may account for it in part in our cities, and in many of our populous districts, but there is scarce ly a. ripple of thia mighty wave that reaches our remote regions. We are thankful that it is so. A genuine for eigner ia a curiosity with us. Wo must find the looseness of which wo apeak in something else. We cannot lay the bi imo on others. The sin lies at our own door. We have fallen below a Standard bequeathed to ua centuries HR MON M. Grriei%at Bethlo ;ember ?.ird, 18?M). id I'i'cshyterian. airo. The useless visiting, the worthless reading, the neglect ol' tin- sacred Scriptures, th<- worldly business that intrude themselves <>n that sacred day jilainly declare the low estimate which we pl ?iee up"ii it. And shall not (?od visit tin- lund for these things. If (?od punished his ancient people be cause they Irangresscd his Sabbath by bl i riging i ?i burdens on th? Sabbath, can we expect ?ess severity for our sin in this respect? Sabbath breaking was regarded one of our great national sins hi fore tho war, ii it lens so now? Let ?i- teach our children lo hallow it- let us .?-et them thc example-then shall "ur peace bc as a river and our right eousness as thc waves of thc sea! II. Again as a peuple wc h vc not cleansed ourselves from thc sin ?d' drunkenness. It were useless to cuter into au elaborate condemnation of that which every man's conscience tells him is a violation of decency and self respect as well ns of (?od s law. There is r;o better temperance lecture in thc world than the sight of a mari possess ed of all thc features ofomanhood, yet robbed of all t!icsc in beastly intoxi cation, livery trace of a divine and heavenly origin is lost in thc degrada tion. There can bc no exaggeration of thc evil of drunkenness. The amount of intoxicants of one sort or another drank in this country is ap palling. It would pay all our school taxes, all our gifts to the Church, to pastors' salaries, to home and foreign missions. It would support all our jails and penitentiaries and then have a large balance. There arc thousands who arc thus doubling thc calamities ol' our civil war, and adding to thc misfortune which broke their spirits and paralyzed their energies. It is painful to sec men of agc and influ ence yielding to this ruinous habit, but it is still moro distressing when wc seo t.iat it is robbing us of thc very hope ot' thc land, BO many of ita young men. There is sonic sort of a poor ?dca, not an ex cuse, mind you, for a man who is left without bodily or mental vigor in his declining years to struggle with pov erty, with thc burden of a household, but one who has health and strength, who has all thc promise of years to conic, who has no lost fortunes to mourn over, no bitter memories to vex him, such a one is left without even a miserable plea when he seeks his com fort in a saloon. Ile is wasting a life which might be useful-he is squan dering earnings which might bless ethers, and worse than all this he is bringing sorrow ao/1 disgraco to a homo of which he is thc joy and pride. All over our laud wc sec abun dant evidences of the waste and ruin of driuk nrnoug our youth. Hut now while we say this wo thankfully ac knowledge that a Christian sontiment is asserting itself in our country, par ticularly in our mora! districts. We rejoice to believe that right here in our own immediate section and neigh borhood thero is lessdrunkonness now than thero was fifty years ago. By constant discussion and agitation a quiet temperance reform has been at work and drinking practices and cus toms that were largely patronized by respectable church people have been seen to be harmful and have been abandoned. And there is an obliga tion laid upon every lover of the church, and ewry lover of his country to exert himself by precept and ex ample in checking and abolishing an evil more disastrous than war. If ever there was a time when wo stood in need of the virtue." of sobriety with its plain, honest, homely dad sun browned industry it is now. And this suggests: III. That we havo not cleansed our selves from tho sin of an ungodly worldliness. This is thc eating can ker of our time. Men mako haste to be rich. There is a deep-seated aver sion to thc slow accumulations of or dinary industry. An observant preacher says, There is a .swarm of tuen bred in thc heat of adventurous times, who scorn to speak of dollars and cents-hundreds and thousands are their words. "Everythingis done at a driving rate. They wish to reap before they have ploughed and sown. Fortunes arc to be made in a day." My hearers this does not arise from any local cause, it is tho result of a I disease in the whole community. Here is a man who has a boil on his hand, it is not from any thing wrong with thc hand specially; no, his blood is wrong, and his whole system is foul with corruption from the crown of his head to the sole of his foot. And in the lengths to which mon go in this matter of unscrupulous money-making they verify the declaration of the in spired Apostle, "They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snaro whioh drown men in destruction and perdition." Oh, let us rebuke this spirit of worldliness whioh ie invad ing our very homes and whioh is seat i ri g itself io every department of hu man industry. Let us remember that our succ?s- in this life is not to be measured by "loss and gain," by what we acquire or what we iuis9 of earthly goods. Eternity has its rewards which are infinitely above the treasures of earth. We have thus hinted at some of the more prominent evils which hinder the prosperity of'.ne land and which afilict thc church o? God. We have endeavored to speak with soberness and truth; we have not overdrawn the picture. Have rot these evils of which we have spoken a hold more or less secure on us? Do we see nothing in our own immediate neighborhood, in our congregation, to lament? My young friends, we make a special ap peal to you in this matter. Tim un born good or evil of this country is with you. Oh! that God would bap tize you with his Holy Spirit, that you might keep his Sabbaths and rev erence his holy day; that you might be kept from all intoxicants as from the plague of small pox, or yellow fe ver, that you might hate; covetousness and love all honest work with its slow but steady gains, thus shall you he rich toward God aud in all good works. -mm* m mi-. The Missionary's Little .lobe. A native Maori chieftain, the de scendant of cannibal kings, is now completing his medical education in Chicago. Cannibalism ended in his tribe, he says, when Bishop Selwyn converted his grandfather; but be tells some stories of it which have a distinctly humorous flavor. For in stance: It is said that once a chief captured a missionary who was anything but a toothsome morsel, as ho was old and thin and looked as if his flesh would be tough. The missionary warned the chief that he ?vould not make a good dinner, and pulling up his trousers, cut a slice off the calf of bis leg and offer ed it to the chief. The chief tasted it, said he didn't like it and passed it to a subchief. The sub tasted it, made a wry face and passed it on. Thc next man who took a bite of it spat it out. Tba missiona ry was released. After he had gone it was discovered that he wore a cork leg. Paid With a Snub If anything roils a woman, it is to have some younger woman get up and offer her a scat in a streetcar. This misplaced civility infers that the elder woman is to be considered on account of her age, when, in fact, there is little difference in years between the two. I witnessed a droll bit of comedy the other day in a Brookline eleotric that makes mo smile every time I think of it. The car was full, with several passengers standing, when in bounced a 3tout, well preserved person, with white hair beautifully pompadoured. She was dressed in deep mourning, but a bunch of violets in the frontof the coat gave u touch of "mitigation," to her grief, which was quite borne out by a meiriment lurking in her mouth aud eyes. Thc lady grasped a strap and looked out of the window. Then suddenly a young person sitting near, observing perhaps that no man in the car intended to offer his seat, rose and leaning forward touched the other on the arm, saying: * "Won't you have my seat?" "Are you going to get out?" ask^d the standen. "No, ma'am," replied thc tactless creature, "but you aro older than I, and-" bus the sentence was never finished. If a glanoe could slay, that young person would have fallen on the floor dead. "Thank you. When I am too old to stand up, I shall not enter a public conveyance." That was all. The junior woman slunk back into the seat, and some of the passengers tittered.-Cincinnati Enquirer. Rheumatism-Catarrh, are Blood Dis? eases-Cure Free! It is thc deep-seated, obstinate oases of Catarrh and Rheumatism that B. B. B. (Botanio Blood Balm) cures, lt matters not what other treatments, doctors, sprays, liniments, medicated air, blood purifiers, have failed to do, B. B. B. always promptly reaches the real cause and roots out and drives from the bones, joints, mucous mem brane, and entire system the specific poison in tho blood that causes Rheu matism and Catarrh. B. B. B. is the only remedy strong enoi ^h to do this so there can never be a return of the symptoms. Don't give up hope but ask your druggist for B. B". B.-Bo tanio Blood Balm of 3 Bs.-Large bottles $1, six bottles (full treatment) $5. B. B. IL is an honest remedy ? that makes real cures of all Blood j Diseases after everything else fails. Wo have absoluto confidence in Bo tanio Blood Balm; hence, so you may test it, we will send a Trial Bottle Free on request. Personal medical advice free. Address Blood Balm Co., 380 Mitchell St., Atlanta Qa. - A girls' seminary at Auburndalo, N. Y., has a fully organised oadet corps that drills with Springfield rifles. - The Phoenicians wero not the inventors of the alphabet. The hon or belongs to the Egyptians. W. 0. T. U. DEPAKTMENT. Conducted by thu Indien of tin? W. C. T. r. of Anderson, .S. C. Tue Silent Example. It is an education to como in per sonal contact with a good mao. Ile may nut utter a precept, but his ex ample is an efficient teacher. Thc HGV. Robert Halgarnic, au Knglish clergyman who preached at Scarbo rough, once rendered, unknown to himself, a great service to a young man by tho influence of his silent cx 'i pie. Thc unconscious benefit is d? fi -ibed by thc Kev. Newman liai;, in h Autobiography." A lady wrote to Mr. Balgarri ie, say ing that she owed hin? more gratitude than she could express. .She had a son who was struggling against thc evil habit of drinking. She dreaded his going to Scarborough, lest the cus toms of society might lead him away. She dreaded the example, not of thc worldly, but of Christian professors who took wine. Her son had written to say that he had been at an evening party where wino was handed round. He was about lo take it, following thc ex ample of some respectable and good people, when he saw that Mr. Balgar nie refused it. This fortified him to resist thc temptation, which with him might have lcd to ruin. Mr. Balgarnie's silent example not only saved thc mother's boy, but ex pressed the rule of thc great apostle : "If meat make my brother to offend [to stumble], I will eat no flesh while thc world standeth, lest I make my brother to offend."-Youth's Compan ion . - - ? mm. Hum in Africa. Bishop Tugwell, of the English Church Missionary Society at Lagos, West Africa, in a letter to the Lon don Times, reports that euoruious quantities of gin, rum, and brandy are pouring into British West Africa through Lagos, Akassa, Bonny, and other ports. Ile affirms that within a few days of the time of his writing thousands of cases of intoxicants had been stocked on the wharves of the merchants. Drinking habits arc being formed, not only among the heathen and Mohammedans, but among thc better classes. Soventy-five per cent of thc deaths amongst the Europeans I arc attributed to their drinking habits. While some of the British officials seem to oppose thc traffic, they do it ineffectually. An enormous revenue is derived from the traffic, but the moral degradation is still more enor mous. The bishop says: "It is a shameful and horrible hypocrisy to boast of our imperial greatness and suffer such evils to*go unchecked." In an appeal to Christian Englishmen to take some prompt and definite action in thc matter, be calls for the prohibition of tho importation of spirits in districts where the trade has not yet been introduced, and that in other districts the duty on the imports shall bo raised so that the price shall be come practically prohibitive. That this letter of Bishop Tugwell's in the Times has greatly aroused the British traders in Lagos is evidenced by the fact that they have brought an aotion for libel against him on his return to Africa. The committee of the Church Missionary Society has hastened to assure the bishop of their sympathy and of their readiness to accept the pecuniary responsibility for his de fense. Possibly the stir thus made will serve to arouse a proper publio sentiment for the suppression of the evil. . - A boy, 14 years old, who was told to write all he could about breath ing in a composition, handed in the following: "Breath is made of air. We breathe WlbU OUI lUUgS, UUr llgunn, uui ilvCX and kidneys. If it wasn't for our breath, we would die when we slept. Our breath keeps the life a-going through the nose when v e are asleep. Boys that stay in a room all day should not breathe. They should wait until they get outdoors.' Girls kill the breath with corsets that squeezes the diagram. Girls can't holler or run like boys because their diagram is squeezed too much. If I was a girl I had rather be a boy so I can run and holler and have a great big diagram." -Detroit Free Press. The Words of a Famous Mission Worker Perhaps no man in Atlanta is better and more favorably known than Mr. John F. Barolay. He for a long time has been a sufferer from indigestion and dyspepsia. This is what he says: Atlanta, Ga., January 23, 1895. Dr. C. O. Tyuer : Having used Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy for several years in my family I gladly add my testi mony to what has already been said in ita praiso. Without any exoeption I think it ia the finest remedy on the market and nothing would induce me to do without it. JNO. F. BARCLAY. For sale by Wilhite & Wilhite. Sample bottle free on application to Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Co., Atlan ta, Ga. _ - The sun, nioon and stars are noth ing but skylights. - If a man ia too fly he ia apt to get into the soup. Murderer's Dash for Liberty. ATLANTA, GA., October21.-Edward C. Flanagan, thc Dekalb County mur derer, broke from bis cell in the Dekalb County jail this morning. AH he dash ed through the door and past the guard, who liad the murderer's bieakfast in his hands, he suatched up the two year-old baby of Sherill Talley. Draw ing a long knife from his s eevc and clasping the child to bis half-clad breast, the prisoner tied down the jail stairway toward the street and liberty. Down one Hight of steps und then through a corridor leading to the sheriff's residence, the only avenue of escape fruin the prison, Flanagan sped, holding the screaming child with his left arni and brandishing the knife in bis right band, lint for the presence of the sheriff in the corridor Flanagan would have escaped. Sheriff Talley happened to be in the room into which Flanagan dashed. Mrs. Talley, the child's mother, was also in the room. The father and mother simultaneously sprang upon the escaping prisoner, Mrs. Talley wielding a broom and the shel iff clutching Flanagan by the neck. The guard came running down the steps at the same instant in pursuit of the prisoner, und the three of them overpowered Flanagan and tore the child from his grasp. The sherill'then drove him back up the stairs and into the cell at the point of his pistol. Flanagan has been con li ned in the Dekalb jail since last February await ing a new trial on tin* charge of mur dering Miss Kuth Slack, Mrs. Dixon Allen, attempting to murder Mr. George \V. Allen, and indicting injuries on the latter's father, Dixon Allen, from which he afterwards died. Ile has been sentenced to hang but on a idea of lunacy be bas been allowed repeated trials. - ma * ma Twisted the Lion's Tail. Ai.HAK v, (Ls., October 21.-The danger of twisting the hon's tail was pointedly illustrated here to-day. Fred Morris, aged 10, visited Cooper's Circus. Eluding the vigilance of the keepers he seized the tail of tho biggest lion and gave it the severest twist his small hands were able. With an angry roar the beast thrust its paws through the bars, grabbed the child's head and nearly pulled it off before he could be rescued. The scalp was nearly torn off and the claws scraped the skull in a dozen places. The child is seriously injured. _ - If we do our duty and then brag about it wo haven't done it. The baby's coming is often looked for ward to as a time of dread and danger. Many vi omen are physicallv unfit to be come mothers. They are sick and weak In a womanly way and may well look with fear toward the time of maternity. Intelligent preparation for this time is most essential. An athlete " trains " for mouths before his trial. Most women do not " train " at all and yet their trial is to be fifty times as severe as the athlete's. During the period of gestation every woman should use every means to strengthen the organs that are to be tried. They should be kept in perfect health. The faintest symptom of dis order or disease should ne promptly eliminated. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is designed to do this very thing-has been doing it for over thirty years. It is the one sure medicine for all female com plaints, It is the only medicine that may be absolutely depended upon to practically abolish the pain and danger of childbirth. It is the only preparation of its kind that is the invention of a reg ularly graduated physician-a skilled and _ experienced specialist in the cure of diseases of women. 0 Mr?. Emerson Allen, of Dorset, Ontario Co.. Ont., writes : " I was in very poor health for a long time, dating from the birth of my little girl. 1 tried different doctors and different medicines. I took four bottles of ' Favorite Prescription 1 and seem to be perfectly well again." FOR SALE. ABOUT Nine Hundred Acres FINE LAND in Fork Towoabio, be tween new Forry and Hatton'* Ford. MRS. O. M. OHENNAULT, Anderson, rt. C. Got 25, 1890_18_ FOB SALE. FARM, containing 240 acres, ll miles Southwest from the City ot Ander son. All scientifically terraced and in good state ot cultivation. 4-roo ea cot tage, (now,) two tenant hnnms and big log barn on the place. Pried $10.00 per acre, spot cash. For further partioulara call on or address JOHN J. NORRIS, Anderson, S.C. Oct 25,180tr ia B linillllVka A I HEADACHE, | . NEURALGIA, 9 I LA GRIPPE. I Believes ail pain. Druggists BANKERS and BROKERS. GEO. SKALIER & CO., CONSOL, STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG, 60-62 Broadway, - Nsw York. LOTS OF MONEY CAff be made through speculation with doposit of $80.00 [thirty dollars] upward [or 3 per cont, margin upward] on the Stock Exchange. The greatest fortunes have been made through speculations In Stocks, Wheat or Cotton. If yon are Interested to know how spec ulations are conducted, notify us and we will send yon Information and market etter freo of charge. Usual commission charged for exe outing orders. Government, Municipal, and Railroad bonds quotations furnished on applica tion for purchase, sale and exchange. ' Oct: 25, 1800 18 - 6m ?v'eg?l?blcPicpar?lionrorAs siB?latlr?g ?teTcodandRegula ling lue Stcmi?chs an?Boweb af INIANXS i HILDHKN Promote s Di^cs?on.Checiful ?icss andBsst.Contaius neither Opium,MorphinC nor Mineral. T?OT NAHCOTiC. f?xrpc aTOLl nrSAKlJLHTCJini I^nnphn Sad' Alx.Saina * Jfot?tUc SJ/J - Anise St tr! * IXfptma'ni - Iii CaitonattSoJw * Jf?nrt Seed - finn fud Sugar . limtny/an Atorar: J A perfect- Remedy forConsUpa tion. Sour Stoniach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Tee Simile Signature of NEW YORK. At b moivllVs." ?Itt J5?0SIS-35C1 NTS LtKXACT COPY-OF "WRAEPEB, For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Always Bought. THC CCWTAUft COMPANY. NCW YORK CITY. y and Wagon Trade is on the increase, but we want it to increase more. THOUSANDS of Farmers can testify that "Old Hickory," "Tennessee," "Studebaker" and "Milburn" Wagons are the lightest running and will wear longer than other makes on the market. You may find in this County? these Wagons that have been iu constant use for the past twenty years. We also have on baud a large and varied assortment of BUGGIES and CARRIAGES, and among them the celebrated ''Babcock's," "Columbias," "Tyson & Jones," "Columbus," and many other brands. Our record for telling first-class Goods is evident by the blands men tioned above, that we have exclusive sale for in Anderson County. Our "Young Men's" Buggy bas no equal. Have also a large and se?eit line of HARNESS, SADDLES, BRI DLES, &c, and have recently seemed exclusive control and sale of the cele brated "Matthew Heldman" Harness, which is well known in this County] and needs no "talking up " The Wagon and Buggy manufacturers are advancing prices on all theil goods on account of the advance m price bf all the material, and in conse quence we will have to advance our prices from $5.00 to 810.00 a job ; bul we wish to give you a chance to buy before the rise, so you had better joh in the procession and buy one of ..ur Buggies or Wagons at once, for on aili after September 1st next our prices will be at least $5.00 higher than a| present. We regret having to do this, but cannot geL around it. Buy now and save this advance. JOS. J. FRETWELL. Will still sell you a first-class Buggy for $30.00. Carj riage $85.00. Syracuse Chilled Plow j FARMERS, we ask y oar kind attention for a few minutes. Youl r< _:_?nm nnn. ?Ute PAII ??A Win??. -- ~i- 9 TUT T. 11 If Jin. UUlUg bVT ?Ul L. JIUU. ?wu?* v.. ?LI VIII ?UH ?. * I? VU A UtU jvu U\.V * ff V)i.. ? * Jfwt* HfJ, J_ you must be sure and try one of th e. 8 YR ACUSE CHILLED PLOWS. Th . are the lightest draft Plows and do the best Work of any Plow in this conni They are no experiment, aa we have been selling them here for the 1 " five years, and we are sure wo would not keep them on sale if they would ? J< ! do the work T?O claim for them. ' C cs VtTg *sk only what is fair. Xf, after you give them a fair trial, they ^ not do the work satisfactory, you can bring the Plow baok to our Store and ? , your money back. I , What could be more fair ? ' I111 We are still selling them at old prices, on aooount of having contract gi before the recent advances on goods in our line. Of oourse there aro so ?j few things that we oaonot sell at old prices, neither can any one else, bot long as we have any goods bought at old prices you can rest assured that 3 will get them that way. fe ;* th W? ha Vo S full lino tbob?Rf. Airrioultnrftl TmTilpitinnt.p f h ?af. ?g rnoniif np, tured, viz : Thc" AVERY DISC VP?T?W, THOMAS ~HAY~ RAKES th CUTAWAY HARROWS of all sizes. Be sure and see our TORRE co HARROW, which does the work of three Turo Plows at one time. .. Will be pleased to see you at any time, so don't forget us when in T BROCK BROS. ?0 ^^OlDEROT & BRO. I inLOTJU.....?T'IL.OTJJEl 2 590BABBRL8. wh GOT every grade you are looking for. We know. what you want, i c&i we've got the nrioes right. Can't give it to yoo. but wo will sell you 1 j grado Flour 2o to 35c cheaper than any competition. Low grade F , 98.00 pei barrel. Car EAR CORN and stacks of Shelled Corn. Buy while it is Chen Ao advancing rapidly. We know where to buy and get good, sound Corn cblT? OATS, HAY and BRAN. Special prices by the ton. thi , We want your trade, and if honest dealings and low prices coon cat will'get it. Yours for Business, int o. ss. ?MS^S?K & mdT VQa. Now is your chance to set Tobacco cheap. Closing ont odds 8,g ends in Caddies. . * ' ' ? . " ? tl ? ooe