The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, February 07, 1900, Image 4
HOW CLEMS'
_A_nirual Report of t
COLUMBIA, S. C., January 29.
Tho report of the board of trustees of
Clemson College has been filed. It
gives an interesting condensation
of the work of the College. Follow
ing are extracts from the report:
In submitting this, the tenth an
nual report pf Clemson College, as
.required by law, it is exceedingly
gratifying to the board of trustees to
state that, notwithstanding the low
price of cottou and the consequent
stringency in money matters, thc Col
lege has experienced during the year
a degree of success beyond our most
sanguine anticipations.
President II. 3. Hartzog has contin
ued to display an aptitude and ability
to manage the affairs of tho College, aud
to his careful mauagemctit the pres
ent prosperous conditions are largely
due.
Owing to the extensive sanitary im- 1
provements made there has been but
very little sickness during tho year.
There have been no cases of a serious
nature.
At the beginning of-thc scholastic
year in September last the number of
applicants for admission largely ex
ceeded the capacity of the College, and
it was with much regret that some
thing over 200 applicants had to be
turned away. Four hundred and sev
enty-five students matriculated, and
these were distributed, as far as pos
sible, among the several Counties in
proportion to their representation in
the General Assembly. At this time
the president has received enough
written applications for admission into
the College at the beginning of the
term, September, 1900, to fill tho Col
lege, not counting the 440 students now
here.
Notwithstanding this increased de
mand upon the College this board is
not prepared to recommend at this
time any extensive enlargement of the
College plant. Such an enlargement
would be a serious matter, as it would
require the enlargement of every de
partment in the College, which would
necessarily entail a large expenditure
of money. But it is imperative that
there should be an enlargement of the
plant as to properly take care of and
provide for those students that are here
now.
In equipping and co-ordinating the
several departments this board eould
not foresee every condition liable to
accrue. The large increase of students
this year was not distributed equally
among the several classes, but was ne
cessarily confined to the freshman and
sophomore o?asses. Had this increase
been distributed among ail the classes
we eould possibly have managed very
well with the equipment, but when
there ia an overflow in say two classes
every department into which these two
classes go for instruction has to be en
larged, otherwise it will be impossible
to give them all proper instruction.
Experience this year has demonstrated
the fact that, in order to properly pro
vide for and properly instruct the stu
dents now here, under the conditions
above stated, there will have tobe large
additions both to the buildings and
equipment. ' . '
Wo will here call your attention to
some of these neoessary enlargements.
The chemical laboratory was primarily
constructed for class instruction only,
but for six or seven years a large part
of the buildiug has been occupied by
the State analytical department, the
work in which department has more
than doubled in the last few years.
Chemistry is largely taught in tho ag
ricultural course and in thc course of
textile industry and to a less extent in
the mechanical course. Now the in
crease in the College, as above speci
fied, renders it necessary to either
build a new and separate buildiug for
the fertilizer and State analytical de
partment, or enlarge the present build
ing, as thc building at present is en
tirely too small. And here we will
state further that the expenses of the
fertilizer department- as public-bed do
not represent all the expenses, as the
department has no rent and other such
expense to provide for, and the board
requires the professors of the College
' to give their work to the department,
when they are not otherwise employed.
By this arrangement tho money ac
tually paid out for this work has
been reduced uewfly cue-asi? of
what it cost when it was legated in
Columbia.
The textile department, recently
added to the College courte/ has met
with gratifying approval and success.
But the skilled instructors employed
in this department, together with the
usual ourrent expensos, have added
considerably to the total expenses of
the College. The buildtri?for this de
partment, when planned, provided for
doubl J tho present building, but lt was
deemed wiso to construct one-half of
the building at tho beginning. Now
-the present building is not large
enough io- permit the placing in it of
ON THRIVES.
lie Board of College
stees.
thc machinery given to it, nor is it
large enough to accommodate the num
ber of students desiring to take this
course, hence this building will have
to bc enlarged.
In the mechanical department the
divisions of wood work, force and
foundry and machinery were equipped
to accommodate sections of eighteen
students at a time, as this number was
as large as any instructor could prop
erly teach. The increase of students
in thc two lower College classes is far
beyond thc capacity of these divisions
and the equipment of each must ne
cessarily be increased.
Our agricultural department heeds
many appliances and equipments to
strengthen thc practical side of the
work. All agricultural courses are
still iu a formative state to some ex
tent, as education along this line is
? new, and there are not many prece
dents to follow. Wc have now reach
ed a point where we can see
clearly the desirability and necessity
of making many permanent improve
ments.
Thc personnel of thc agricultural
faculty is strong, but for the most ef
ficient work equipment and appliances
are necessary. In the past wc have
tried in every way that seemed proper
to make this course thc best of the
United States. We feel that it will
now compare favorably with that in
any other agricultural college, but to
hold up this nigh standard we should
provide modern appliances.
The wretched condition of the one
mile of road from the College to Cal
houn last winter made thc expense of
hauling coal and supplies very heavy
indeed. To remedy this evil, tho
board determined to build a macadam
road, both for convenience and in
struction. This road is uow nearly
completed. In building it we were
materially assisted by Mr. Secretary
of Agriculture Wilson and the experts
under him.
The macadam road will largely re
duce the expense of hauling, but if tve
had a railroad branch from the same
place, so that the unloading of ears
could be avoided, the cost of this
hauling could be rcduoed to a mere
trifle.
The board would have graded and
laid the erossties upon this road
this year, the railroad having agreed
.to lay the iron and move the cars for
us, but persons owning lands refused
the right of way. We ask that the
Act incorporating the College be
amended, giving the trustees thc right
to build reilroads, macadam roads,
tramways and highways within its in
corporate limits, and to construct a
railroad along the highway from the
College to Calhoun Station, if deemed
advisable, with the power to con
demn rights of way therefor when ne
cessary.
Owing to the fact that many of our
instructors were unmarried men we
have been able to provide house room
for them, but this oondition has 'been
changed and, therefore, we feel it ne
cessary to construct several more small
I cottages.
The treasurer reports a balance on
hand of some ten thousand dollars.
1 This balance could have been profita
bly expended in making enlargements
: to tho cquipmentof the divisions men
tioned above, but in the management
of such an institution as Clemson Col
lege it is uot good' business to appro
priate all of our income at tho begin
ning Of the year.
To make the enlargements of build
ings aud equipments before mentioned
to keep paoe with the rapid develop
ment of science, to preserve the Col
lege property, to properly tako care of
thc students now here, und to main
tain thc high standard which Clemson
now enjoys, it will require', 'to meet
these improvements, together with the
j current expenses, and to maintain a
sufficient balance on hand to meet
emergencies, all the balance now on
batu left o vcr-from ?sst year, and all
of this year inspection tax, even if the
amount should be as large as reoeived
last year.
In conclusion, we desire to oall at
tention to one of the results growing
out of the particular instruction given
at Clemson. Within six weeks after
the last class graduated every member
of the class obtained a good position
zi salaries ??ckdgiog ?600. Besides
all of tho graduates, or nearly all of
them, are profitably employed in posi
tions heretofore inaccessible to the
young .men of this State. Many of
the graduates of the electrical division
are now receiving larger salaries
than we pay the professor of electrici
ty.
All that wo ask from the Legisla
ture' is that the condition heretofore
existing be allowed to remain aa it now
is. If this is done we will guarantee
the eontinned development of pros
perity of Clemson College
R. W. SIMPSON,
President Board Trustees.
W. 0. T. ?. DEPARTMENT.
Conducted by tho ladies of tho W. C.
T. U. of Anderson, S. C.
.Nea! Dow's First Triumph.
Neal Dow was 25 years old when be.
delivered his il i st temperance speech.
It was at an aunivorsary tupper of a
Gre company to which) he belonged,
and his strenuous opposition to the
use of liquor was effective to that do*
grco that tho Gre company adopted
temperance as a principle. Later, he
prevailed upon the Maine Mechanical
Charitable Association to forego, the
use of wine at its annual dinner.
At that time liquor was almost uni
versally used in Maine. Ono of the
curious cu?toms of Portland in those
days was thc ringing of thc town bell
at ll and i o'clock by way of warning
ta mechanics that it was time to leave
work and get a drink. This custom
the young reformer succeeded in hav- J
iug abolished. Then he persuaded i
most of tho Portland employers to dis
continue supplying their men with li
quors.
After his fiist success, Neal Dow
felt that temperance was the most im
portant cause of thc age. It was ow
ing lartroly to his efforts that thc
Young Men's Total Abstinence Society
of Portland was organized. Its first
meeting, it is said, was held in the
counting-room of a distillery.
In a recent address before the rail
road branch of the Y. M. C. A., of
New York City, Chauncey M. Dcpew
said: "Twenty years ago, when thero
were about about 15,000 men in the
New York Central service, tho average
proportion of meu discharged for
drunkenness within a certain period
( was at least 20 per cent. Now, with
j 30,000 men employed by tho company
not 1 per cent is dropped from the ser
; vice for that cause."
? A temperance restaurant in Paris,
under tho name of "Hygienic restau
. ant," has, in less than a.year, proved
a profitable financial venture.
A boy was passing a saloon, and
seeing a drunken rosn lying in the
gutter in f ?ont. of it, he opened the
door and bald: "Mister, your sign's
fell down." The saloon keeper chased
him half around the square. *
Sam Davis.
Tae names of Major Andre and of
our own Nathan Hale live together as
those of men who loved their country
to the uttermost. If a third may be
admitted to their company, should it
not be the name of Sam Davis, the
! Confederate spy who met death on
I the scaffold at Pulaski, Tennesse, in
the summer of 1864? His oareer cs a
spy had been singularly successful,
and he returned severel times un
scratched after executing the most
hazardous missions withiu the Federal
lines.
At length, however, he was captur
ed. Upon his person wero found doc
uments which proved his mission.
He was tried by eourt martial and
sentenced to be hanged.
It was of prime importance to the
Federals to know who was the author
of the papers found upon Davis, and
the Union captain in whose custody
the prisoner was placed was author
ized to offer him life and liberty'in
return for the desired information.
The captain, who felt a warm person -
J al esteem for 'Davis, pressed him to
accept the offer. Davis listened in
silence,,then he said:
"1 cannot be false to my comrades
or to friends of our cause within the
Union lines."
The captain pressed his point in
vain. The prisoner stood firm, but
his constaucy was to Undergo a sever
er test. Davis was engaged to bo
married to a young woman of northern
Alabama. The unhappy girl secured
a pass to the Union lines and was
finally accorded an interview with her
lover. Sho pleaded with him desper
atly.
"Sam, if you love me, if you love
your old mother, who sits weeping for
you at home, you will save your life.
Wo beg it, I implore it."
"I do love you, and my heart is al
most breaking as I think of mother,
but"-here his voice trembled, but he
mastered his emotion and proceeded,
"there are occasions where one's duty
to country rises abovo every other
motive. I cannot be a traitor!"
The girl he loved understood him.
She no looger strove to move his re
solution, but told him how she loved
and honored him the more.
Still another temptation came on
the last day o; Davis's life. Tho
yoting captain, who had become his
friend, was ordered to superintend his
execution. They stood together on
the scaffold, while the ignominious
noose was placed round the prisoner's
ueck. Once more the captain, in a
voice broken by emotion, begged Davis
to save himself. The doomed man
hung his head, and his lips moved in
silent prayer. Then he stood ereot
and answered:
"If I had a thousand lives I would
lose them all here before 1 would be-1
tray my friends or the confidence* of I
my informer."
The lover was pulled, and Davis
died an honorable mau.-The Youths
Companion.
Modder Uiver uud Franklin.
After tho battle of Modder Uiver
was fought in South Africa den. Met
huen seut a special dispatch to thc
Queen, saying: "Tho battle was tho
bloodiest of the century." One of
tho uewspaper correspondents ^ who
was with Methuen's columu tele
graphed: "Tho Waterloo of the cam
paign has been fought and won." The
engagement at Modder Uiver occured
two months ago, and yet the war ?is
not over, and comparative figures,
which have been given over and over
again, have supplied tho St. iJomes
Gazette with full warrant for saying:
"When swagger and rant prevail there
is commonly plentiful lack of judg
ment and of true resolution." Thc
same might be applied to the empty
boasting of the Pall Mall (?azette,
that the war will end when Gen. Uob
erts dictates thc termsat Pretoria."
In November last a monument was
dedicated at Frauklin, Tennessee, to
the memory of thc- Confederate sol
diers who lost their lives in thc bat
tle of Franklin in 18l>4: a battle which
was, indeed, one of the bloodiest of
the century, and with which the en
gagement at Modder Uiver could com
paro only as a hot skirmish. In thc
course of a very fine address made by
Gen. John B. Gordon at thc unveiling
of the Franklin monument, he gave
some figures, recounting the losses
which were sustained by the Confed
erate troops in that terrible engage
ment, whioh illustrate the valor of
thc Confederate soldier. The oppos
ing forces in the battle were nearly
equal in numbers, the Confederates
having about 19,000 infantry actually
engaged, and tho Federals about 22,
000; but the Confederates were the
attacking force, and the Federals were
so well fortified as to render one man
defending equal to about four attack
ing. Tho casualties in the battle were
appaling, but especially on the Con
federate side. Among the general
and field officers they were greater in
proportion to numbers engaged than
in any battle in tho war. Six general
officers were killed, 6 wounded and 1
' captured, making a total of 13. Thir
teen regimental commanders were kill
ed, 32 wounded and 9 captured, and
at the oloSe of the day 6,000 of tho
rank and file lay dead or disabled on
the field. Thc Federal loss was about
one-third as great as the Confederate.
The infantry forces actually engaged
lost 33 per oent. The loss in Stew
art's Corps, by divisions, was: Lor
ing's, 23; Walthall's, 25, and Frenoh's,
45 per cent. In Cheatham's corps,
by divisions, the loss was: Bate's, 10;
Brown's 31, and Cleburne's 52 per
cent. In Loring's Corps, Johnson's
Division, the on'y division of this
corps that was in the battle and in
the second oharge, the loss was 21 per
j cent. Pickett's Division, in its fa
mous oharge at Gettysburg, lost 21 per
' cent, while the loss in this hattie.
Franklin, cf the entire infantry en*
gaged waa 33 per cent, or 12 per oent
greater than that of Piokett at Gettys
burg. The statistics prove, as Gen.
Gordon said, that: "The battle of
j Franklin was the bloodiest of modern
: times," and he added:
' "lb concluding the aooount of this
great conflict, I doubt that if in any of
the bloody battles of the world, from
Marathon to Waterloo, from Waterloo
to Balaklava, and from Balaklava to
Gettysburg, there was more desperate
daring than was displayed on some
portions of this famous field."
The Confederate soldiers engaged
in the battle of Franklin were fight
ing for the same vital principle-the
Tight of self-government-that tho
people of South Africa are contending
for to-day. They lost at Appomattox
but they woo an eternal weight of
glory. What -the outcome cf ibo
strugglo in South Africa will bc no
one can tell. Thejadvantagc of wealth
and numbers is all on the side of
Great Britain; the righteousness of
the cause is with the Boers. In the
conflict so far the British have been
defeated, but tho Empire is aroused
as it has not been aroused before, and
the struggle, which was undertaken
unadvisedly and for the sake of pro
moting commercial ends solely, has so
far resulted in thc triumph of thc
plain people who are standing for their
rights, and have proved their patriot
ism by their sacrifices, rfc may hope
that the outcome of their struggle will
be more fortunate than the result of
the great contest in which wc were
engaged in this country nearly forty
years ago. Bot, whether the war
last long or not, we do not believe
that greater gallantry and devotion
will be displayed on any field than
that which immortalized the soldiers
of the Southern Confederacy in the
battle of Franklin., T*nn?22cc.~. Xr.ua
and Courier.
A Great Blessing-Something lo the Beat h
of Everybody.
What w luld you think of a man who
was sick and constantly lived in reach
of salvation, yet because be had failed
in other directions refuses to take tho
blessing that is before him ? This
was the case with Mr. John S. Cook,
of Atlanta. "I have been suffering
with dyspepsia for ten years. Ibo
gan taking Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy
and gained fifteen pounds in thirty
days. I commend it to the public as
a great blessing. I can eat supper, go
to bed and sleep like a babe-some
thing I could not do before." Price
50c. per bottle. For sale by Hill-Orr
Drug Co. and Wilhite & Wilhite.
HACK SAWS.
And Sawi of VnrlotiH Other Sorti*
Lard In Cutting Metala.
No doubt tho common Idea ot u saw
would bo of au Implement used for
sawing wood, and such is the chief
uso to which saws aro nut; but there
uro also many saws used for sawing
met?is. Tho most conunouly used of
those saws ls what is called a hack
saw.
Tho hack Baw is built something like
a meat saw; that is, the blade is hold
between the beut down ends of a
frame, to one cud of which is attached
tho handle by which, in the ordinary
way, tho saw is plied. But the hack
saw is smaller thau the meat saw, with
i a far moro slender frame, ?nd a light,
slender blade.
There are various stylos and sizes of
hack saw frames, including extension
frames, lu which can be used, accord
lug as the frame ls adjusted, saws of
different lengths; for the hack saw
blade ls not riveted Into Its frame, but
adjusted there, and blades eau be taken
out or put lu at will.
The blades are very narrow and very
thin and very flue toothed; they are
made of a steel specially hardened for
the uso. In tho manufacturo of the
blades the teeth are set and tiled by
machines with greater accuracy than
that work could be done by hand, and
at much less cost. Formerly many J
hack saw blades were hu port od from
England: now there ar.? very few Im
ported. The American blades are bet
ter and far cheaper. They are st) inex
pensive that when worn dull they are
not refiled; lt is cheaper to use a new
blade.
Th?; hack saw blades most commonly
used aro made lu various lengths rand
ing from 0 to 14 Inches; perhaps there
are sold more IS Inch blades thau any
other. These saw blades are put up
In dozens, a dozen of them together
making only a slender little bundle.
The average price at retail ls about 0.1
cents a dozeu.
Hack saws aro used in many trades.
A jeweler would have some little hack
saws on his workbench; back saws
are used by machinists, locksmiths,
stovemakers, plumbers, brass workers,
foundry men; they are used In all
trades in which metals aro worked,
and the carpenter, supposed to bo a
worker in wood alone, is likely to have
a hack saw in his kit of tools. Ho may
want to saw oft a bolt or something
of that sort, and for that mutter hack
saws are sometimes used for sawing
lu wood.
How long a hack saw will last de
pends, of course, very largely on how
much lt is used, but a hack saw with
which a seveu iuch steel shaft had
been cut off still remained sharp
enough for further use. Hack saws arc
put to many uses on indoor and on out
door work.
There are now mado for rallrond con
struction and repair work portable rail
saws for sawing off rails, tho old way
being to cut them off with chisel and
hammer. The rail Is clamped Into tho
frame lu which the saw ls worked, tho
saw bel nf, operated by baud power.
Portable rall saws of American inven
tion and manufacture are sold all over
the world.
Of power driven saws for metals
: there are various kinds, these saws be
ing put to many UBCS. For some pur
poses hack saws are fitted up so that
they can be power driven, but the saws
commonly used with power are cir
cular. As io size, circular saws are
made for metals ranging from 3 to 00
inches in diameter, and such saws aro
variously tempered, som 2 harder and
some sorter, according to tbo uta to
walch they are to bo put. Some aro
run at high speed, some, at low speed.
Some are toothed and some are tooth*
less, these lost being called friction
saws. And there are cold saws and
hot saws, so called, the hot saws being
used to saw metal which comes to tho
saws redhot.
Such saws, In one form and another,
aro used in the various mills in which
iron and steel are made into shapes
and in bridge and architectural works
and in machine shops and foundries;
they arc used for sawing off rails and
beams and burs and for many other
purposes.-New York Sun.
Pretoria and Thackeray.
Pretoria, as everybody knows. Is
named after Pretorios, ono of the cele?
orated Boer triumvirate of the pa3t.
He was said to belong to the sumo
family ns a Dr. Pretorius who In the
carly years of the queen's married Ufo
was attached to the immediate service
of tho prince eonsort and who In that
capacity was present nt all tho func
tions of tho court. Tho Court Circular
of tho time, after naming all tho dis
tinguished personages present, Invaria
bly concluding with the words "and
Dr. Pretorius." At a banquet ono even
ing at which Thackeray was present,
after the toast of tho queen hm? been
received with musical honors, the au
thor of "Vanity Fair" was overheard
quietly singing to himself the refrain:
.'Happy and glorious.
Long to reign over us.
Dr. Pretorius.
God savo tho queen."
-Westminster Gazette.
The Pride of Manhood.
The happiest time lu a boy's life Is
the day that he dons his first short
trousers. Mrs. Poyser's bantam cock,
which Imagined that the sun rose every
morning to henr him crow, could not
strut with moro conscious pride than
did this little fellow, and he felt the
importance incident to his first pair.
Finally, he stopped in front of his lit
tle slBter and deuvercd himself of these
Indisputable facts:
. "Sister, you can't never wear pants!
Sister, you can't never have a mus
tache!" and finally, as a complete
clincher, "Sister, you can't never be a
man, nohow!"
Overcome with tho gloom of her fu
ture, "sister" burst Into an uucontrol
able flood of tears.-Memphis Scimitar. ?
''After doctors failed 10 core me of
pneumonia I used One Minute Cough
Cure and three bottles of it cured, lt
is also the best remedy on earth for
whooping cough. It cured my grand
children of the worst cases," writes
Jno. B?rry, Loganton, Pa. It is the
only harmless remedy that gives im
mediate results. Cures coughs, colds,
croup and throat and lung troubles.
It prevents consumption. Children
always like it. Mothers endorso it,
i Evins Pharmacy.
I - An express engine consumes 10
gal lons'of water per mile.
use
PRICKLY
ASH
BITTERS
FOR KIDNEY DI8EA8E, 8TOM.
A0H TROUBLE, INDIOE8
kTION. LIVER DISORDER OR,
CONSTIPATION,
ir CUM*
inf
Evans Pharmacy, Spacial Agents.
KAMNOL.
HEADACHE,
NEURALGIA.1
LA GRIPPE.
Relieves all pain.
25c. all Druggists.
Drs. Strickland & King,
?l??fc
OFFICE IN MASONIC TEMPLE.
?M?*- GaH ?nd Cocaine nmd for Extract
ing Teeth.
Like to remind our cus
tornera who have not set
tled lust year's Accounts
that it is impossible for us
to wait longer. We are
better prepared than ever
to do Carriage, Bug0y and
Wagon Repairs with neat
ness and dispatch.
PAUL E. STEPHENS.
Qnattlebaum & Cochran,
Attorneys at Law,
Anderson, - - - - S. C.
iW Offices removed to People's
Bank Building, ground floor.
Jan ?4, 1900 31 4
- TUB _
BftiiK OF ANDERSON.
. A. BROCK, President.
.Jos. N. BROWN, Vico I? rea id OD t.
li. F. MAULDIN, Cashier.
THF lftWHt, strongest Bank in tho
bounty.
Interest Paid on Deposits
By Hpecial agreement.
With onsurpaased facilities and resour
ces wo aro at all tiouos prepared to ae
ro i Ul m >( iain our ?-a H to morn.
Jan 10, lttOO 29
Notice to Trespasser e.
ALL persona aro horeby warned not
to bunt, Heb or otherwise trespass
ou Lauds owned or controlled by tho un
derslgued.
A. J. Stringer, W, C. ?owen,
?. II. ??reer, 1? lt. Mitchell.
NV. N. Cox, M. K. Miteholl,
.1. .1. Kelly,. IL A. Cirillo,
O. K. ?reuzeale. o. K. l'oore,
T. C. Poor?, NV. F. Smith,
C. ?. Lewin. K A. Lewis.
Jan 31,11)00 :vi l
WARNING.
ALL persons aro lioroby warned not
to trespass or hunt ? ti any ol' ?mr
Lauds in Anderson County, nuder pen
alty ?>?' law.
Rev. C. L Stewart, R. ?.. Welbon),
.lan. \V. Williams, .lohn (?ar rt lt,
Irvin ?Jarrett. ?. I'. McDavid.
.lan :n, un o 32 4?
NOTICE.
I have a considerable num
ber of small unpaid Accounts
on my books. I am notifying
each one of amount due, and
unless paid I am going to place
them in officer's hand for col
lection.
- J. S. FOWLER.
I ,Jan3, IMO JW_
BPresbyterian College,
Oiihton, S. C.
SECOND TERM benlns*. Jan. 20, lt?<K).
Students received at anyitime. Ma
triculation, Tuition, Board and Room
rent Irom Jan. 2 to Jone 5, ?Hil), for only
$02.00. Hame, ;t'rom Jan. 20 to June ii,
$52.00. Classical, t?cientitlo and Commer
cial courte?. For catalogue or informa
I tlon of auy kind address;
W. T. MATTHEWS, or
A E. SPENCER.
Dec. 13. 1800 25 <?
CAREY,
I MCCULLOUGH,
& MARTIN,
Attorneys at Law,
M ANO NIC TEMPLE,
ANDERSON, M. ?,
W.~GL McGEE,
SURGEON DENTIST.
OFFICE- Kront K .oie, ovor Farmers
.?nd Merchant* Bnnk
A-NDEHt?ON, t>. O
Why You Should Buy Parian Paints!
BECAUSE
They Beautify, Protect and Preserve your property.
BECAUSE
PARIAN PAINTS
a Adhere to wooi, tin, iron, galvanized iron, stone or tile.
BECAUSE
PARIAN PAINTS
Are guaranteed not to crack, chalk, peel, rub off nor blister.
BECAUSE
PARIAN PAINTS
^re not affected by salt water or sea breezes.
BECAUSE
PARIAN PAINTS
Are not affected by ammonia, carbonic, sulphurous or other gases.
BECAUSE
PARIAN PAINTS
Produce a high gloss, cover perfectly, are the haudaomest and
raoBt durable Paints ever placed upen'"the market. Every
gallon guaranteed. 8old only by
F. B. GRAYTON & CO.
umm ?m. A ?mm mmm ?mm ?mm ?m) A mmm) mmm? ?mm} ?mm. A mmm mmm
5 " The Best Company-The Best Policy."
: TEE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO., F
i OF NEWARK. N. J. ?
i This Company han bron in miecosBful businean for llfty-?our yenrn . ha? W
j paid policy-holdora over ^3<?.r>,OOO,OOO, and now bas ''ash asseta cf over L.
< $07,000,000. It U-Hues Ibo plainost and best poliey on the market. After TWO Y
< annual proiniurna bavo bron paid it- fy
i fUT i T? A TSITK"!?? ? '? Cash Value. -i. Extended Insurance. 5. IncontfiB- L
4 Vi l X * Usn Value. i. Paid-up Insurance. faBfltty. T
4 AINO I'ajN HiurjL;?* Annnal BM vi ?len (SN. fy
j . M. M. MATTISON, t
^ State Agent for South Carolina, ANDERSON, S. C., over P. o. F
4 56fi- Reaident Agent for FIRE, HEALTH and ACCIDENT Insurance. ?
o S o 5 Ag O
H . o a H K o
g a cd ?g0^o3 O^S I
W pd, H g B
BOYS' STEAM LAUNDRY !
The ??OBt Complete and Up-to-Date Laundry in the State.
Every Machine the latest improved, and designed to do most perfect work
Under tho superintendence of an experienced Laundryman, with a oorps
of skilled assistants. Every piece of work carefully inspected, and no sorry
work allowed to JOASS from Laundry.
PRICES LOW. Quality of work unexcelled. G ive us a trial.
W. F. BARB, Business Manages.
Located at rear of Pant's Book Store.