The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, May 16, 1900, Image 2
THE HAT
Why Should Wc
In Ch
Atlanta Joun
Thc .Journal recently published a
suggestiuu from a correspondent that
the ladies of Atlanta remove their
hats in church as they do in thc thea
tres. This idea has been very goner
ally approved, and wc shall not be
surprised to see an anti-church hat
movement inaugurated iu this city.
Atlanta was thc second city in this
country to require thc hats of ladies,
as well as those of men, should bc rc
moved at performances in theatres.
New Orleans led in this great reform
and Atlanta was ?juick to follow.
How immensely has the pleasure of
all the patrons of thc theatres of this
city been increased by this simple
concession to common sense!
If tho question wore put to a popu
lar vote, a great majority of women,
as well as men, would now declare in
favor of tho disappearance of hats at
theatres.
Are not tho reasons for taking them
off at church quitcoas strong as those
which have effected their removal at
operas and plays? Tho attendant of
church services should have as many
conditions of comfort as tho attend
ant of thc theatres. It is quite as de
sirable to seo a preacher while ho is
speaking as to sec an actor while ho
or she is performing, prancing or sing
ing. We never really know what a
speaker, especially if be bc an orator,
really means unless wc eau look into
his face, catch its every expression,
watch thc flash of his eye, see thc
play of emotion on his features and
discern that indefinite and undefinable
something which betokens sincerity
and earnestness of pretense and hypo
crisy.
And yet many of us now often sit in
church and hear a voice, but cannot
pcrceivo whence or from whom it
comes. Tho awful spread-eagle hat ?B
in the way. A man outside thc door,
with his back turned to thc preacher,
would have as much chance of benefit
or entertainment from thc sermon as
do you when you sit and suffer in this
total eolipso.
There is a groat moral principle as
well as a serious question of ethics in
volved in this matter.
Thc big church hat is a deterrent of
religion, an obstacle to righteous con
viction, a feathered and ribboned
stumbling blook io the way {?of tho
pilgrim who is trying to walk tho
straight and narrow path.
There may be mon in this land of
light who aro still in darkness because
tho ohuroh hat has intervened be
tween them and the full effulgence of
tho truth.
For all we know thero may bo men
now leading wicked and hopeless lives
only because tho preachers have never
had a fair shot at thom-men who
havo not skulked and hid from tho
batteries of thc truth, but have been
involuntarily concealed during all
their church going behind a varied
but unbroken array of femino head- 1
gear. Those who favor this proposed *
reform do not advocate thc onactment
of a law which will compel women to
take off their hats in houses of wor- 1
ship. They will depend upon the
power of moral suasion. They ap
peal to that sense of justice and mercy
which is strong in the hearts of all
good women. The appeal also to that
honest and laudable desire of every
woman to look her best at all times.
The milliner is a benefactor of man
kind. She works wonders for the
adornment of women, and men are
?truck delightedly dumb as they gazo
on her oroations. But all things have
their place, and tho place for a wo
man's hat in church is ?her lap or her
pew, not her head. f
And, after all, what art or achieve
ment of millinory has ever equaled
the beauty of a woman's uncovered
head? Is there anything in this world
more beautiful than the silken tresses
which cover and crown a woman's
head, cluster over her sweet temples
and sweep above her beauteous brow?
The more we see of these things the
better, and how can wo got a full view
of there when women persist in wear
ing their hats? The church is, of all
places, the ono where the hats of wo
men should come off.
Not only are the comfort and the
moral welfare of men involved, we may
ask if women aro following strictly the
way of the righteous when they .wear
hats in church? The good Book tells
us that her hair is a woman's glory,
and in T7C~sk:p she S???iu be at ?east
as glorious as she is in pleaseT
The war on the church hat has be
gun. It is a war for the right, and
when it is won by the champions of
the right, civilization will make a
long stride forward.
Atlanta Journal, Maj; 1.
.1 Ladies took off their hats during
.Services at Trinity church yesterday.
/Following tho suggestion made in a
recent Journal editorial Dr. W. B.
Stradley, the' pastor, at the opeoing
MUST GO.
>men Weir Hats
.iirch?>
fat, April as.
of the services requested the feminine
I part of his congregation to remove
their hats.
Scarcely had thc request been utter
ed before hundreds of hands were
busily engaged pulling out hat pins.
In few moments thc lovely display of
spring millinery which had obstructed
thc view of many members of the con
gregation was out of sight.
The coverings of straw, laces, rib
bons and flowers being removed thc
ladies presented a prettier vision than
before, anu thc new venture was gen
erally pronounced u success.
Thc question of women taking off
their hats in church has been much
discussed ol' late in social circles.
One practical woman suggested thc
other day that if women must take off
their hats in church, they should cer
tainly bc provided with hatracks on
which to hang them.
A young man overhearing this sug
gestion wanted to know where was thc
woman who would bc willing to hang
her lovely Kastor bonnet on a hatrack
where it would blush unseen.
Atlanta women arc somewhat divi
ded in their opinions on thc subject.
"I am strongly in favor of women
taking off their hats in church, and
think it a much needed reform," re
plied Mrs. Albert II. Thorton, when
questioned on tho subject. "My moth
er'declares," she continued, "that
BIIO hasn't seen a new preacher in
years on account of thc big hats. I
hope you will start a crusade against
them and that success will meet your
efforts."
"I think it a good idea," said Mrs.
Charles Rice. "It is terrible to have
to sit behind a big hat in church; be
sides, if one has a very heavy hat it
is a rolief to take it off. I think it a
very sensible idea for women to re
move their bats."
Mrs. I. S. Mitchell, a incuber of
Dr. Stradley's congregation, when ap
proached on the subject, replied:
"I think is is unnecessary for tiiosc
women who wear small bonnets to
have to remove them, but for tho.ie
who wear large hats I think it a splen
did idea. Yesterday in Dr. Stradley's
church thc ladies looked lovely with
out their hats. I think boys ofton do
not go to church on account of the big
hats. Thoy say thcro is no use going
when thoy can't see the preacher."
"Put tho pulpits up higher so that
women won't have to tako off their
hats," said a prominent member of
tho North avenue Presbyterian church.
"I asked our minister the other day,"
she continuod, "pleased to have tho
pulpit high so that wc might dodge the
question of women removing their
hats. However, I seo mp Ty conveni
ences in thc idea, and f : uk we will
undoubtedly come to it before long."
Mrs. Alex King thinks that taking
off one's hat in church would bo a
great nuisance, and altogether unne
cessary.
"I think it would bo a great mistake
to have such a rule in ono's church,"
she doolared. "Let women booonsid-1
"-ate and wear hats of moderate size,
but don't put them to tho inconveni
ence of taking off hats during ohuroh
service. You can usually manage to
Bee thc minister's face, and that is
sufheicnt. It is different at tho thea
tre where you wish to see tho entire
stage and everybody upon it.
"No, I'm not in favor of trammel
ing women with so many laws. The
law of kindness and a small hat is
Burely the solution."
Mrs. W. A. Ilemphill, another
member of Dr. Stradley's church, ex
pressed herself as horrified at the idea
of women hiving to remove their hats
in churoh. She thinks it entirely in
consistent with the old time Metho
dist faith. "It made me sad yester
day to think what the oldfashioned
ministers would have thought on the
subject. I oouldn't realize that I was
sitting in a Methodist churoh,"
Miss Madge Landrum thinks re
moving bats is a very good idea, bat
not an improvement to tho looks of
thc churoh. "I think," sho said, "it
takes away somewhat from the dignity
of the ohuroh. The men, however,
are strongly in favor of the innova
tion. I remember hearing Governor
Northen speak with much emphasis
recently, of his great annoyance in
having to sit through a wholo sermon
behind a gorgeous mass of millinery."
Mi:: Belle Nash and Miss Liiiian
Smith, two representatives of Atlan
ta's young girls, object strongly to
removing the hats in ohuroh on ac
count of the disarrangement of the
hair that results, and the difficulty in
getting on again the pretty head-gear.
"We'd never get them straight," they
say, in despair.
"After suffering from piles for fif
teen years I was eured by using two
boxes of DeWitt's Witoh Hazel
Salve," writes W. J. Baxter, North
Brook, N. C. It also cures all skin
diseases. Evans Pharmacy.
Memorable Ilattleflelds.
lu view of the near approach of the
annual reunion of the Confederate
veterans at Louisville, the main pro
visions of a bill now before Congress,
to create in Virginia a national park,
embracing thc battlefields adjacent to
Fredcricksburg, will be interesting.
The bill provides that for the pur
pose of preserving and suitably mark
ing for historical and professional mil
itary study thc famous battlefields in
Spottsylvania County, Va., known as
Fredcricksburg, Salem Church, Chan
cellorsville, the Wilderness and Spott
sylvania Court House, all of them
within u radius of eight miles, and on
which limited territory thc late distin
guished Union general, John C. New
ton, after careful investigation, de
clared that more great battles were
fought, more men engaged, and more
execution was d >ne than on any simi
lar area in the world.
The report made on thc subject by
the House Committee on Military
Affairs recommended the passage of
the bill. It sets forth that it is propos
ed to set apart (?,000 acres in Spott
sylvania County, Va., embracing the
area on which were fought the great
battles of Fredcricksburg, Chancel
lorsville, tho. Wilderness and Spott
sylvania Court House ; also Marye's
Heights, Hamilton's Crossing, Salem
Church, Laurel Grove, thc Bloody
Anglo, Todd's Tavern, the Po and Ny
rivers. Thc land may now bo pur
chased at an average of eight dollars
per acre.
Troops from every State, North and
South, were hero arrayed in battle to
the number of at least 500,000, and
moro men were here engaged than in
any battle in tho world's history. The
losses in killed, wounded and missing
on both sides aggregated 129,838, to
wit : Fredcricksburg, Deo. 13, 1862
Union loss, 12,.'{53 ; Confederate loss,
4,570. Chancellorsville, May 1 to 4,
1803-Union loss, 16,030; Confede
rate loss, 12,281. Wilderness, May 5
to 7, 1864-Union loss, 37,737 ; Con
federate loss, 11,400. Spottsylvania
Court House, May 8 to 18, 1864
Union loss, 26,461 ; Confederate loss,
9,000. Of the aggregate of 129,838,
thc Union loss was 92,581, while the
Confederates lost 37,257. In the na
tional cemetary on Marye's Heights,
the largest in tho nation, there lie
buried 16,500 I nion soldiers, and fre
quent additions aro made from thc
exhumations on thc battlefields.
Tho general officers who hero offered
up their lives a sacrifice to their con
victions wero, on the Union side, Ma
jor Generals John Sedgwick, Hiram
G. Berry and Araiel W. Whipple, Bre
vet Major Generals James S. 'Wads
worth and Alexander Hays, Brigadier
Generals George D. Bayard, Conrad
F. Jackson, Edmund Kirby, James C.
Rico and Thomas J. Stevenson ; and
on tho Confederate side, Lieutenant
General Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jack
son, Brigadier Generals Thomas H. ll.
Cobb, .lanius Daniel, Abner Perrin,
Maxcy Gregg, E. F. Paxton, J. M.
Jones, Leroy A. Stafford and Micah
Jenkins. Over the entiro field tho
intrenchmonts are in a remarkable
state of preservation, proteoted in
largo part by a heavy growth of tim
ber.
Capt. John Smith, within the limits
of what is now Fredcricksburg, fought
the Indians in 1608. Here Washing
ton's boyhood days were spent, and
from Frederioksburg he went to join
the army of Braddock. Near the eity
was opened the first iron mine ever
worked in America, from the product
of which the cannon and cannon balls
used in tho Revolutionary war were
made.-New Orleans Picayune.
Blood Poison Cured by B.B.B.-Bottle
Free to Safferere.
Deep-seated, obstinate cases, the
kind that have resisted doctors, hot
springs and patent medicine treat
ment, quickly yield to B.B.B. (Botan
ic Blood Balm), thoroughly tested for
30 years. Have you muouous patches
in the mouth, sore throat, eruptions,
eating sores, bone pains, itching skin,
swollen glands, stiff joints, copper
colored spots, chanores, ulceration on
tho body, hair and eyebrows fall out ?
Is the skin a mass of boils, pimples
and ulcers? Then this wonderful
B.B.B, specific will completely ohange
the whole body into a olean, perfect
condition, freo from eruptions, and
skin smooth with the glow of perfect
health. B. B. B. drains the poison
out of the system so the symptoms
oannot return. At same time B.B.B,
builds up the broken down constitu
tion and improves the digestion. So
sufferers may test B.B.B, a trial bot
tle will be given away free of oharge.
B.B.B, for sale by druggists and Hill
Orr Drug Co. and Wilhito & Wilhite,
at $1 per lar6o bottle, or 6 large bot
tles (full treatment) $5. Complete di
rections with each bottle. For trial
bottle address Blood Balm Go., 380
Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Desoribe
trouble and Free medical advice si von.
- If the boy* ?re pern?itted to hare
secret societies in colleges why should
not the girls? Besides, if the girls
learned to keep a secret in Behool it
might be of great benefit to them in
after life.
J. T. Hood, Justice of the Peaoe
Drosby, Miss., makes the following
statement: ean cortify that One
Minute Cough Curo will do all that is
ol ai m ed for it." It cures all throat
and lang trouble Evans Pharmaoy.
!-Many a Christian destroys hie
peaoe and usefulness beoanse he is
not willing to do little things.
?o Ants Tulki
A close observer of tho little crea
tures of God's world tells us that he
once saw a drove of small black auts
moving, perhaps to more commodious
quarters. Tho distance was over
seven hundred feet, and nearly every
ant was laden with a portion of house
hold goods. Some carried their
"eggs" he cocoon stage of tho ant,
some had .oed, "some had one thing
and some another. I sat and watched
them over an hour," he continues,
"and I noticed that every time two
met in thc way they would hold their
heads close together as if greeting one
another, and no matter how often thc
meeting took place this same thing
occurred, as though a short chat was
necessary. To prove more about it I
killed one that was on his way. Others
which were eyc-witnossoa to the mur
der went with speed, and with every
ant they met this talking took plaoe
as before. But instead of a pleasant
greeting, it was sad news they had
to communicate. I know it was sad
news/for every ant that these messen
gers met hastily'turned back and fled on
another course. So thc news, spread,
and it was true. How was it commu
nicated if not by speech?"
Many naturo students have observed
like facts. Yet we aro almost as far
from a solution of tho problem of ant
ioteroommunication to-day as ever.
Tho Rev. Henry C. McCood, D. D , of
Philadelphia, has done more than any
other living student in America in
this field of ant study. Young natu
ralists cannot take up a moro fasci
nating study than that of ant habits;
but murder, even of an ant, is not
necessary in such studies, save to
preservo a few speoiments to assure
one of the species under study. An
ingenious and truo lover of nature
delights to devise ways for suoh
study that do not require needless
c r uel ty.-Fo rica rd.
Washing the Face.
This matter of washing thc face ai5
pears very simple, but it is thc excep
tion rather than the rule when it is
properly done. Look at a piece of fur
niture and note the amount of dust
and dirt it will collect in a few hours,
and it is realized thc quantity tho
face has to receive. It not only gath
ers up the minute particles of all kinds
that float about thc house, but that,
too, whioh is outside. There is an
old tradition that if one would pre
serve a delicate complexion, water
should not touoh the face, its skin to
be oleansed by rubbing it with a piece
of flannel, which might suffice if the
face were kept in a glass case. The
face needs hot water applied liberally
to it with'the hands, and generally
the use of a pure, nonirritating soap
will not come amiss. Wash-clothes
aro often an abomination, as they are
too seldom free from impurities, and
the same statement is true of sponges.
They ave left imperfectly cleansed
from the soap that has been used and
are dried at the washstand, when
after overy use they should be wash
ed, boiled and hung in the air. I
have often seen faces with muddy
skins dotted with black heads and
pimples because impurities from wash
cloths and sponges have been rubbed
into tho skin, to its infection.
If the face is oily and filled with
fine blackheads, the latter can bc re
moved by rubbing them with a soft
oloth dipped in alcohol or in equal
parts of cologne and water; the latter
will oleanse the face better than any
thing else, aeting upon the skin as a
gentle stimulant. The oontaot of the
fingers with the face seems to have a
vivifying effect. It is easy while
thus dashing the water in the face to
message it and to bring the blood to
the surface.
If, however, the faoe has not been
carefully looked after in the manner
described, the only matter has been
allowed to collect in the glands and
enlarge their orifices, and the face is
dotted with these unoigthly accumu
lations, the work of getting rid of
them is no easy matter. Some of the
largest may be rubbed out with the
soft oloth dipped in cologne and water,
especially if the face is first steamed;
but if this method is not sufficient,
those remaining must be pressed out,
one by one, using a watch key. The
hole of the key is placed over the
point, a quiek pressue is made, and
the contents of the gland is pushed
out. To allay the irritation the faoe
should bo washed with very hot water
after this, and oare should be taken
that too many of the blackheads are
not removed at one time.-Dr. Grace
Peckham Murray, tn Harper? Batar.
- To keep roosters ?n>m fighting
catch one and clip one wing. When
u* iuak?? ? divo ii W?? thrOW bim to
one fiido, and he wi!! soon conelode he
don't kno v how to fight and will attend
to his owe: business.
- "How's dat, Sambo? You say
you , waa at the battle of Bull Ron?
when I sees yon at New York the
same night?" "Yes, Julius, you did
for sart?n. You see, our eolonel says
he, 'Boys strike for yer country and
yer hornea!' Well some struck for der
country, but dis chile he struck ?or
home. Dat splains de whole matter,
yen see."
? ??riiik.^rfl- -' ? - -?? ^A. . M'-. ? ? . .
Thc American (?ill's Marriage.
When thc American girl defers her
choice of a husband until she has had
a icasonable opportunity to sec some
thing of mankind, and had a chance
to compare thc good with thc bad, she
is pretty apt to strike a good judge of
herself. As a rule, she is a pretty
good judge of men when she gives her
judgment time to assist her to a wise
conclusion. Thc point is to get her
to wait. It must be sar' to her credit
that she is waiting longer than she
did formerly. It is not so many years
azo that a girl was considered of a
marriageable age wheo she became
sixteen or seventeen years old. If
she married then, or shortly afterward,
it was not such an unusual thing.
Twenty-five years ago girlr generally
married at nineteen, while to day the
average is closer to twenty-three.
Tho marriago of a girl in her teens
causes actual surprise in these days.
Out of a list of 1,000 marriages recent
ly compiled, just one-half the brides
were between twenty-two and twenty
five; 200 were between twenty-five
and thirty. Still, thcro wero 300
under twenty years of age. And
nearly all theso young girls married
men under twenty-two-mere boyB, in
other words. And this is the fatal
part of a girl's marriage at too early
an age. Instead of choosing a mau
for her husband she is very apt to
choose a boy.-Ladies Hoyne Journal.
The Importance of Grass.
No more graphic and comprehensive
statement has been made on the sub
ject of grasses than this by John J.
Ingalls: "Next in importance to the
divine profusion of water, light, and
air, those three great physical facts
which render existence possible, may
be reckoned the universal beneficence
of grasses. Exaggerated by tropical
heats and vapors to tho gigantic cane
congested with its saccharine concre
tion, or dwarfed by polar rigors to the
fibrous hair of Northern latitudes, em
bracing between these extremes the
maize with its resoluto pennons, the
rice plant of Southern ?swamps, the
wheat, rye, barley, oats, and other
cereals, no less than the humble ver
dure of hillside, pasture, and prairie in
thc temperate zone, grass is the most
widely distributed of all vegetable be
ings, and is at once thc type of our
life aod the emblem of our mortality.'
Mr. Ingalls says this also in favor
of grass. "Its tenacious fibers hold
thc earth in its place and prevent its
soluble components from washing into
the wasting sea. It invades the soli
tudes, climbs thje inaccessible slopes
and forbidding pinnacles of moun
tains; modifies climates, and determi
nes thc history, character, and destiny
of nations. Unobtrusive and patient,
it has immortal vigor and aggression.
Banished from the thoroughfare and
tho field, it bides its time to return,
and when vigilance is .relaxed, or the
dynasty has perished, it sileot?y,
resumes the throne from which it has
been expelled, but which it never ab
dicates. It bears no blazonry of bloom
to charm thc senses with fragrance or
splendor, but its homely hue is more
enchanting than that of tho lily or the
rose. It yields no fruit in earth or
air, and yet should its harvest fail for
a single year, famine would depopu
late thc world."
Evidently the presence of grass in
farming practice can hardly bo over
stated; and even in.the usual under
standing of the meaning of tho word
grass it is safe to say that ibero can be
no good farming without grass in the
pasture and meadov; form. The faot
is that ?he state of farming ia a coun
try can usually be inferred from the
presence or absence of the grass feat
ure.
Achilles waa in
vulnerable in every
part of the body
save bis heel. The
myth rona that he
was rendered invul
nerable by being
dipped in the river
Styx in infancy, the
heel by which he
waa held being
the only part
not submerged
and there-.
fore retain
Iing its mor
tar weak
ness.
Everyone
has some
weak spot
in bis phy
sical organism, and that weak spot is the
invariable attacking point of disease.
No man is stronger than that weakest
spot in bim. We see great robust look
ing men go down like ninepins, at a
touch of disease, and wonder at it. It
is simply the wound in the weak spot,
the vulnerable heel of Achilles.
It is the office of Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery to build up the weak
places, to Rtrenathen the weale organs of
lire body. It does this <<n Nature's own
plan of nourishment Proper food prop
erly . assimilated maw s vrc-h ;ssn
strong. But the man ia only an aggre
gation of parts, so that the strong nan
liver, nerves, etc. "Golden Medical
Discovery *' pots into Nature's hands the
material by which the stomach is
strengthened, the blood purified, the
nervis nourished, the luum vitalised- xt
makes the weak strong and the sick well.
It contains no alcohol or other intoxicant.
Mr. R. J. McKnight, of Cade*, Williamsburg
Co., & C., wit?*: ^'X had bein troubled with
rheumatism fcc- twelve yea?, so tad at times I
could cot leave my bed. X waa bsdly crippled.
Tried many doctora ead two of them ?at?'me
up to die. None of them did ne much mod.
The patna tn my hack, hipa and tes* (and at
times tn my head), would neatly kui me. My
appetite was very bad. I took five bottles of tbo
? ciolden Medical Discovery * ?nd four vials of
' Feuet*,' and to-day my health is good."
LIME, LIME!
CEMENT CEMENT !
NOW is the timo to whitewash your barns and build. M?e handle the
Lime, Cement, Plastering. Hair, &c. We carry the largest stock and best
goods at low pi ices. Over 5,000 barrels of our Lime have been sold in An*
derson during the last year. Our Tennessee brand is the Lime-that built the
Orr Cotton Mill and the Cos M'f'g. Co. We are prepared to furnish you
from a barrel to a car load Lime, Portland or Rosendle Cement at any time.
Use no other Lime or Cement but ours-they are the best.
Remember, we are Head quartern on
Oom, Oats, Hay, Flour, Tobacco,
And everything in the Grocery line. Como and see us or ?eud us your order.
Yours fer business,
O. O. ANOER8UN & BRO.
Car Unknown and Whippoorwill Peas to go tkif week. Come quick,
hey are going cheap.
? Few Things Necessary to make a . . .
GOOD COTTON HOE.
A PERFECT HOE should have a straight, well-sea
oned handle, made of the best grade selected timber. The
blade should be made of a high quality of steel, perfectly
tempered and properly sharpened. The shanks should be
of the same high quality of steel, and so fitted into the
handles as to make their pulling out, from ordinary usage,
impossible. AU Hoes should be set to exactly snit the
purpose for which they are intended1. To find a Hoe that
fully meets all of these requiremFnts we invite you to come
and inspect our line. Men, women and children will here
find a Hoe to suit them. All weights and sizes are com
prised in our mammoth stock.
9&* Please bear in mind that we are the only dealers in this section who
buy their Goods in solid car lots, and hence are in a petition to name such
prices as cannot fail to make it to your interest to favor qa with your pa
tronage.
Sullivan Hardware Co.
mmmmWMyMmWmwm^mWBmmWnmWBm
E G. EVANS, Jr. . R. B. DAT, M. D.
PENDLETON, 8. O.
IDIR/UO-S and 3S^OX>IOI3STES,
Perfumery, Toilet Articles,
Fancy Soaps.. Sponges, Combs?
Hair and Tooth Brushes,
Rubber Good? and Druggist Notions,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Byes,
_Buists* Garden Seeds?__^
BARGAINS!
Yon Don't Believe It I
WE,are not going to make pri?es here for tbsy ar? so ridiculously iow
you would not believe it, but if you would inspect our low prices and do
yourself a kindness come and Bea what we say is true.
We will show you prices on some things, regardless of the advancing
prices on almost everything, that is lower than ever before known in the City
of Anderson. If not, we will pay you in cash for your trouble. How is
that ? Now xs- your chance to buy at low prices and save yonr cash.
Percales,. Serges, Lawns, Calicoes, Etc, at Cut Prices.
Let them go. Short profits and quick sales for spot cash does the work?
Aguaran teed sale on GLASSWARE if you see it
T INWARE, bought direct from factory. Ne> better prices bought at
than we buy. Come, give us a look. It don't cost anj thing
A big lot ol FLOWER POTS to arrive in a few days.
KING BROS., BARGAIN STORE,
Two Doora from JPost Office.
GARDEN SEED.
Buist and berry's.
Bemember when you go to get your Seed to get fresh
ones. As this is-our first year in the Seed business we haye
no seed carried over from last year. '
Tours,
F. fi.. GR AYTON & CO.
- -
Near the Post Office.
The Farmers Loan 1 Trust Go
PAYS INTEREST ON ?EPOST1T&.
t&* No deposit too small to receivo careful and courteous attention.
Children's deposits especially-invited.
J? R. YANDITER, CartHer.
BUY A
Petts Loo ??I Sieve |
FROM '
JOHN T. BURRISS.
IP you want a PERFECT BAKING StOVE, and never born on tba
bottom. ; Th?re ? no Stove on the market that can equal it in durability and
even baking on top*^nd bottom. Also, fol! lin? of
TINWARE? WOODBB?WARE?
GI-ASSW^RK, LAMP GOODS, &CU
And at prices to beat tho bant}.
. Your trade solicited, ?
JOHN T. BURRISS