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you WU! B? ttoppy sf Weil. paine's Bestows that Health and Vigor that Makes Liv-, ing a Pleasure. If you arv ?ck and ?nii-o?-soris, it is in your Ironer to make, youisv?? healthy, sUung, arid 'there is not thc slightest reason why you sbouldgo t xroughlife fec'ilng sickly, miserable, |an"uid, ai d melancholic, 'foyLe well raid strang, mc in? happiness 4ri<J tntfc joy. If you ?re sleepless, rheumatic, neuralgic, dvjpeptic, or have the shadows of disease hovering over you; ii you are not as bright, energetic, ?nd tfxong as voa were some weeks .".. "th" cf Paine'? Cc?spcur.d 'jill Tone up anil fortify your whole system, cleanse the blood, correct digestion, sharpen the -. petite, and conduce to restful sleep. Thous and* once in u half-dead'..condition"owe their j resent good health to t'ne \i:;e of Paine's Celery Compound. Mr. Wm; S. Gibson, of rieasureville, Ky., who, through sickness and suffering, was brought near thc dark grave, writes as follows, regarding his marvelous cure: .< I have been broken down in health and strength, nervous system shattered, kidneys out of order, had.nervous and trembling spells off and on for the last ten years. I have taken three bottles of your Paine's Celery Compound' and all of the abpve-menticiied troubles have left me, and I can now dp a good day's work. I go about my business all daylong anet it don't worry nie, ?nd ? now feel better ithan I have in ten years. I have a good appetite; and can cot and get around oh foot as active as when I was a boy. My age is 65 years.') ? DIAMOND DYES Color Jackets, Goats, Cipes, Ribbons, Neckties, Waists,.. Stocking* will not ftd* oe crock when dyed wftb Diamond Dy?. DJ?iTCtloo book sud 45 dyed ssmpbf > frc?. DIAMOWD DYB3,; Butfagtoa, Vt? Sarcastic Advice, It chanced that one pf those in judicious persons ; whoso name K is legion on some occasion pressed through the circle gathered -around Mr. Browning and incontinently, asked him ta. e^i?iin there and then a difficult passage in ono of his own poems-a passage where probably the masterful .thoughts elbowed ?acn other for precedence. "Upon? my: .word, I don't iknow what itimeans;" said the poet, .laughing, as Ketclosed the volume > thrust into his hands. "I advise yera to ask the browning society.' They'll tell you all about it." " A Bad Half. , A negro couple were in police court at Topeka on a charge which grew , out of their'quarrels. The evidence was heard, and'the judge, thinking to harmonize the family's domestic relations, told the wife that she was too ?asily led by the gossip about her husband; that sfieV mustn't believe-all the'stories told by enemies.. " Deed I don't belieb ell de lies du tells on .Jim," ehe re sponded. ; "I doesn't belieb moah 'n half ob dem. But half bb dem lies, jedge, makes him a low down, onery nigger."--Kansas City Journal. Sj Nothing to Crow About. \ lattle Arthur was visiting bis grandmother, who owned a. large rooster that was possessed of fight ing qualities. Arthur went out to feed the chickens, when .the rooster flew ut him, pecking him severely. Arthur beat bim off as well as he could and finally got, away and ran to the house: Some time later he was playing on the porch, when all at. once tho"roostcr flew upon an ad joining fence and crowed lustily. Arthur looked up and exclaimed; "You lie I You lie 1 .You'didn't .lick me! Irunnedl". m:ff:. A Narrow Eecape. j^ V Dutchman was relating his marvelous escape from death when thirteen of his companions were drowned by the upsetting of a boat and, he alone was saved. . '''And how. did vbu escape their fate*?", asked .ose.of his hearers. "I tirTnot go in te poat," was the Datcliman-e'placid reply. Judging by_Appearances. "What is thia?" asked the crusty ;boarder,,poking at something; in his uish.-,Wh?e h? turtled a glaring RV* ,on the landlady. ' i "That, Sir. Saase^h," explained the chatelaine of the feedery, "is one of the new predigested foods. I Sthought my boarders might appreci ate thc introduction of a novelty of some sort." "Predigested, eh?" growled J?r fSosseigh. "It looks prehistoric to mel" ; \ ________ Soldier Ante. : Amoiig ants there is much the ?same divisi?n of labor.as among; ibees hnd a more compHcotediseries! M?:in?ividual?, for wo find noKonty itKo neuters, which performs aUltlib; (working functions of the ?bive,Uho( m^es and tho queens, but > we ?Eave m sonic species a special class* .known as soldier ants, wbich^havej ^Wonderfully powerful heads (jaws and parrarra no other ?n^^g (fcKon to defendltho ?f?rmiwryjirmd? make war. Tot Infante and Children. m mi Yes ta iiways feagM Boara the. Signature- of -.-Thir^ is a ? crest differeto^ ie ?the Way a woman tills you how ah likes you and tho w?y sho proves it. ; Freakish Acts off Monday's Cycleae. i -- Gainesville, Ga.t June3.~-Mirao?ea j played au important part m Monday's cyolone, which journeyed through tho eouther? part of Gainesville ;\ud* tho upper portion of HaU o?ui?ty, for, while death was hurled tx ^r?a and injuries to thrice that uuraber, there are thousand a alive and well to-day who owe their escape from death to the freaks and whims < of the giant wind demon, nealon** stogies, like talon of fishing ?omatimes or?ate doubt in the minda of those who stay ed at home, hui unlike the fish atones, the absurdities of the Gainesville cy clone are proven by fact and seores of eyewitnesses. "For iuBtauce, it is hard to imagine a ut raw being blown, bodily into a tree, yet this was done in several i OB tances hore laut Monday evening. It is still ? more strenuous'oiTert to stretch the mind to the point of believing that cows' were picked up bodily from strange lands end brought through .various shifting scenes, to a country foreign to their past wanderings. Yet there are strange co^s ~3 Gainesville -the sam? cows probably that are missing from their country barnyards many miles away. I have talked with the little boy-? his name is Cony-who took the flight through space on the wings pf the cyclone. Two other children are reported ic hr.TC m?de ? eliuuar juur ney, but thi3 little fellow io particu lar told a wonderful story, for ea? which were not accustomed to the re herod of miraculous doings. . ; Cody was in tho fifth story of thc Gainesville cotton mills when the cy clone came. He heard the roaring and whistling and saw the dark cloud com ing. Like scores of others, he ran tc the window and looked out. ; - "I remember seeing a dark thins coming right against the mill," he tells mo in childish s^szement, "hui the next thing I remember is when 1 Woke up and found two men carrying me on their shoulders." - That Cody ever awoke to tho lattei situation is. what makes the story ol his adventure wonderful. . The truth is the lad.was blown from the window, high through the air and almost gent ly, if that word oan figure in the voca bulary of a oyolone story,' placed upor tho railroad embankment. ' From fri gb t and IOSB of breath, ho was mo montai ly unconscious. Otherwise h< was in the pink of condition when ht reached the earth. Many saw hil wild ride on the wind and cnn vou?l for his statement and for mine.-At lanta Journal. J Heat as a Home Remedy. There is .scarcely any simple ail ment in which heat may not be ad van tageous if used understandingly. Bruis es and sprains are better treated hi heat, than oold. It may be applied ai a local bath or as a fomentation. Colic pains in infants nre quieted by tho applications cf dry- heat af tc the manner of our grandmother, wiv knew tho value of hot flannels and tin importance of warm feet and hands If the heat applied over the abdomei does not still the pain, try it on th spine. This often produces a quio tin, effeot at once. An incipient peritonitis or pneu monia may bo checked by hot applier tions accompanied by rest and fast ing, 'cr at least abstinence from coli food. For earache er toothache, heat, eitb er moist or dry, will usually give niuo comfort. If the child cannot breathe with th mouth shut, heat applied over th nose will be apt tc open the nasal pase ages and give relief. in headaches, a hot foot and han bath are often beneficial. A ho\ water bag over the storaeoh will prc mote digestion. Spinal irritation an sleeplessness are frequently relieve and permanently benefited by appli cation cf heat. A knowledge of the value of heat i of great value to the mother Of "croi py" children.--American Mother, t Coras Blood ano Skin Diseases, ifohia Humors, Eczema, Scrofula, Etc, Send no money-simply write an try Botanic Blood Balm at our e; pense. A personal trial of Bloo Balm is better than a thousand prin ed testimonials, so don't hesitate l write for a free sample. If you suffer from ulcers, eoaemi scrofula, Blood Poison, cancer, ea ing sores, itching skin, pimples, boil bone pains, swellings, rheumatism catarrh or any blood Or skin -disoas we advise you to take Botanio Bloc Balm (B B B). Especially reoor mended for old, obstinate, deep-aeati cases of malignant blood or skin di oases, because Botanio Blood Bal (BBB) kills the poison in the bloo eures where all elsa?fail?,' heals eve sore, makes tho blood vure and rio gives the skin the rich stow of healt B B B, the most perftv** blood pu fier made. Thoroughly tested 80 yeal Druggists $i. TO pro?e it cnn sample sent free and prepaid by wr lng Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, G Describe trouble, and fie? medical i Vice sont in sealed lotter. Sold Anderson by Orr-Gray Drag Co., W bite & Wilhito and Evana Pharma? - Tho oldest man in Ohio has j\ ulyu ni tuc ago O* ??i? auiidrc? ? j ten, leaving a ono-hundrod-an^-' j year old widow, to whom he had b< I married for eighty-five years. v.-.. -JT"- *. .. -,-?~ Makins Paper From Cornstalks. Wonders will neeroingly never oease -OSDGdiaUp toiler. JA.? pl..? 3. concerned. One would think that Arith auch an anomaly as that of a 'big grass plant futni?hing both sugar and vinegar, ship-is.de packing and silk the limit hud been reached, but now comes word from Washington that the department of ogrioulturo has die I covered a way to make from the porn plaut the pspsr ca whie?r to write Ha marvelous history for thc benefit cf posterity. In a special dispatch it is stated that experiments have been carried on by Uncle Sam in the Illi nois city of Kan-Kakeo for some time in. tho making of paper from corn stalkB and that success had been ach i o ved to such an extent that as soon as the 1903 crop of stalks shall have roaohed the propor stage of Ma turity the machinery will bo ready to begin the manufacturer of paper on an extended oommeroial soale. Samples of the corn paper have been received at tho department. Three grades aro made-one from the shell of the stalk, one from the pith and a third from the- husk or shuck. The paper made from the pith is, ac cording to dopartment experts, nearly equal to a fine grade of liacn goods. It is also stated that the production of paper to tho given quantity of raw ma terial is such as to justify large ro turas and in that manner permit the payment to the farmers of more money than the stalks are worth for feeding. In-order also that the stalks may be obtained at the proper stage of matur ity a machine has been invented and is now being built that takes the en tire plant, ear and all, in at one end and after husking out the ears breaks up the remainder into tho form in which it is needed for further treat ment. This will enable the paper makers to buy the stalks in the field, husk out the grain, and thea le* the farmer haul it away. There is a Scotch proverb which says that "those who live longest will see mostferlies" (wonders) bu? it was hardly to bo thought that, after all these years of experimentation, oom paper would become an accomplished faot-Breed er's Gazette. Cotton ?rea Increased. New York, May 29.--The Journal of Commerce wiii today issue the re-, suits of a careful investigation of the acreage planted in cotton, the con dition of tue plant and the progress of farm work. Therre results in brief are: First, an in?rense, to be exaot, of eight-tenths of 1 per cent in the area under 1 cultivation; second, a decrease bf 16.9 points ir^eondition, and third.. agreement that the -season is two or three weeks late. In: .other words, an increase of 224, 422 aorefr as indicated, while the crop's average condition is 75, com pared with 91.9 reported last year by virtually . the ontuc correspond ents. The returns are from 1,800 corres pondents whole reports bear average dato of May 24. North Carolina re ports an increased area of 6 per cont or 68,343 acres ; South Carolina 4 per cent, or 89,671 aores; Georgia three tenths of 1 one per cent, or 2,661 aores; Alabama, a decrease of 3 per cent, or 109,769 aores; Mississippi, a decrease of 1 per cent or 22,701 acres. Louisiana and Texas no chang? from, last year; Arkansas, increase of 6 per cent, or 120,418 acres; Tennessee, in crease of 2 per cent, or 12,150 aores; the Indian Territory, an increase of 5 per cent or 33>685 acres. In condition, North Carolina re ports a decrease of 10 Y~" cent; South Carolina of 17 per cent; Georgia of 22 per cent; Florida of 10 per cent; Ala bama cf 15 per cent; Mississippi of 9 percent; Louisiana 12percent; Texas 21 per cent; Arkansas 15 per cent; Tennessee 10 per ce nt, and Indian Ter* liinrti . Iii ?v?? ?A??* . , -~ t"? -:- . tn- -'?-r Dead 2i> Years-Sow ls Alive. Rooheste'r, May ?).-A Btrange ro mance was narrated to Chief of Police Cleary today by a man who was sup posed to have been dead for years. It was told by a man who had oome from Mount Hope Cemetery, where he had road bia epitaph on a tombstone' and then razed tl s stone to the ground. And it was told to a man who had act ed as pallbearer for the man supposed to have boon dead. Twenty-eight years ago thia month the body of a mau was found floating in a mill raoe^here and identified as that of William H. Stone. The iden tification was made positive by Mi: Stoho, the supposed widow. The 105th New York infantry, of which ho had been a member, adopted a me morial and attended the funeral in a $ody.' Cheif of Police Cleary, then a : policeman, was one of the pallbearers. The burial was in the Stone family plot in Mount Hopo. To-day Stone suddenly appeared and fully identified himself *to hia family and police. He has beau a wanderer. iNasativ? Bromo Aoinfee Cures ?Co?t! InOnoDoy. Gtffia 2 Days oaevsry box. 35a "Mogal"-.- Trame Morora/ Under tho great obed of *tJnion Su. ?ion panting monstora of steel and iron glide io almost every hour from "rues" of hundreds of miles. A little oil ia poured on their bear ings, a wiper goes . over the .shining shaft, a nut ia tightened, a sorew ad justed, and they are ready onoe more for another trip. Locomotives of tho present day typify tho essence of human ingen uity. Economy is the factor whioh has had much to do with their existence. ! Saving in coal, saving in time, sav ing in repairs, and a capacity to do riioro work at. ICBB expenso aro the guiding stars of tho men who make these great traine uiovurt*. Slowly it has been realized that though it may require twice as mueh coal to give the Morgul, tho Pacific or the Atlantic locomotive power to go a given distance as a cheap or old-time engine, still they can make the dis tance half again as fast, oarry a train twioo as heavy and at tho end of . the ! run need no repairs. Because of the knowledge that a mistake will cost many human lives, the improvement in locomotives has been comparatively slow. Theories were of but little use in railway engines, j Practical imnrovemflnta t?erc seed ed. Less than fifty years ago an engine weighing fifty tons was regarded with awe. Its wonderful speed of twenty miles an hour was oommented upon, and its trains of ten or twelve freight oars were regarded as the acme of traffic possibilities. Driving wheels from forty to fifty inches high carried these trains. The smokestacks were often five feet high, and terminated in bulges from whioh the smoke poured in im pressive volume. Since that day of these "iron mon sters" looomotive building has under gone a complete change. Almost all things which were re garded as imperatively necessary havo been found sot only unnecessary, but in the way. The small boiler has given plaoe to huge boilers, often extending far back into the cab of the engineer. The high amokestaok has been out down from 60 to 20 inoheB, and is al most completely lost to view behind the hugo headlight., Driving wheels are now from 80 to 84 inohes diameter end the fire box has been raised from the center of gravity to a degree which would have caused tho old-timer to predict certain disaster. The speed attained is from fifty to sixty miles an honr for jours at a time, -and the trains hauled may be fifty heavy freight oars or a line of from twelve to fourteen heavy passen ger cars, one of whioh would have stalled the engine of fifty yeera ago. The weight of these engines is from 100 to 150 tons. The Pacifie locomotivos of the Chi cago and Alton weigh 219,000 pounds and have driving wheels SO inohes in diameter. The new Burlington engines weigh 300,000ponnds andar? what is known as the "Atlautio" type. Their driving wheels are 84 inches in diameter. Speed is the chief essential with them. It is generally believed that the new engines of the Illinois Central are unequaled in their class. Especially is this said to be true of the twelve wheel f "-eight locomot i vea recently put into use by the company. " These locomotives weigh 232,000 pounds and are built for power. One of the sights of Union. Station is the great B:g Four engine, No. 399, whioh weighs more than 100 tons and has a speed of soventy miles an hour. The Wabash and the Iran Mountain also have several very large locomo tives.-St. Louis Republic You Con Keep Cool If you-. Don't get exoited. Dress properly* Bathe daily in tepid salt water. Cut. down the daily meat suppl). Substitute cold cereals for hot ones. Dispense with heavy soups. Turn your baok on rion desserts. . ' Have plenty of berries, fruit*, veg etables, custards and oold puddings. < Keep the house darkened through the heat of the day. Lie down every afternoon. Don't plunge iced drinks into a heated stomach. Leave off all unnecessary fixings, and be oontent to look neat and oool. -Exchange. m o' mm _ -- Paper gloves and stockings are now being manufactured in Europe. As to the manner in which the former is made little is known, but tho stock ings hav'e been carefully examined by exports, and they are loud in their praioo of them. It is olaimed that they will last almost as long as ordi nary stockings. - If man's first lovo is himself ho never find? a aatib/actory suocusuur. - At the sge of thirty a woman regrets that her past didu't begin a few years later. Snake Hypnotism. Gr?hs?n Pock, ? wow-known author ity on snakes, was asked hit) opinion regarding a snake's hypnotic powers. Hts reply was as follows: "There ia a certain power to fasci nate in snake's eyes and movements. I saw only the other day a ty pi o al il lustration of the power of a snake to fascinate. "Over in the pino woods I saw a ground squirrel fascinated by a blaok gopher anaae. Tho forked tongue darted out of the snake's mouth almost as rogularly and rapidly as the needlo of a sewing machine rises and falls. The squirrel seemed to watch it spell bound. Tho snake crept slowly near er. When tho gopher snako was with in two or three indies of tho squirrel it gavo a leap and tbrow three, coils about tho squirrel. Instantly the spell was gono. .Tho fascination or charm thero had been over tho . littlo animal was no doubt broken tho very moment tho serpent's coils wore about tho squirrel, for tho animal gavo three convulsive, terrified chirps and realized that its death moment bed come. "I belicvo implioity that all snakes have a certain degreo of power to fas cinate their victiufs to death. Black snakes, gopher snakes and racers havo the power of a large degree. Rattle snakes bave the most fascinating pow er among all the poisonous serpents in the southwest. Thc indications of charming among poisonous snakes are deooiving sometimes. Poisonous snakes fang their prey onoo only. The poison does not kill at once. The viotim flutters to a branch, it maybe, or rune a short distan ;o and stop . Tho snake watches it. The poison does it? deadly work, and the bird falls. Any ono who comes up, not having Been the attack, might bc readily de ceived into imagining that it was the glenco ofaho snake and not the poison that oaused the victim to fall."-De troit Free Press. Paid in his own Coln. The physician was overtaken by a storm on a cold winter night,' and rather than drive ten miles home, ho put np at the tavern keeper's house. He and his host sat for an hour or two before they went to bed at a table on which a bottle of whiskey stood. They talked pleasantly, but neither took anything to drink. What, there fore, was the physician's surprise in the morning to find on his bill a charge of 50 cents for whiskey. "Why, man, I drank none of your whiskey," he said to tho tavern keep er. "Ma,ybe you did'nt," the other re plied, "bu? you might as well. It was there on the table for you." The physician paid the 50 cents, and a week or two later he put up at the '.avern again. This time he ran up a bill of good size. What with the things he ate and drank and sm?k ed seated with the landlord at tue table, his medicino case before him, his acoount came to something like In the morning when he got his bill -it was $5 exactly-he gave the land lord, instead of cash, a receipted bill of his own for a Uko amount. At this bill the landlord started. "Medioine, S5.Q0!" ho exclaimed. "What doee thia mean? I have'nt taken any of your medicine!" "But, my friend, why did'nt you?" said the physician. "It lay before you on the table all last even;-..g." -- AH waves are moro or less dan gerous-and the waves of a pretty, girl's handkerchief are usually more. .-- While you are sympathizing with a hen-peoked husband also sigh for his next-door neighbors. WHEN BABY ?S COMING USE Mother's Friend. Woman'* greatest dream of beauty and glory is when natara bas chosen her to become a mother. Every faculty is keenly meit and her natur* the finest aa 6ho fore seen tho joy, tho ambition, tho success and tho life-long satisfaction coining, coming rearer, day ny day, in tho dear and innocent being so soon to seo light, and the very uncertainty whether sho shall seo a sweet Kiri face or a brava boy faco beside her on tho pillow, adds ?est to her expectancy. Then, if ever, sho shonld take care of her physical, mental and moral health. MOTHER'3 FRIEND applied externally throughout pregnancy will rolievo tho pain of parturition, and no mothor and child can fail to bo healthy, hearty, strong, clear corn pit .-.ioned, pura blooded, calm nerved and cheerful in disposition, who are mutually Inuuenced for months by the continued use of Mother's Friend. Of druggists ai.CO Oar treatise "Motherhood" mailed frc?. THC BRADFIELD REGULATOR CC. ATLANTA, aa. l?-LO-TAN CURES CATARRH Read what a prominent Wholesale Grocer of Spar tanburg, S. C., has to say of this wonderful remedy: To-lo-tanCo., Knoxville, Tenn., Gentlemen: The writer has been a sufferer with catarrh in tho head for 15 years. During that period. I havo tried many catarrh remedies. I was treat ed nnd operated on by an eminent physician. For several years I got no Detter. I then went West where I was treated by a nromhientcatarrh specialist. Tho disease had made mo deaf and my hearing was getting vrcrso. To suy ihc least, i . -ad given up in despair. I saw advertised tes timonia!.'? of truthful friends who had used Tolotan. I procured this remedy and to my surprise, found at onco,' great benefits. I heartily recommend Tolotan to all oulTerera of catarrh. Gratefully your-', To-Lo-Tan is a complete treatment for catarrh, being a combination of two distinct remedies that act in harmony, absolutely cleansing the system of every trace of the disease. Treatment $1.00. If your druggist docs not keep To-Lo-Ton, write to Tolotan Go., Knoxville, Tenn. CURSE - or - DRINK CURED BY WHITE RIBBON REMEDY. No taste. No odor. CHU he gi?en in glus of water, tea or conto without patient'? knowledge. W h ito Ribbon Remedy will euro or d?stroy tho diseased appotito Tor alcoholic 8tlinul?uts, wheth er the nat I cut la a continued insbriat?, a .'ti pier," aociaS drinker or drunkard. Impo?8lMo for any ono to have an appetite for alcoholic liquors after using White Ribbon Remedy. Indorsed by Members of w. C. T. U. Mrs. Moore, press auncrintenii-mi of Woman's Christian Tempor?neo Union, Ventura, Callfor nts, writes: "Ihare teated WhiteBlhbou It? mort y on very obstinato drunkards, and tbo cures have beon many. In tunny oases the Home ly was glv> en secretly. I cheerfully recommend and indorse Whit? Ribbon Remedy. Mombers of our Union aro delighted to And an economical treatment tn aid us in our temperance work." Druggists or hy mail, fl. Trial packago free by writing Mrs. A. M. Townsend, (for years Heornta ry of a Woman's Christian Temperance Union,) 218 Tremont Ht , Boston, Mess, ?old lu Anderson by ORB, Git AY & CO. Sept 17,1002 . 18 ly Foley's Honey and Tot* cares colds, preve?is pneumonia, ANDEBSOr/, H. C. Of Wo respectf ally solicit a share of your business. -:-" ,rst ! ? BANK OFINDERSOW. J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice President. B. F. MAULD.U?. Cashier. TH? largest, strongest Bank in tb County. Interest. Paid on Deposits By special agreement, With r-UBur passed facilities and reaour? ces we are at all times prepared to ac oommodate our customers. Jan 10,1900 29 College of Charleston, J Charleston, S. C. H8th Year Begins September 25. Letters. .Science, Engineering. One Scholarship to each County of South Caroline. Tuition ?40. Board and fur nished room in dormitory, 910 per month. All candidates for admission ar9 permit ted to compete for Boyce ttcholarships, which pay 8100 a year. For catalogne, address HARRISON RANDOLPH. President. Notice to Creditors. ALL personn having demands against thc Batata cf Mr. P. F. Farmer dee'd are hereby notified to present them, properly proven, to tho undersigned, within the time prescribed by law, and those Indebted to make puvmont. E. B. FARMER, Executor. ' Juno 3, 1903 50 S F0l?ty'?~Kid?ty Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. HORSE SHOEING. Have yor- a ?oed horse or mule? If so, bring him to W. M. Wallace, an experi enced hand in ali kinds of Horse Shoeing. I have studied Horse 8boeing under ex perienced men from ' the North-have done all the race-shoeing for them. I have some of my work I would like to ?how you. ?Don't forget I am doing Wagon and Buggy Work at a very low price. All work guaranteed. You will .find me on the corner below Jail. Look or my sign._W. M. WA LL, ACE. CITY LQTSFOR SALE. . SITUATF1> ou and near North Main Street. Fi'.e minuten' walk Court House. Apply to J. F. CUnkscalos, Intelligencer office._ CO ?3TIOOM 'M a NV flP^R -WU tunMOinuOT ? Al ffm g ? ffl HM JOotuoqco?ninon IBB ll ? J - RH -nd jo 3ooq ofljwi MBI Ul fl - BH ? ./O^OAV JO oui tro B HI [IL lU-:j .. ? .&>,. 'mnnnpnni 'mnido SS3 TN Iva UAKHM 9VS?SS*MmHi "JO'?JP' ??HBGESa HAIR BALSAM , J?SClt?ni?? and buntlAea th? hate. MIMSail '* WU ? 11 1 * Icr-irln.-:* growth. ???Ra wfll Nov?r S"?ils to Kastore Gray KTKV&^r :J1 Hklr to Ita Youthful Color. Anderson County Mutual Ben efit Associaion of America. The Anderson County Mutunl Benefit Association of America writes the cheap est insurance of tho day. The plan la to tako one thousand people, men and wo- ' men, hlud thom together in a business way to help each other in time of need and trouble. You only pav when one die?. K you join now your first payment, pays you up until Jauuary, 1004, unless we IOHO one of our members, If the hand of Providence should sever the silver thread that holds tho life of ono ot our loved ones, friend or neighbor, who would het 'tato a moment on paying the little sum of One Dollar and ten cents to roplaoe the. amount and pay expenses paid out on death claim. Consider the matter, examine and Btudy our plan. You are; receiving insurance o protect your family at aotual cost. Don't stand back, let our agencies write you up at once. If there ls anything you wiBh to know in regard to the poliuy call on any of the agenta and they will take pleasure in explaining the policy to you. Remem ber this 1B the only opportunity ever presented lo you at actual coat. Toa owe it to your family, you owe it to your self to secure their protection in caso yon are taken away from them. If you are over thirty years of age this ia the only chance you will havo of getting in. After 1,009 members have been secured no one over thirty gets in, and he only to roplaco a deceased member. N. R. GREEN, Pres. J. M. PAYNE, Sec. and Treas. Foley's Honey and Tar torchttdrea,saie,8ure. No opiates. KIDNEY are the most fatal of all dis eases. 'JO KIDNEY CURE ls ft d Buarantfiid (tenaty or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles* PRICE 50c* and $1.00? FOR SALE BY EVANS' PHARMACY BANNER 8A t.VB tho moat healing salvo in tho world. General Repair Shop, AL Li kinds of Blacksmithing, Wood Work, Painting, Trimming, Rubber Tiras and Rubber Horseshoeing. All done at short notice by first-class work men. We don't claim to be the only first-ciuss workmen in town, but as good aa any in tho South. Our work ohowa for Itself. Work and Prlcea guaranteed. Call and see our work and get pilcos. Bring your Buggies aud have them re paired and made as nice and good as new for Soring aod Hummer drives. Yours for business, J. P. TODD. P. 8.-Horie Shooing a Specialty. March ll, 1003 ' 38_ S. G. BRUCE, DENTI8T. ?VER D. C. Brown ?fc Bro'a. Store, South Main Street. I .bave U5 years experience lu my pro fession, and will be pleased to work for any who want Plates made. Filling done, and I make a specialty of Extracting Teeth without pain ana with no after pain. Jan 23,1901 SI Wall Papering and Painting. THE undersigned has a superior lot of Wall Paper and Bordering which I will sell io the roll ata very low price. I will also Paper and Paint your house at a,sat isfactory price. If you need any paper ing or want your house painted give me a trial. *Q. L. ARNOLD, Dopot Street. Feb ll, 1903_34 Om 6OV;EAR9*' EXPERIENCE ~ TRADE NTARKSJ -DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS Ac? Antone sondlng a sketch and daacrlpUon mar Quickly M Mr tain our opinion freo ?hether an invent MI la acobaMrmMi?itM?, Communloa. f ions luridly coundon lal. Handbook on Patent* lent freo. OUto.it aponry tor NHIW potent*. Talents taken tli''?ccu Munn & Co. rccctTf rptt?il ?ofloe, wlthou? charge, In, tko ^ $deifif ic Jimerican. A handsomely Ulu-drated \reokty. Tamoat cift eatsttofl ci nr.r getdseMfl icarsai, WM? 53 a rear: fourniontlia.fi. SoW byan ncwsdralom. MUNN &Go.38!?T^ New Yort Branch O nico. 625 F BU Washington. Due?. .