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THE POT OF. GOLD? l l He used lo thin* ? pot ?J Of gcW WAS buried where I ( Tho radiant rslnbow touched the ground, Aad cit ? helped him hunt ?round .Co cod th? treasure there. D'\t that waa long ?go. it childhood's careless days. 'Tb dead, that fond belief of old} Vic seek no' buried pots of Rold And walk In worldly ways. Yet where the people surged I saw him p'-h bis way To bet bis money on the race. I saw him with an ashen face Trudge home that luckless day. At r?ioho wi' ends wa ?ought ' lu vain- for hidden gold; Ab, fa? and I were children tata. Kow he and I ?re? worldly men And wiser than ef old l -S. E. KJser in Chicago Times-Herald. A COSTLY i-UXURY. Her Divorce ??orc Expensive Than Her Marriage. "Where's tho jeugo ai what gives out divp'ccs?" . . A negro woman asked this of the elevator man in the courthouse. ? negro man, her husband, was with! her. {iDo you want a divorce ?" in quired the elevator man. "Yes, sali. YVe's done 'greed to git divo'ced, an Will, my man here, has done 'greed to give the jedge power io divo'ce rue." "You'll- have to bring a suit first. The judge can't divorce you till you, have filed a suit," the elevator man taid. "How much does that cost ?" "Well, the lawyer and all will cost about $15 or $20." "Shaw, man, you sullenly don't mean it i why, it only cost us $2 to git mah'ch Um-m-m ! Fifteen dol lars! It suttenly do cost a lot. Say, mistah, why does it cost moro to git divo'ced than to git mah'd ?" "Don't know, Pm sure, but that's . a fact." "An can't the jedge givo her n divo'ce if I give him the power?" asked the husband. "No; got to have a suit first." "Um-m!" they both groaned in chorus. Then the woman said: "Fze got a right to a divo'ce. Will's bin mean as pizen to me. S'posc if I tell the jedge that he'll take it up?" "Look here, woman," interrupted ihc husband, "don't you git too smart 'bout tills here divo'ce or I'll light it. You knows I'ze been a good nigger to you. I done consent to? give the jedge power to divo'ce youl 'cause you got yo' mind sot on cut iin loose. But don't go to settin up! for a angel 'lonpjside of me or I'll fight it sho'." . As they left the courthouse to gether she said: "Dci't seo* how I'ze {/oin to raise $15 for that divo'ce."-Kansas Cityi blar. TALISMANS IN CHINA. The belief in the potency of. charms, etc.. is very widespread' among the lower class Chinese and1 the Shans in parts of Yunnan. The latter in particular havo all kinds: of amulets to ward off evil, the gem* of their collection being one whiclv confers invulnerability on tho wear er. This useful quality may also be obtained, I was informed, by un dergoing a very painful process of; tattooing. ' During my trip I was ?hown a dragon's nest, which looked! Uko a bit of the horsehair stuffing from a foreign saddle, guaranteed to render the purchaser's house sa?e from fire, and a female deer's horn, Which would enable the fortunate, owner to walk a great distance with out fatigue. Not being a landed proprietor or, a professional sprinter, I had no use for these things, and though I .cn-! t'ered into negotiations with several! people for the talisman which would: render me invulnerable nono of thom was willing to stand tho test: of western skepticism-a revolver at 30 paces-neven though I offered them an enormous Bum and a hand some funeral in case of accident. Geographical Journal. TUB JIDGK'S LITTLE* -J 3KE. During the trial of certain mem bers of tho Belton Park club in Eng land, who were charged with illegal ly employing a nu*ubcr of young sters as caddies who should have been af school, it was stated thatthe caddies were given luncheon and tea. ''Why did you give them tea?" the judge asked. The witness replied thal it wa? usual to give caddies tea. "Ah," said tho judge thoughtful ! ?y, ''1 presumo that makes them tea caddies." DIS EXCUSE*. "Aren't you ashamed to bo wast ing your time in this manner," said ?io.impressive citizen to whom Me-/ audcring Mike had just applied for' ? small loan. "Yes, sir," was the answer; *Tm annoyed half sick about it. Bat I <*u't help makin mistakes some jjucs. when I sighted you fer a 0uianthropist an followed you fer tree blocks, how was I to know fer toro whether I was wastin mo timo or notP'-^Washington Star. - Egotism is an alphabet of only. .?O letter. I - An optimist Soya that pessini ?? is tho faith of cowards. - Tho world ia like a piece of mnaie -full of sharps and flats. - Thc royal road to wealth is paved WUh industry and frugality. - The man who gives advio-1 freely ?otoars unnecessary responoibiluu-a. ' Some men aro fortunate; Others . only.foeky> ?Hi Married One Thousand Couples. Rev. John Hoory Burroughs, o! Bristol, Toon ( married his' one thon Baudin runaway- couple during th? past 75eek. Ht is commonly and wide ly known aa "Parson Burroughs.' His sole profession for the last clever yaars has been tbxt of marrying, ant his phenomenal record has been gaioec in that time. Bristol ia oituatec squarely on the Tennessee and Vir ginia State line. Thia givea Parsot Burroughs an advantageous looatiot for bia calling. To him a treater pan of the one thousand couples have coon from Virginia, where the State law ii more inimical to the matrimonial in tentions of the young than in Tonnes see. Mais street of Bristol is tba centra street of the city. Tho State ii no rum in the middle of the street. Th< quarters of the marrying parson an oil the Teunesseo side of the stree and conveniently near the depot. Thone one thousand marriages hav taken place in the parlor of tho Niok els house, which serves also as th office of the marrying parson. Th Nickels house is a respectable hote whioh Mrs. Burroughs looks af te while her husband is attending to hi more serious duties. Mrs. Burroughs however, is matron of honor at ail th weddings and takes a motherly inter, est in every bride. She is quito a well known in the marriage ceremo nies io the Nickels house as her hus bscd. Parson Burroughs meets the incom iog trains with the regularity of hotel porter. Any who may be seek ing bis services could not be mislc bj his appearance. He always ap pears at the depot in his Prince Alber coat and wearing white neckties and dignified derby hat. His bearing ii all respects is ministerial. His smal figure may be seen nervously an quickly pacing up and down tho depo platform. Wherever there is a coupl of young people or a bevy of thei about tho depot, there he will moo conspicuous.y present himself, not a a vulgar prier or eavesdropper, bu with a delicate appearance of uncon cern. If the prospective bride an groom desire his services his attentio may be easily attracted, whereupo he leads tho way to the Nickels hous -the Gretna Oreen of Teunessec an Virginia. .His presence at tho depot, it i claimed, bas put it iuto the heads o many couples to go to the Nickel house and be wedded at Once out o an impulse to be romantic, who befor had not given serious thought to mat riage. Parson Burroughs has the distinc iion among those who officiate,, a Gretna Greens of being the only on who makes it his sole occupation. I has been worth his while between th rna- .-?age fees he has received and th board money his wife has made. Ho has no fixed marriage fee. H has rcoeived various amounts, rangin, from 50 cents to $20. Before giving himself up to hi matrimonial business Parson Bur roughs was a Methodist minister regularly ordained. His standing ii his community is high and overv Bris tolian has a kind word for their famou "parson." PERPETUAI. MOTION A DELUSION. Arkwright, the celebrated Eng lish inventor, in his younger days and even Sir Isaac Newton believed perpetual motion might be discover ed. All so called perpetual motion machines that have run have beer] impositions, with secret clockwork or some other hidden source of pro pulsion. Men havo presumed, by the aid of levers, balls rolling on an inclin ed plane, tho wheel and axle, the 'Archimedean screw, the pump, thc siphon, the hydrostatic bellows, thc hydraulic ram, etc., to have discov ered perpetual motion. An authori ty in the study declares : 'Trora thc info nt rauchine projected in thc thirteenth century to tho last hy draulic, pneumatic, weighted and lever worked pretensions patented as motions, no motion-whatever hos resulted from the ouo or the other to the present da}'. Not a solitary discovery is on record, not one ab solutely ingenious rcherao project ed or ono simple seif motive model accomplished." BLOWN OUT DY ONE PUPP. A party of American tourists wore doing Italy, and in tho course of their peregrinations they found themselves in ? very old and* very quaint cathedral. Ono of the prin cipal objects of interest there was a lamp which, as the guide declared, h:vi been burning incessantly for 600 years. For a minuto or two tho sightseers gazed at it in silence, find then one of the number drew a deep breath, blew ont his cheeks and gave a mighty puff. "Well, ? guess i t'a out now/' he said as ho inirncd for tho applause of bia' -?rienus.-San UTancisco News Let ter. CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. Tte KU Yw Hm Atop BM$I Bears the s^f f/1f> * Seat of Empire May go to the Desert of Sahara. r - ! Why should wo burn costly, hard- ! j delved ocal in power houses, when we i . can hitch oar trolley cara to the sun ' . and have them propelled for the ask- j , ing? But how to hitch them-that L has bec? tho problem with which j scientific mon have wrestled for years, j Now it has been solved, and the prin . oipleofthe invention, like the prin I oiple of all great inventions, ia , exceedingly simple. If you take a i sun-glass and a toy-engine, and oan 3 got sufficient heat at the focal point i of the sun's rays below tho glass to . make the water bobble in the tiny . boiler,/ you will have steam aud presently power. Thia has now beon 1 done by the new solar motor, 3 The motor is in aucoesaf al opera 9 ation, working a fifteen-horae-power 9 engine, at the Ostrich farm at Pasa t dena, Gal., and it used to pump water. It lifts fourteen hundred gallons a e m?nate. The solar motor may bc likened to e an enormous, open umbrella, with a 0 part Of the top cut off, aud set at an 1 anglo to catch the sunshine on its r mirrors and to reflect it upon the long, s slim boiler, set in tho centre like the i, handle of an umbrella. e From the boiler the Bteam is con - ducted in'pipes to a compound engine s opciating a centrifugal pump. There - ia little manual work to be dona in L_ connection with the machine. To turn a crank and to clean it now and then is all that it requires, lt is fifty-five a feet from the uppermost part of thc . rim of the umbrella to the ground, j which distance ne&rly represents the whole diameter of the oirole. There t are in reflector eightoen hundred glasf a mirrors, each about three inches wide Q and two feet long. Supporting th? j upper part of the umbrella, which it ? heavily ribbed with steel, is a tall iroi l framework, like that set up for wind 0 mills, and under the bottom is at Q equatorial mounting, something like 1 that used with large telescopes. Th? g solar motor is automatically balanced t the weight resting on roller bearings ?. so that only a few pounds of hau< j pressure are required to turu it in an: Q way that may be desired. When tin ? operator wishes to get up steam, he e turns a crank and swings tho reflecto d into focus, guided by an indicator When tho focus is once obtained, th 8 gieat umbrella, liko a sunflower, auto f matioally keeps its sinning face to s wards the sun. Here, too, the.inven r tors eave learned a lesson from th c astronomers, for a common dook i .. made to do duty as a regulator. * At first tho morning dew is sec ?- slowly to ascend in a wreath of vapn t from the gigantic month. Then th e bright glasses glitter in. sun, and th t heat-lines begin to quiver inside th e circle, the greatest commotion bein 0 about the long black boiler, whioh, a the intensity of the focussed ray sic e creases, begins to glisten, so that i g any photograph taken of the machine the boiler ia shown almost as pur s white. Within an hour of the tim '- of turning the crank and getting th focus (if no clouds intervene to thro a shadows into the reflector) there is . jet of steam from the esoape valve s The engineer moves the throttle, thet ia a succession of bisses from the un brella-handle, a"clank-olank*olanketj dank," and the ano is drawing wate . in a wry of which* he little dreamed , few months ago. 1 Once started the machine rons a day without any attention whatevei 1 The man in oharge may hoe his ga L den, or read his novel, or eat orange; or go to sleep. The machine oils i self. [ The supply of water for the boil? is regulated automatically, as is ala ! the steam presaue, and there can b i no explosion. Tbc motor can bo lei ! alono and will run until the sun gel so low tbat there is no more heal Then it will stop, rest overnight; an 1 all that is needed to start it when lb radiant energy again asserts itself j thc twist of a couple of handles. Thc machinery wa9 mado inBcstoi and southern California, -ho land < almost perpetual sunshine, was seiet ted as the best place to give the mote its first practical trial. Tho succ?s: ful - otor is the result of nearly tc years' experimental work and c a very considerable outlay c money. Device after device was mad and rejected. A model was built an set up in Denver a year ago, and il feeble workings convinced tho prc motors of the plan that they were o the way to success. It is now thought that solar motoi will before long be seen all over tb the desert as thick as wind mills i Holland, and that they will make tb descvt to blossom aa the rose phrase that literary represents th the possibilities of the machine, fe windmills will run only sc long as io wind blows, and for weeks at a tim on the desert there ia no wind; bi the ann ehinea nine daya oat of te apon the great waste laud, whei oranges may be growing, lemons ye lowing and grapes purpling, under tl glare of the san whioh, while it riper the fruits will also wator and nouna them, Cheap powera means cheap home in the arid regions of the southwest homes for millions of men ?hero thero are DOW only hundreds. Coal is ex ceedingly expensive, and there is little wood to bo had. if tho sun motor will pump water, it will also griud grain, and aaw lumber and run elec tric cars. In Central California, in a section where there is a large, stream of water available for supplying tho power, the promoters of an electric enterprise are hesitating abou t the out lay of a large sum of money io build ing a dam and are thinking of using ! solar motors because the initial ex pense would bo only half thc cost of the dam. In any land of long sunlight there need be no atop over night of the ma chinery run by solar motors; for tho storage of electrio power by th.? ?a?, ?uiuc is promised by engineers. Of the many former and unsuccess ful devioes to utilize the sun's heat for power-aside from the mero toys of tinkering inventors-Ericson's is the moat famous. Thc mind ?nat modelled the "Monitor*' gave vears to this problem. But Ericson's sun motor was not successful. Other mechanically-minded men tried to trap sun beams and make them work for a living, but they danced through all the meshes of the strange nets I spread for them by eager hands. Pro fessor S. P. Langley of thc Smithson iau Institution wrote sixteen years ago: "Future ages may see thc seat of empire ?ranefcrrsd to regions of the earth now barren and desolated under intense solar heat-countries which, for that vory cause, will not improb ably become the seat of mechanical and hence political power. Whoever finds thc way to make industrially use ful tho vast sun power now wasted on deserts of North Amerioa or the shores of the Ked Sea, will effect a greater change in men's affairs than any con queror in history has done; for he will once more people those waste pisces with the lifo that swarmed there io the best days of Carthage and of old Egypt, bet under another civilization, where mao shall no longer worship thc sun as a God, but shall havo learn ed to make it his servant."-Ji. F. Millard, in the World's Works. - A woman's idea of being uice to another woman is to kiss her and say, ;'Oh, how lovely that now hat is!" when she knows she has had it a year. - Said a pretty girl to a young man who had just kissed her, "I like your impudence." - Crazy men and fool? arc poor in structors. - With the esception of gray hairs women like to mako discoveries. - A fool at home will not be the wiser when abroad. - ? lawyer is a cat employed by mico to settle their quarrels._ ^PnK?enn%? . * .* aaw Br SBB^HBW&P^VV' '..>.' ?. - . i If y wan hav< best you in y try ? New this yea HILL-ORR - -- 1 --? Glenn Springs J -FOR SA EVANS' Pl THE OLE WW SPRINGS WA MSR baa ? r^ooirntacd by tba beat Phyclciana ia t Liver, KUI noya, Bladder, Bowela and Bio brought ba fora (Lbs notice of ihm public in t M ??na. XCVAHC PHARMACY-G*WT?: I j e?ver*J ??.?ra. a?><* hare found tba mm? ot ye to sa?, and eta confidently r soo m mead it tc Fighting a Flower. Tho ?.cupl? of Florida aro struggling against what thoy call tho "hyacinth pest." Ten years ago a gentleman, living on thc St. John's Uiver, plant ed in the river a water hyacinth, lt has spread to such an extent that tho tributary river* are entirely closed to navigation and the upper St. Johns almost closed. Often steamers arc unable to move, because thc wheels have become clogged by the mass cf Howers. Tho Congregationalist describes tho hyacinth thus: Tho blossoms are very pretty. They grow in spiral form, of a dclioate lavender shade, with a single spot of bright yell JW. about th? site of a pon, on tho lower leaf, and a ring of blue round the yellow. They are not ?rngranl. Thc plant docs ?not take root in the bed of the river, but floats on the sur face. Could it be kept near ?he shcrc, { thc difficulty would not bc so serious, but it covers the entire river so thick ly that by throwing down planks men oan walk ou it. In ono pl ac where the river is two miles wide, it is Uko a green meadow. Not only does it make navigation I difficult, but it covers tho logs which I are being floated down in rafts It has stopped tho fishing, too. Kven the alligators hate it, as they cannot j como up to thc surface through it to I breathe. Wh.nn the rank growih is thrown up along thc banks it decays, making thc place unhealthful. . A number of methods for extermi nating the plant have been, tried. A Florida paper Bays that for a limo fairly successful use was made of chemicals, which, floating on thc wa ter, killed the plants. Another meth od was to fasten together two long timbers at ono end. resembling an im mense pair of shears. With thc clos ed end pointing up stream, tho open cuds, including a great ma3S of plants, were drawn together. Tho mass was 60 compact that thc wot knien could walk about on it-keeping a sharp lookout for moccasins and other water snukes. It was towed out of the creek and set edrift on the tide. There is a small red spider which cats the plant and who kuows wheth er tho spider might not prove a worse pest than the flower? The only thing that can bc said in favor of hyacinth is that it makes good food for cattle and pigs. But it doesu't do them any good when it's out iu the middle of the S'.. John's obstructing steam boats. . - Ilumau hair, wigs, albums,-chro mes and photograph's ure some of thc articles which the United States im port extensively from Germany. - Time well arranged indicates a well-ordered mind. The far fained sDutch kitchen '( (innot compare n Uh the Amen (?tn kitchen cleaned with DUST POWDER Oil t to e the ; Garden ever had our life, our Seed ir. DRUG CO Hineral Water LE AT ?4 A? MACY. ?ann kuowa for over a lui nd rod j ear*, and ;ho land aa a oura care tor dintana of tba od.. norna of tu remark jblo ou ron were ha Charleston Modi ra! Journal tn 1S6?. bava baan a sufferer from indignation foi ?ur Olonn Spring* Watar nf graft bon cm > any on (Taring fron Uko tr?obl?a._ S. 5. ?LkLdBn Ule is bard enough aa it is. It is to her that we owe our world, and everything should be made as easy as possible for ker nt Ute time of childbirth. This is just what FRIEND will do. It will ni ak baby's covuint? easy and painless, and that without tak ing dangerous drugs into the sys tem. It is simply to be applied to the muscles of thc abdomen, It penetrates through tho skin carry ing strength and elasticity with it. It strengthens the whole system and prevents ail of the discomforts of pregnancy. Tue mother of a plumb babe in Panama, Mo., says: "I have used Mother's Friend and can praise it highly." Get Mother's mend at the Drug Store, $1 per bottle. The Bradfield Regulator Co., ATLANTA, GA. Write for our free illustrated book, " Before Baby is Bom." Peoples Bank of Anderson Moved into their Banking House, and aro opeii for busi ness and respectfully solicits the patronage of the public. Interest paid on time deposits by agreement. - THE - BANK OF ANDERSON J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. M RR< >WN, Vice Presiden t. B. F. MAUI,DIN, Cashier. THE largest, atrongi-at Bank in the County. Interest Paid on Deposits By special agreement. With unsurpassed facilities nndreaour ces we aro at all times preparod to ac commodate our customers. Jan 10,1000 20 THE JLSSSKR?O? Mutual Fire lane Go. HAS written 1000 Policies and have a little over $550,000.00 insurance in force. Tho Policies arc for small amounts, usually, anJ. the risks aro well scattered. We are carrying this insurauce at less than one-half of what tho old line companies would okargo. Wc make no extra charge for insurance against wind. They do. J. R. Yandi ver, President. Directors-ll S. Hill, J. J. Fret weil, W. G. Watson, J.J. Major, J. P. Glenn, B. C. Martin, R. B. A. Robin ion, John G. Decworth. lt. J. ?INN, Agent, Starr, S. C. IMO MATTER How badly your Vehicle now looks, or how badly out of repair it may be, or how badly it is worn from usage, the time to repair it !S KOW. The place to repair it is OUR SHOPS. Repainting a specialty. PAUL E. STEPHENS. Judge of Probate's Sale. STATIS OF SOU ' II CAROLINA, ANDRUSOX COUNTY. In (he Court of Common I'lcox. V. C Orr. W. J OT, ot si., Plaintiffs, flgtinst J. !.. Orr, individually >n.d aH Executor ot tho laut Will and 'r>Nta mont of Alezan 1er Orr, deceased, MIP Amanda Stlgall, ot al., 1) jfrndanls. IN ob^di^nc" to tho order of Halo grant ed herein, I will noll on Sals?day in May next, in front of tho Court I louse, in tho pity of Andmon, S. C., during tho uaual hours of sale tho following described property, to-wlt : All that certain piece, parcel or Tract nf Land, containing fourtooti and one Imlf (M|) acron, moro or leap, situate and being in Brunhy Crook Townubip, in the county and S tat o aforesaid, iyiog on Little Brusny Creek, bounded by lands af John L. Orr, Whit Stlgall and others, beginning ou a atako x3 In tho r. nd, thence 8. 133, W. 22 45 to toe Creek, stake x3; Hierum N. 20J. E. O.-iO ton Mono xS, t boneo N. 80}, E 2.00 to M atone x3 thence N. 2?, W. 4.76. to the beginning point. Terms of Hale-Cash. Purchaser to pay extra for papera. It. Y. H. NANCE, Judge of Probate as Special Referee. April 10. 1001 41 4 NOTICE. THE Supervisor gi voa notice that from his date be can be found in the office ?oh Monday and Saturday, and will be mt in the country on all other days aa jualnsas requires. J. N. VANDIVBR, Co. Bu por vioor A. O. Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Administrator of the Catate o* Mrs. E. T. Miller, deceased, lereby givra ?utios that ba will on the 6 b day of May, 1001, apply to the udgo of Pro^ato for A nd onion County. l. tv for s Fins! Se?u.uaint of ?aid Es sie, and a discharge from bia office as LdminlatrAtor. G. A. REEu, Adm'r. April 17, 1001 4? 6 7 IS^v?-VSl ?without Bnt??r supp?; profits will be Q>N ^??l large; without /* Vi. TO * * 0 L U S tt yOUr Bky^ crop will be Our books, tolling about composition^ fertilizers est adapted for all crops, ar ^ 'rec to all farmers. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. A. H. DACNALL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, \iulerwoii, - ? - S. O. >FFICE-OVER THE F03T OFFICE. An All-around Satisfaction is assured to those who Patronize. HJUVU J I OUR WORK is uniformly excellent, not merely occasionally good. What caro and skill can do to give eatiBfaotton ia dono Fine work on goods of every description ia done here. The Finish, Mittler high gloss or domestio, on Shirts, Collars and Cuff* is especially meritori ous. ANDERSON STEAM LAUNDRY CO. 202 East Boundary St. R. A. MAYFIELD, Supt. and Treas. PHONE NO. 20. ?SSfcU Leave orders ut D. C. Brown & Bro'a. Storr. . _ Womanly Beauty ! Sparkling Eyes and Bright Faces! ?rc tho Fruits of Kouna Nerves. UT NUTT PA lttE GREA? FU??NCI? HllvL/?rU NEUVE TONIO AND VI TALIZED Cures Nervous Exhaustion, Hyrteria, DIzzltiets, H> ndncbe, Rnckacbe and Eenic?e Weik ni?. ?6 Caibfltan attending the Monthly P'rlode. riTTJT Cl Pas-ing thron h th? trying chah rt) VTiJXljO from Girlhood to Wonianho d ?111 find lu lt a wonderful roliof and bent flt. It Qui ets and btrcogtbena the NerTes. Cleanses the Blood. Oleara the Bntin and Tones up tbwwholo Hynam. M *KE-f A WOMAN LOOK YOUNG aud FEEL. YOUNO. Price 60c.. 12 Boxes $3. Bent by mall to any oddros?. Bold by EVANS PHARMACY, Solo Agents. REAL ESTATE AGENCY. THE undersigned have formed a Read Estate Agency under the name af Tribbln cfc Edwards, for the purpose of uegot?a?'ng sales or purchases of Real Estate, both in the City and County, and also attending to the renting and rolleob !ng of rents of such property Sevwal desirable Houses and Lots for sale now. M. P. TRI BB LE, H. H. EDWARDS. Jan 23, 1901 Jl AUGUSTA, GA. BUSINESS, Shorthand, Typewriting and Academia departments. Lite rary Society. Lecture Courses, Boarding Hall. Positions secured for overy grad uate for thia year wishing a position. MONEY TO LOAN I ON REAL ESTATE. Long time if security is good. Fine Farm Lands for Little Money. strong Farms in Pickens for half the price of Anderson lands. Call and see >ur list of them ; will aid buyers to get. what they want, and lend tbem half of purchase money. B. F. MARTIN, Attorney at Law, M?senlo Temple, Anderson, S. C. DR. A. 8. TODD, Townsend Building, North Main StnvS, ANDERSON, 8. C., OFFERS Improved treatment for Rup ture Piles, Skin DISO-W?HH, and Gen to-Urinary Troubles. Special treatment br facial bloini?bos of ladies and cbil Iren. J",n 10, MK)1_30_3m Trespass Notice. A LL poraonH are warned not to lisb, ?\. bunt or wulk ou our premisos. No rieud will and an onemv must not. K. S. LIGON, .1AM. IL Mo ONNELL, J. L. McOKE, B. FRANK MAULDIN, R. E. LItiON. April 10, 1901 -12_ 3 _ S C. BRUCE, DENTIST. [N BROYLFJS BUILDING, over Nich olson's Store, below the Bank of An larson. I have 26 years experienoe in my pro Basion, and wili be pleased to work for my who want Plates made. Filling done, nd X make a cpxsialty of Extracting ?eeth without palo an J with no after pain. Jan 28,1901_31_ NOTICE. WILL iet to the lowest responsible tldder on Thursday, 25th inst., at 10 .'clock a. m., the building of a Bridge ver Hurricane Creek, OD WilliamatoM nd Greenville road, near William Wat on'a reeldenoe, in Wi ll lama ton Town hip. Reserving right to accept or reject ny or all bids. J. N. VANDIVEtt, County Supervisor A. C. April 17, 1901 41 t PATEN 19 '??isr j ASV?CE ki IO PATEMTABILrTY 1*111? ja? 1 Notlooln "Inventivo Aro" J ? Ni -> ^ Book "Stow io obtain Patenta" fi Iii? Bal 1