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EATING FOR PLEASURE. fti.nv Palatable Article* of Food That W 7 Are Moat Injurious. Eating for the sotisfying of Iran ia a norina*, act. All living thing8* pl*0*8 w?inial8 alike, gave man and tho brutea he has ide banched, do thia ss naiura^Iy 4* tho. ?Binds blovr.theniaelves to test. But eating *o 8^ TW^ton cravings 0f the palate is unnatural anet ab normal-iaiBphysiological sin. It no longer >ulnoi?nt that lood shall bc nutritious-and not distaste ful* it must ty* palatable. That is tbc'first requisite, and ilit has the added virtue ojf sustaining qualities -well, very gdod. just stop to think how much of your food is adapted to satisfy tho fancies of the palate without regard for and often to the ?jjrect detri ment of the highest efficiency of the food material It is well known that oatmeal which has not been cooked long and well, that the starch globules may be all broken ?m is exceedingly indigestible. But when thus properly cooked oatmeal is gelatinous and. sticky. It does ?ot look so well, and many people won't eat it so prepared because they like to taste the oatmeal-flavor. a? the kernels are crushed in the mouth. AMA^w^rtjv^v.-ii"-- . Then lhere is the matter os meat cooking. The deadly frying pan, that self inflicted instrument of death that has contributed so much to personal djbcomfyrt and perma nent injury and hence to domestic trouble and discord, exists today solely because the people pander to their palates rath ar than feed their bodies. What excuse is there for pastry of any kind except-that it "tastes good?" Much of it is notori?utly indigestible, and that part of it which can be easily?taken up by the blood is generally the food elements that are not needed-thc sugars, etc.-they having been included in sufficient quantity in tho plainer fare. Tea and coffee, both long ac knowledged to be poison, to say nothing of others drinks sometimes taken with or between meals, are not in any way needed in the hu man physical economy, but their use is almost universal.-Everywhere. Money Lenders In Europe. Thc continental monts de piete had their origin in the Italian mon ti di pieta, large numbers of which were founded in Italy throughout the sixteenth century and the ob jects of which were in the first in stance essentially charitable, the avowed purpose of the institution being to counteract the injurious effect of usury by lending money on deposits at an almost infinites imal rate of interest. The Francis can monks were the first to lend money on goods, and in 1515 they were allowed by the pope to receive a moderate amount of interest. But in process of time the Italian monti di pieta became extensive banking corporations, vvhich were occasion ally plundered or half ruined by forced loans exacted by tyrannical princes and sometimes brought to entire collapse by injudicious finan cial speculations. - London Tele graph. Blooms the Year Round. A horticulturist mentions a plant of the primrose family, Primula ob conica, as the only one that can be had in flower all the year round. A large pot of this plant has flowered continuously for five years. " The flowers are abundant and were orig inally of a pale lilac, but have re cently improved not only in sise, but in variety of color, white and many shades of lilac and pink rose being now obtainable. The cut flowers are pleasing for house decoration, while keeping fresh a long time in water. "The plant thrives out of doors in summer, but requires hothouse pro tection, in winter. The one objec tionable quality is that both flow ers and leaves poison the skin of some individuals.-Milwaukee Sen tinel. Waterless Regions. Hundreds of horses and thous ands -of cattle in tho Hawaiian Islands never take a drink of waterT T.Vey live on the upper altitudes of the mountains, where the cattle run wild from the time they are born until they are sent to the slaughter house. Except possibly for two or three months in tho rainy season there are no streams or pools of wa ter in any part where the cattle roam, but everywhere there grows a reciimbent, jointed grass known by the native name of maninia. This is both food and drink. . Mud In the Mississippi, It is estimated that the Mississip pi river annually discharges into tho gulf. of Mexico 19,500,000,000,00^ cubic feet of wator. Of this prodi gious quantity the one-twenty-nine hundredth part will be sediment. Thus the Mississippi annually de-< posits alone :into the gulf of Mexico j sufficient mud to cover a square mile! of surface to a height of 240 feet. signature is o&&eW?ox el ?fee genuine Laxative BroiTrO*Qii?olae TO*** tte teaed? tost caws a cold to <*? ?3agr - "I don't believe you. love me a bit," sobbed his wife. "But, I do, darling! I-" "Don't toll me. It's unnatural you should. No mau could love a worn au who wears a hat like ?that." - ' ; Hard for Crimin?is to Hhje. "Several recent sensational homi cides and the aotive pursv.it of the alleged marderers by the palios in the cities where the crimea wena commit ted, and of the law officer* in the dif ferent parta of the counts Vj oail np a fact about the apprehension of crim inals," said a headquateW, detective sergeant. '...^ "To the ordinary observer one, would think It would be comparatively easy to commit a crime, whether of robbery or of homicide, and escape detection, especially in a large city like Nf w York. It would appear to be very easy in that whirlpool of humanity for a man to secrete himself, lie low, wait until the affair blew over and then seok safety in flight and oblivion in some distant part of the country. To a stranger it would seem that a man oould be entirely lost from obser vation in New York, where one does not know the residents of his own apartment house, or even those on the same floor with him, much less the people upon the block. "The two great reasons why such an escape is not made by the culprit lie in his lack of nerve, onoe blood I has been shed by him, and from the further feet that we all hove our little ?worlds in whioh we live, and when j a stranger comes over th? threshold thereof we at onoe detect hie presence. "Thus, while a man who had com mitted a crime in a large city would think himself safe in some small town or village, he becomes on the con ! trary, immediately au object of sus picion on the part of the residents, I who, though 61rangers to him, are known to one another. Until this suspicion is cleared up ho is a marked man, and, being a stranger, he is as readily picked out as a man iu a uni form upon a city street. . "But in a great city, you Bay, he would be safe. A great oity is simply an aggregation of little worlds to whioh I refer. If a man comes to a lodging house or a boarding house or to a hotel in any quarter of town, if he is not as he represents himself to be, his real identity is soon discovered. The same is true if we go into the lower strata of oity life; in eaoh little world he Bhows himself to its inhabitants to be a stranger, and the suspicion I speak of attaches at once to a greater or lesser degree. "And thus are 'clues1 given to the police. The stranger is discovered and reported directly or indirectly. He is not one of the regular frogs in that particular pond in whioh he thought he would bo secure from those from whom he has fled. It is reilly astonishing how quickty a man is de tected out of his regular environment and sphere, and the first thought of a man who has committed a crime is tc get out of his regular environment I and into a new and unfamiliar one to I him. I "A oriminal who seeks the environ ment of a tramp, as in several reoent notable cases, is detected by the men whom he tries to simulate just ae readily as a man in the lower walks of i lifV who commits a orimet obtains .money and seeks to float in anatmos ; pbere to which he is not used. Those men betray themselves and are oaught, and because of this trait of human nature, showing itself over and ovei againt the police are able to Jay theil hands so 'quickly upon offenders. They have learned where to look foi their game. Like the hunted wild animal, they run in tho same putin where pursued, and are quickly brought to bay or shot down. "Each year tl: oatohing of offend ers of all degrees against ?he law ii being worked down to a fixed science, The chances of a man escaping aftei committing a crime have been greatly reduoed during the past decade and eaoh ensuing decade they will be still lessened."-Washington Evening Star. J -:- air Snakes in the United States. There are four kinds of veuomoui serpents in the United States-thi rattlesnake proper, the copperheac and the moccasin, thc coral snake and the ground rattlesnake. The di* mond rattlesnake and the copperheac are the most deadly. Tho former ii undoubtedly tho cause of mere deathi from snake poisoning than any othe in the United States. This is due t< its large f size--it grows not inf re quently to seven feet in length an< three iucb.es in diameter-and to th< great length of its fangs and th* ?0 pions amount of venom it injects int wounds. Probably not more than 51 persons die of snake bite in the Uni ted States in any year. Perhaps 80, OOO would be a fair estimate of thi world's annual death rato from th? bite of venomous snakes, not with standing the long and practically fruit less efforts ?f science to discover ai antidote. I s ? - M y ' - n ? a? Vi Strengthen the tired kidneys am purify the liver and bowels with afei doses of Prickly Ash Bitters. It i an admirable kidney tonio. Evan Pharmaoy - ? horsefly will uri? for hour after its head has been pulled ofi The head of the mosquito hawk wi) continue eating its victim when sepal ated from the thorax. Donc With Girt Typewriters. A merchant fr^ru an interior town of Miwhigan was in Detroit a few days ago looking for a young man to aot as his typewriter, and when asked why he did not employ a girl he re plied: .Tft had three or four, and they duo't turn out jell. The first ono had been with me about a month wOfct>'v ?J^t!if'aj connelly came along and was going to skip itu'ttM^e^use Little Eva was siok. My typewriter ? heard of it and offered her cervices, and she played the part so well that the company took her along and in four weeks she married the manager and ran the whole show. The eeoond one got a little too fresh .after a week or so, and oame to me and said: " 'Mr. Blank, you haven't got bul one f in coffee, while you've put an h in sugar and left eut an e in ohcet ing.' "Do you object to my way of spell ing?" I asks. " 'I do/ she says. 'I don't wan? folks to think I'm typewriting for a saw mill.' "As I wouldn't change, she did; and number three was all right till a young farmer walked in and gained her love while she was typewriting an order for six grindstones and a bale of bed. blankets. "Number four was the best looking girl of all, and she hadn't been in the store three days when my wife says to me ac Foes the breakfast table: " 'Silas, I think Tl! go home on a visit.' ".Yes?' says I. " 'And take our seven children.'. "'Yes?' " 'And stay a year or two.' " 'What's the row?' says I. " 'Nothing,' says She, 'only that' when a man of your age has to put on a clean shirt and collar evjry morning it's time he got a homely typewriter or a new family.' "The girl went" continued the mer chant, "and I don't thick I'll try any more. I'll get some young man who wants a ohance to work up, and when he ain't typewriting I'll hoist him up stairs to barrel up beans and sack up wool."-Detroit Free Press. Bad Spelling. Many reports and oomments which are largely oiroulated are calculated to create the impression that the average of American spelling is improving very slowly, if at all. We ruad often of examination papers prepared by students high up in onr colleges and universities whioh present specimens of spelling that would re lied upon children who were in their second year at school. Some years ago the committee that visited West Point to represent the government at the final examination at the military academy expressed its surprise at finding so much bad Eng lish and inoorrect spelling among stu dents who proved remarkable profi ciency in their highest and most diffi cult studies. We observe that of 141 students who took an entrance examination in spelling for Northwestern University 85 missed 20 or more words out of a list of 150 whioh was fairly selected without special search for the unusu. and the difficult. Professor Clark, of the institution at whioh this remarkable showing was made, said of it: "As long as the word method of spelling is taught in the publio schools, just so long will boys and girls enter college nuable to spell cor rectly." This remark probably indicates the main reason who so many publio school pupils and college students spell badly. They are not taught to spell scientifically and in a language as complex and varied as ours thc "word method" will never make a re liably accurate speller. A reform in spelling in one of the most evident needs of our schools. Atlanta Journal. One on the Old .Man. The youth had adopted tho pompa dour method of combing his ha5r and hie father didn't like it. The latter had an idea that there was only one sensible and man .'y way to comb the hair, that was to part it on the side cither side. Everything else was dud ish and affected in his opinion. Only a woman was privileged to take liber ties with old established methods. "Young man," he said as he looked the youth over, you look like a fool." There was no discussion and short ly thereafter an old friend of the fam ily oame in. "It's startling," he said, by way of pleasant comment, "how much you resemble your father." "So he's just been telling me," answered the youth. The old' gentleman looked hard at his son for K moment. '.'Wei!, he conceded at last, "I guess your brain hasn't been affected by your fool notions of hair, dressing os yet."-Brooklyn Eagle. - mm o m -. Stope the Counh and Warka off the Cold. Laxativo Bromo Quinine Tablets'cure a cold in one. day. No oure, No Pay. Price.25 oonts. A Babe Born Old. Strange, indeed, are the facts con nected with the short life of the in- 1 fant child of Mr. and Mrs. Will Pooh- J nor, of Houston. Tho ohild afc birth t showed extraordinary traits. It never ' oried, and exhibited an observation ? and mental understanding and devel opment that was almost terrifying in a babe. At four months this prodigy 1 of intellect oould talk plainly and mike its wants fully known. But its little frame began wasting away. The pb^i.ciana who were called in ahook their ht*d8 gravely, sod said to the parents: "You will ne"*r rfti88 the ohild. The mind is too powerful Tho men tal weight is sapping the ptvjtv?oal strength." They proved to be true prophets. In a few days' time the child was dead. Before its death, tho news of its wonderful precocity being noised about, many people oame io see for themselves the talking baby, and went away filled with awe and wonder. It was weird, almsot unoanny, this thing of an infant in swaddling clothes speaking plainly, and gating upon the spectator with eyes wherein could be discerned a depth of intelligence be yond all ? ii nary calculation. As the child's life was strange, so was its lifo peouliar. Several days ago a fierce electrical storm swept over Houston. Just as the roar of the storm came, at the very instant the ohild, without a murmur, oalmly and painlessly, went in the great silence of eternity. Channing (Tex.) Courier. Dare Devil Workman. "I remember," said a bridge con tractor some time ago, while on the subject of workmen's dare-deviltries, "when working at the big bridge across the Niagara when the two can tilever arms had approached within 50 feet of eaoh other, a keen rivalry as to whom should be the first to oross sprang up among thc moa. A long plank connected the two arms, having about two and a half feet of support at each end. Strict orders were issued that no one should at tempt to cross the plank upon penalty of instant dismissal. At the nopn hour I suddenly heard a great shout from the men, who were all staring up. Raising my eyes, I saw a man step on the end of that plank, stop a minute and look down into the whirlpool be low. I knew he was going to cross and I shouted to him, but he was too high up to hear. Deliberately he walked out until he reaohed the mid dle of the plank. It sagged far down with his weight until I oould see light between the two short supporting ends and the cantilevers on whioh they rested. He saw the end in front of him to do this, hesitated and looked baok to see how the other end was. I thought he was going to turn. He stopped, grasped both edges of the plank with his hands and throwing his feet up, stood on his head, kicking his legs in the air, craoking his heels together and yelling to the terrified onlookers. This he did for about a minute-it seemed to me like 40. Then he let his feet drop down, stood np, waved his hat, , and trotted along the plank to the other side, slid down one of the braoes hand over hand, and regained the ground. We discharged him, of course, but what did he care? He got. all the glory, his fellows en vied him, and he could command work anywhere." _ Mot Compelled to Explain. David H. Lane says that every time he hears of negotiating for fusion be tween the Democrats and rebellious Republicans he is reminded of a pair of up State politicians, Congressional candidates from adjoining districts, who agreed to help eaoh other in the campaigning, although opposed in principles. The arrangement had it that the Republican should mingle with the crowd whenever the Demo crat was to make an address, and vice versa, and ask certain questions that should provoke carefully prepared re plies of an eloquent nature. The Democrat was ca .thc platform one evening and began with the declara tion: "I have been a Democrat for four teen years." This was the other's cue to inquire why, BO that the orating candidate might launch forth fervently on the beauties of his belief. "Why are you a Demoorat? Tell us th uti" shouted the friendly Re publican. Just then he was hit behind the ear by a powerful fist and pulled roughly baok by a huge miner, who roared: .TH kill ye if he ever try ag'n to break up a Dimiorat whin he's spak ia'!"-Philadelphia Times. To Care a Cold la Oas Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature on every box. 25o. - A man may suoceed in becoming a hero to his valet, bnt to his mother iu-law-nev^r. - Many, a Woman's tongue is kept busy trying to get her oui of the trou ble it got her into. ?losed For One Week. - u "lt's a hoary chestnut to say that b -ho English can't see tho point of a joke," said Lieut.Gov. Woodruff, a speaking of an experience abroad, n "but the limit of all density I saw in o London itself in a plaoe where you pould least expeot to find levity, a Hewn into the stone of a ohuroh were t the words: j " 'Gate of Heaven.' "But the trouble came in that the ohuroh was undcrgoiag repairs and di rectly under the promising insoription they had fastened a sign: " 'Closed for a week. Enter other door.' " - ? ? - Evidently a Landsman. The boy who oan use his eyes ss simply as did tho hero of the follow ing starjv need not mind if his teacher oalls him obCeue: "Do you know ?whether Washington was a soldier or a sarjar," asked the teaoher. "He waB a soldier," replied the boy. "How do you know?" " 'Cause ' I saw a pioture of him oroBBin' the Delaware au' any sailor'd know enough not to stand up in his boat." - An exchange says that the letter "e" is the most unfortunate letter in the English alphabet, because it is nevor in cash, always in debt, and never out of danger. Our exchange forgets that the aforesaid letter is never in war, but always in poaoe. It is the beginning of existence, the commencement of eaBe, and the end of trouble. Without it there would . be no meat, no bread, no heaven, no hell. This reminds us of the conun drum: . Why is the letter "e" like the day of judgement? Because it is the end of timo and the beginning of eter nity. - A nephew of Col. Lanham, of Texas, tells the following story of a negro baptizing in Texas: An old ne gro preacher did the honors, and the candidate for baptism was a coal-black negro woman. The preacher led his victim far out into the stream, where she could be thoroughly immersed, and at the auspicious moment he cried in a loud voioe: "Be stiddy sister, be stiddy, and you'll oum up whitah den scow!" "Oh, parson," she ex claimed, "dat's askin1 too much; a oream oolouh'll do!"-New York Times. - A recent novelty in invention as a combination revolver and dark lantern. Its distinguishing feature lies in the small incandescent lamp situated in a reflecting tube placed immediately below the revolver barrel. A battery in the handle of the revol ver may be electrically connected with the lamp by a slight pressure of the trigger. Thus should a man suspect a burglar in the house he can use his revolver as a dark lantern to find his man and insure good aim before firing. - A most singular partnership ex ists io Gaston oounty, N. C. A negro totally blind and one without arms live together. The blind one works the farm and patches as directed by the armless one. When they hitch their mole to the wagon to drive to market the armless one indicates to the blind one how he should pull thc lines and guide thc animal. - A Pennsylvania man who over turned a beehive has been cured of rheumatism, and the doctors are dis cussing the uso of bees for that pur pose. There's nothing in the idea a bull, a rattlesnake or a funnel-shap ed oloud, will oure any man's rheu matism. A patient has only to try anyone of these agenoies to be con vin ed of it. - A Harrisburg (Pa.) man on his death bed reoently directed the pay ment of a board bill of thirty years' standing. ' - Father-"Tommy, quit pulling that poor oat's tail." Tom'ay-"I'm only holding on to it, pa. The oat's pulling it." - Many a sunstroke is due to a man's efforts to make hay while the sun shines. - The summer girl doesn't appre ciate ?he mountain scenery unless there is a man in it. - One-half the world imagines the other half couldn't possibly mauage to worry along without it. - Fortunato is the man upon whose face nature has written a letter of ere" it. - Genius may be akin to madness, but only the latter gets free board and lodging. - A woman may not bo able to love three men simultaneously, but she can make a strenuous bluff at it. - Love may be blind; but it never fails to hear papa's footstep on the stair. - Many a wealthy man owes his success to the competency of his subordinates. - It is hard to get a dollar into one's pooket, but it's easy to get it out again. - The first problem that confronts a baby is how .to make crying pay. - The pesky fly can never hope to become as unpopular as the mosquito. - The wise weather prophet lays up an explanation for a rainy day. - Wheo marriage is a failure it ia sually the masculine ead of the com ination that ia called upon to pay up. - A woman will scream at sight of mouse, but a millinery bill that lakes her husband shake in his shoes lever jostles her. - Don't make too muoh of a man ,t first; otherwise >ou'U not be able o raise the ante high enough to ?lease him later on. SECRETS At th? Price of Suffering. V^?^mar?^?T?rwry to semt-tnvalldtsm caused 07 P*v sn ?ncr BjHers much pain and terror. Ignorance prompts her to suffer alono In ?Hence, arid remain ta th? dark aa to th? true came mother hoooL Mother's^l?Hft,dtake? tha doctor*? place at her aide, and she aaa no cause for an Interview. Sit? ls her own docto?, \ -A her modesty is protected. Dally application dv-r the region of tho breast and abovetheab??o^nen. throughout preg nancy, will enable her to Vudergo tho period of Gestation la a cheerful moUd and reit undis turbed. S. Mother's Friem is a Liniment, and for external usa only. It I odorlcsa and will not ?tain women's prettj fingers, lt would In-Jeed bo shameful if Oil sacrifice of modesty were necessary to tho sue cessful Issue of healthy children. All womel about to become mothers need sen-* only to : drug storw and for 91.00 secure the prize child birth remedy. Sweet motherly anticipation and health) babies aro tho result of tho use of Mother': Friend. Our book "Motherhood" malled free. Al women should have it. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. County Treasurer's Notice. The County Troa*urere book* will be opem for the collection of State and County and Sehn Tases for the fiscal year, 1802. at thc Treaaurei office from October 1ft to December 81st, Inclusif where the followlog levies will be collected : State Taxes.fi Milla Ordinary County. 3 " Constitutional Behool. 3 " Public Roods.-. 1 " Pnit Indebtedness.J.*.. 1 " Total.18 ?' A special school ?erv for ll tinter School Dlstrh No. 24, 3 n Ills. Also ?amt School District No. I 8 mill? College District No. 20, town of Wiitin aton.2 tull.a All able bodied male citizens between the ag Of 21 and 60 shall be liable to pty a Poll Tax of { except old poid lerp, who are exempt from Poll Ti at SO years of age. All pei sons owning property in more than 0: township will please make it known when payli their Taxes, so that any additional coat and pc alt v may be avoided. Baction 2. That all State and County Taxes, ai all Taxes co-'ected when State and County Tax are collected shall be duo and payable on or befo the thirty-first day of December of each and ere year, and if such Taxes ana Assessments aro n paid on or before said time, a penalty of one p> centum thereon shall be added by the Count Auditor on the County duplicate and collected I the County Treasurer ; and if the oald Taxes st Aoeeesments and penalties are not paid on or b fore the first day of February next thereafter,! additional penalty of one per centum thereo H nail be added by the County Auditor on tl County duplicate ano collected by the Count Treasurer, and if the ?aid Taxes, Assessments ar Penalties are not paid on or before the first 01 March next, an additional penalty of fire per cn-' tum thereon shall be added by the County Audi tor on the County duplicate and col leo ted 1 County Treasurer ; and if the said Taxes, i meats and Penalties are not paid on or before I fifteenth day of March next thereafter, the 11 County Treasurer shall iasue bia tax execution for the ..Id Taxes and Assessments and Penalties against the properly of the defaulting taxpayer according to law. All persons between the age* of 18 and 60 years who are able to work roads or cause them toba worked, except preachers who have charge of caa. gregations and pe iso ns who served In the war be tween .be Statos, are liable to do road duty, ind in lieu ot work may pay a Tax of one dollar, to be i collected at the same time the other Tax ea are ' collected. I will gire notice later of tho different places I will riiit. _J. M. PAYNE. Co. Treas. FOE SALE. ? offer for sale OD anny tarma a valua ble Tract of Land containing 200 acres, lving In two ra il 0.1 of the WlUiamston Cotton Mills. The place Ilea well and is well wooded; has a fine pasture Inclosed with a wire fence, and 25 aeres o? good bottom land not subject to overflow B. F. MAULDIN, Anderson, 8. C. Sept 17, 1900_13_4_ FORSALE ! WE offer for sale the Calhoun Falls 8prlng and Plantation adjoining. Thn whole property contains eight hundred and fifty acres, more or lean. "Will seil RB a whole, or the Spring and ?f"y aeres ad joining. For terms apply to QUATTLEBAUM ?fe COCHRAN, Attorneys at Law, Anderson, S. C. Sept 24, 1002_14_ LAND FOR 8ALE. ONE Tract, whereon B. C. Crawford now lives, '201 acres, two miles East of j Clemson College, sod adjoining lands of ? same. Good dwelllug, barn, ?fee. One Tract, woodland, about 30 acres. One mile S. W. of Pendleton. For prices call and see or nddresB J J. SITTON, Agent, Pendleton, S. C. Aug 27. li?02_10_ 2m_ NOTICE. I hereby notify nil panton who owe the firm of Bleck ley A Fre-twell, by note or otherwise, and all parties who are owing me for Mules, Bungles, Ac, that all amount due must be paid op promptly by November 1st next, as I must have th?, money. JO-. J. Flt ET WELL. Wept 17, Tr02 17 CURSE - OF - DRINK COBED BY WHITE RIBBON REMEDY. Notaste. No odor. Cnn be giren in glass of water, tea or coffee without patk-t'a knowledge. White Ribbon Remedy will cure or destroy the diseased appetite for alcoholic stimulants, wheth er the patient la a confirmed inebriate, a "tipler," social drinker or drunkard. Impossible for any one to bare an appollo for alcoholic liquors after using White Ribbon Bemedr. Indorsed by Members of <V. C. T. U. Mra. Moore, press superintendent of woman's Christian Temperance Union. Ventura, Califor nia, writes: "I hare teated White Blbboo Remedy on rery obstinate drunkards, aud the corea hare been many. In many cases the Remedy waa ?Ir en secretly. I cheerfully recommend and indorse White Ribbon Remedy. Members of our Union at? delighted to find an eco no ti leal treatment to aid us in our temperance work." Druggists or by mail, fl. Trial package free by writing Mrs. A M. Townsend, (for years Secreta ry of a Woman'? Christian Temperance Uuion.) 218 Tremont 8?. Bonton, >\"?*s. So!d in Anderson by ORB, GRAY A CO. 8ept 17,1W2 18 1/ Is Yellow Poison a your blood? Physicians call it lalarial germ. It can beaeen chang lg red blood yellow under a micro? jone. It works day and night. First, ; turns your complexion yellow, hill?, aching sensations creep down our l>ack bone. You feel weak and rorthl?8. Roberts' Chill Tonic inters the blood, drives out the yellow toison and stops the trouble at once, [t not only prevents but completely ?urea chills, fevers, night sweats and nalaria. The manufacturers know di about this yellow poison, aud have ?erfected Roberts' Tonio to drive it mt, nourish your system, restore appe Ate, purify the blood. It baa cured thousands of cases of chills, fevors and malaria. It will cure you or your money back. This is fair. Try it. Price, 25c. ORR, GRAY & CO. EVANS PH ABM AC 7. DENDY ?RUG CO. Foley's Honey and Tar torchUdr*ntsa1e,aure, No opiates* see you or writing you again, as I must have same settled at once. I can't do business on as long time as you are taking; so avail yourself and come in at once and save expense. Bespectfully, JOHN T. BURRI3S. KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of all dis eases. Edi EV'Q KIDNEY CURE it I ?ULCI a Guaranteed Remad; or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c and $1.00. SOLD BY EVANS' PHARMACY. Foley's Honey and Tat cures colds, prevents pneumonia* S. G. L.RUCE, DENTIST. OVER D. C. Brown A Bro's. Store, on South Main Street. I bav 25 years experience lu my pro fession, and will be ploaaed to work for any who want Plates ma'ie. Filling done, and I make a apecUlty nf Extracting Tee'.h without pain and with no after pain. Jan 23,1901_31 _ 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS DESIGNS * COPVRIOHT8 Ac' Anrone tending a skotch and desertion maj onlcklr ascertain our opinion froe^elher ac ?nVintTon I? probably ratentablo. Communie* Uon??trictlyo.mOdoiitlaL Handbook on Pa*?nU Mn" freo. oW.it ??rencr for s?<mrtMp?lonw. I'atVnta taken th'-usb. Munn ft. Co. recelTt tptcfal notict, withou? charge. In the Scientific Jftncrtcan. A hand?omoly HttmtratM weekly. Janwsi. ctr eolation of any gelcntldc Journal. Terni?. W ? piS: ?QIFt5onth?. IL SoVdby^lnewdMlwfc ir?nchOffl???? F BU Wa*Mn*tou.D.C.