University of South Carolina Libraries
Trouble Among the Seceder*. We are in receipt of a letter i rom a young woman in the Eastern part of thc State and, as is the case with a letter from a woman, the important part is in the postscript, which is in words as follows: "Has the piano for Church arrived?" The piano has not como to hand and when it docs reach Abbeville there will be "a monkey and parrot time" before it gets into the Churoh. We have a very good organ now. A piano is not in good taste and unless there are other instruments ono should nev er be put in a Church. Several stanch members of the Churoh aro opposed to any further progress in that lino. It is indeed time to call a halt when such tunes as the "Spanish Cavalier" are sung to the Psalms of David, and such a thing has boon done in this placo. Musical instruments in a Church destroy con gregational singing. Tho service of song id part of worship iu which all should take part and every substitute for the same should be opposed. Some years ago we sang in the ohoir at Hopewell Churoh, Chester County. James Bigham was the leader and J. C. Flenniken and ourselves were his special aides. One day we sang the tuno "Siloam" and did notstop to line out two lines at a time. The result was that an old gentleman arose and stalked out of the Churoh in great in dignation. He would put up with no such innovation, and did not stop un til he took his scat on tho ground at the root of a great red oak tree, ne,li the Churoh. After the benediction the first man who approached him did so with apprehension, expecting au outburst of temper. He had, how ever, cooled off in the shade of the oak and his first words were: "What's the price of cotton in Liverpool?" The staple was then Helling at 40 cents in gold per pound. If tho piano goes into our Churoh here it will take more than the shade of a red oak tree or the prioe of ootton in Liverpool to restore the equilibrium of the congregation. The Seceders won't stand every thing. We remember when an old lady in Due West left the Churoh and quit il for good because window glass wore put in it. Before that time the window was nothing more than a hole in the wall with a solid plank shutter. She thought it her Christian duty to .crucify the flesh. In the olden time if a member of the Church at Cedar Springs or Long Cane married "among the Dutch" he had to make acknowledgements to ihe session before he could partake of the Lord's Suppor. But marrying a "Dutoh" girl is nothing to what put ting a piano in the Churoh here will be.-Abbeville Medium. ? -m m When They Met. "Are you good at solving riddles?" inquired Boss of Beid the other day. "I'm not great on puzzles at any time," repliod Reid; "but what have you got?" , "Well, supposing a train leaves London for Edinburgh and travels 60 miles an hour; and another train leaves Edinburgh for London at the same time and travels 50 miles an hour, which will be the farthest away from London when they meet?" ?eid pondered a moment, and then replied: "I should say the train whioh left London, seeing it traveled ten miles' an hour faster than the other." Boss laughed, and told Reid to try. again, but the latter maintained that he was right. "Umph!'' remarked Boss, as he prepared to mount an approaching oar, "now, don't you think both trains wpuld be the same distance from Lon don when they met?" \; And when Beid thought a moment and saw through the puzzle it was well for Boss that he was several yardn away. . I fe -:--J-,-- I ;v Descriptive. * Private John Allen is responsable for this one : j. $f*? Last year there were a numb?Fof claims for damages brought againBfc ene of the railroads in Mississippi by the farmers in a certain County of that State; ;f These, claims arose .but of the fact that many hogs bad-been kill ed-.,by the-?rain?,./?fr^e railroad ty eemm|ssion .was an. old darky whe claimed to have been: & eyewitness cf tho annihilation i>f ono hog: Said tho chairman of tho commis Me/?o*ttisWw*s killed." Old Zeph shifted ? huge cud of to bacco from one cheek to ihe other, I kin make it out, ft was dis way ; .De train tooted and dop tuk him}"- ft* XQ? Xfifanta ard Children, ?ha Kfed Yes Have Always Bd?gM Signature of ?w^^&^?^^^^^ Why do They Whine! Women are queor, after ail. Per haps even now, after fifty years cf trial, they are yet too new to money earning and business ways to adopt the best methods of conducting enter prises to success. Perhaps during decades of centuries they have become :?o accustomed to gaining their aims through tears and mournful appeals to the sympathies of others that poor souls!-they drop through hered ity into thia lugubrious ctylo when they want you to biro them to work or to buy from them a now patent shirt waist fastener. At any rate, many a woman's first essay in tho industrial world is a wretchedly unbusinesslike appeal to the sympathies of others. Say Mrs. Tobias Boby is canvassing for tho grip-it-fast shirt wai?t clamp. She comes into your presence and sinks inio a chair with tho eigh of a ioBt soul. Then she opens out. She tells you she is a widow with small chil dren to Bupport; that sho has been oheated out of her little property the moro fool she is for allowing her self to be cheated! She tells you how infirm her health is and how she suf fers from some kind of ailment. It may bc this or it may bc that, but it is always chronic, like her own down in-the-mouth faoo-a face so woebe gone and unpleasant that you instinc tively want to look away from it. She enlarges on how dreadfully hard she has to work and how tired sho gets and oh-ah-oh! till you feel as though you would rather seo a sheriff's summoner come into your house than a self-supporting woman.. Even a girl who earns a good salary too often takes this woebegone, fall to-pieces attitude. She counts busi ness hours as so much of her time that, she ic defrauded out of by adverse fate and whines because she has to support herself instead of glorying in tho fact. This down-in-'.he-mouth attitude is seriously in tho way of business wo men of all conditions. It is the atti tude of the beggar who stands on the street corner and parades his deformi ties to draw money out of people. Because we are widows with children to support, bocause we have a chronic toe ache or used to be rich and were fools enough to let ourselves be cheat ed out of our wealth-none of these is any reason why other people should put their hands in their pockets and give us money. Business is business. It presup poses that if two parties make an in terchange of labor and money or merchandise on mutually advan tageous terms, give and take, fair and square. Sentiment and sympathy have absolutely no plaoe in commer cial transactions, only it seems hard for women to learn this. It is not a hardship to work for one's living, whether at cooking or anything else. It is being a useful member of society, contributing to its economic strength. If? is something to be undertaken with pride and satis faction. The woman who has the brains and grit to maintain herself is to ho congratulated, not pitied. She is not ia the least deserving of any body's sympathy; on the contrary. Why she should attempt to draw on people's sympathies is a mystery. Perhaps she imagiues she wiii gain by it. If so, she is mistaken. All other people have troubles of their own, as' many as they can carry, and they therefore have so much sympathy for themselves that little is left to spill over upon others. A whine and a doleful tale a few times repeated will harden any mortal and close his ear against all who approach him mingling business and beggary. The two do not mix successfully. Undoubtedly the attempt to suc ceed in trade by drawing on men's sympathies has something to do with co many women's failure in the busi ness world. It does not work, it never will Work. The noble, s elf-re specting attitude is the only one. ZTho woman who succeeds is she who is prepared to give full market tidue in the trade of labor world, who keeps all lier troubles and weal cess to herself and thus gives the impression that ahe is strong and capable, who greets all tho world with a brave, cheerful, confident mien ind words, thus giving the impression ?hat1 she t?k?&^?M?g*. . V"* ?? 'r>.i>?:\ ? /?vi Jv13 II rm ? y*f-r?rr->JJ tahiUt?fCm a Cold lp OKS Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. PM mmmm turo is'o? e?oh box. Price 2?o. . \--. I / .,.::! iffi? &? - George, Jones who' had been io the Oak?ind, 0U/J eott?ty jail for Iff years, awaiting -trial, has diei there,, aged 93 years. ? He. had been incar cerated bi nco January, 1885, for the murder ot Lorenzo Suitlo. Ho waa oonvioted June 5, 1835, of the murder and sentenced to bo hanged July ll. He succeeded in gaining ? new trial. About the time the trial was to begin Jones was taken with a stroke of pa eaTjsis and baa never been able to leave Bia bed. Time and again the case was set for trial, but a continuance always was granted. --fWheo- a woman gets through worrying over whether the cellar Ja damp sho begins on whether the chil dren might not catch malaria from the collar next door. Run by Blouse Power. - Thrift is generally acknowledged to be ono of tho leading characteristics of tho nativo of Fifeshire, and it ncv was moro forcibly exemplified than in the person of David Hutton, a native of Dunfermline, who act ually proved that even mice, those acknowledged pests of mankind, could be made not only to earn their own living, but also to yield a respectable income to their owuers.' About the year ISL'O this gentleman actually erected a small mill at Dun fermline for the manufacture of thread -a mill worked entirely by mice. It was while T.isiting Perth prison in 1812 that Mr Hutton first conoeived this remarkable idea of utilizing mouse , power. In an old pamphlet of tho time, "The Curiosity Coffee Boom," he gave an account of thc way in which the idea dawned on him. "in the summer of the year 1812," he wrote, I had occasion tobe in Perth, and when inspecting the toys and trinkets that were manufactured by the French prisoners in the depot there, my attention was involuntarily attracted by a little toy houce, with a wheel in the gable of it that was run ning rapidly round, impelled by the insignificant gravity of a common house mouser For ono shilling I pur chased house, mouse and wheel. In closing it in a handkerchief, on my journey homeward I was compelled to oomtemplate its favorite amusement. But how to apply half-ounce power (whioh is the weight of a mouse) to a useful purpose was tho difficulty. At length the manufacturing of sewing thread seemed the most practicable." Mr. Hutton had one mouse that ran tho amazing distance of eighteen miles a day, but ho proved that an or dinary mouse could run ton and one half miles on an average. A half penny's worth of oatmeal was suffi cient for its support for thirty-five days, during which it ran 736 half miles. Ho had actually two mioe constantly employed in the making of sewing thread for more than a year. The mouse thread mill was so con structed that the common house mouse was enabled to make atonement to society for past offences by twisting, twining and reeling from 100 to 120 threads a day, Sundays not excepted. To perform this task the little pedes trian had to run ten and one-half miles, and this journey is performed with ease every day. In the period of five weeks it made 3,350 threads of twenty-five inches, and aB a penny was paid to women for every hank made in the ordinary way, tho mouse, at that rate, earned ninepenoc every six week?, just one farthing a day, or sev en shillings and sixpence a year. Taking sixpence off for board and allowing one shilling for machinery, there was a clear profit from each mouse of six shillings. Mr. Hutton firmly intended to apply for the loan of the empty cathedral in Dunferm line, which would have held, he cal culated, 10,000 mouse mills, sufficient room being left for keepers and some hundreds of spectators. Death, how ever, overtook the inventor before this marvellous project Gould bo carried out.-Edinburgh Scotsman. The Startling Assert Ions of a Preacher. Let two men, one a worthy church brother and the other a lodge man, bo sick in their own communities: whioh, most likely, will have the greatest in terest shown him by his brethren? It is the lodge man. Let two men, one a worthy churoh member and the oth ther a lodge man, come to distress among strangers; which most likely, will have brotherly interests shown him? It is the lodge man. A man who for years had been . an honored member, and supporter of both his Masonic lodge and the Bap tist Churoh (he also for a long time sang in ohcir) came to need in his last days. The lodge, not the church, went to his assistance, and contracted a debt of several hundred dollars see ing him through his last illness. Where is the church that has shown a like spirit of the "good Samaritan",to a brother in 'distress? A few years ago ? lady told me. that when heir husband was' sick some of his lodge brethren were with him much of the time. Not a day passed but some called. But it was only oc casionally when a church member palled; and then it whs to inquire how the sick man was/ and not to inquire if the brethren of the church could be ot ?ny assistance. A Congregation al deacon once told mo that wore he in distress he wonld go to his lodge and not to his. churoh. -Rev. T. F. Blanchard in Christian Work and Evangelist. - If some people did nothing -but mind their own business they wonld soon become rather narrow-minded. -? Some men who believe in the di vision of labor let their wives do all the work and they do the rest. - When a. woman looks well fa mourning for her husband it is a sign she is likely to get another one. Cotton, and Frost. A correspondent writes to the Char lotte Obs?rvor: Some days ago, a par ty of Mississippi and Louisiana cotton planters at tho Hot Springs, N.C., ho tel were discussing the cotton problem of the South and whether the agita tion about raising tho staple in Africa would ever seriously attect tho mar kets of the world. A successful plant er from Tesas parish, in Louisiana, thought that Africa could not make any material increase in the yield, for, said he, "John C. Calhoun and (Jen. Hampton were both of thc opinion that cottou could not bo produced where the frost never fell, and I agree with them that frost is necessary to prepare the conditions for a healthy cotton growth." Continuing, he said that the sugnr lands of Louisiaua were the richest in the South, and yet they could not successfully grow cotton. The question about frost and fruition of tue piont was a new one to most of thc listeners and they did not combat thc assertion. A very large and wealthy sugar planter from New Orleans, and who now is also the owner of extensivo tracts of land in Cuba, on ?hoing told of thc discussion, attached but little importanco to tho proposition about tho fall of frost. On one of his plan tations, Cuba, was a cotton tree sever al years old, and the women had been gathering the cotton for domestio U60 as they needed it. On another plan tation in Cuba, ho had successfully raised some sea island cotton and sent it to Now York to a broker who .pro nounced it worth 28 cents a pound. He had only, however, tried the ex periment for one year. He said the reason cotton could not bc raised upon the loamy sugar lands of Louisiana was because the worm and bugs seri ously interfered with the growth of the plant. Tho Texas planter in this connec tion interposed a pertinent question which yet remains unanswered: "If Cuba is such a fine cotton country, why was cotton not raised there dur ing the four years of tho oivil war, when cotton was worth $1 a pound?" A Yozoo, Miss., planter volunteered the Btatemont that Mexico had grown some'ootton during the war, but could in no way compete with tho South, on aocount of the fact, as he believed, that t?tere was insufficient frost to ar rest ths rank vegetation aud bring about a maturing of the plant. There seemed to be a wido variance of views about this oottou and frost question. A large commission mer chant from New Orleans, and one weil acquainted with the farming interests of his section, said-that as sugar mak ing'was no longer profitable, and 'had but little futuro prospects in Louis iana, he knew personally of a number cf sugar plant..s who had gone to < raising cotton in tho sugar parishes, and that cotton was1 looking exceed ingly well. One friend had 200 acres another 150 acres of as fine a cotton aa could be found. The frost did not fall there. What about the cotton of Egypt, and does tho frost fall in Egypt? Wise Mother Mouse. "When we think of mice it is us ually of the trouble they cause us; we are not apt to credit the rodents with much intelligence," said a lady at thc sewing circle, as quoted in the New York Times, but I recently had an ex perience which shows that the little oreatures possess a good bit of wisdom, after all. "I had been annoyed for some time by a family of mice which lived in the walls of the bed room. They nib bled my clothes, disturbed my sleep and when they grew so bold as to go into the canary's oage and eat up its seed my patience gave out andi de termined to fix them. * 'I bought a trap and set it by the bolo in the wall. For five nights I caught a mouse, then several days passed without oatohing one, although they were still there, for they kept up their noise, although not coming into my room anymore. "I found that the trap was all right but the whole in the wall had been closed from the inside. I pulled the filling out. It was not easy work, for it had been evidently put there to ' stay, and was made of bits of pis s ter and rubbish. I kept the holo open with the trap .close to it, but next day it was filled again. "I repeated this clearing out, pro cess five times, and five times the fill ing was replaoed. It was evidently the work of the mother mouse to pre-. Vent her little ones from passing through what had proved a fatal gate to so many. And I left the hole olosed, for the mioe did not oome into my room again. - Statistics show that the average amount of publie schooling1 por capita in thiB country is 998 days. That is there would be 998 days for eaoh in habitant if it were distributed around. Fifty years ago the average was 420 days, and at the beginning of the nine teenth century it was but eighty-two days. The Nation gives' the aohool ohifdren of to-day twelve times aa mv.oh sohooling as the youngsters ro ceived 100 years ago. a Too Lnte With the Dollar. "Hurry up with your fare!" cried tho couduotor of a Broadway car to a mcseeuger boy with a big bundle un der his arm. "I'll give it to you in a minute," returned the boy. But as he searched in pocket after pocket his face grew scarlet. "It's in my other suit wrap ped up in this paper," he explained. "None of that," interposed the cou duotor. "You'll have to get off." "Wait a minute, conductor, and seo if he isn't telliug tho truth," said a prosperous looWng man. Meantime the boy, his face redder still, untied his buudlc and proceeded to rummage through tho pockets of his old uniform. At last he lishcd out a nickol. "You are au honest boy." said thc prosperous looking man. "Herc's a dollar." The messenger boy looked at thc dollar and then at the mau. "Not if 1 know it, mister," he ex claimed loud enough for everybody on the car to hear. "I don't want no pay for bein' honest. Besides you're too late wid de coin. W'cu you secu dat guy about to put me off w'y didn't youso come acrost wid a nickel? Keep yer old dollar till I asks yer fer it!" Then tho prosperous looking mau also got red in the face.-New York Press. _ _ - Miss Eidora Sinks, of Mareugo, Towa, has received notice that $300 000 was bequeathed to her by B. J. Thompson, of Colorado Springs. Thompson was a mine owner and a bachelor when Miss Sinks, with a par ty of friends, visited Colorado three yearg ago and became acquainted with him. He was evidently attracted to her. Sho spent the entire summer in thc West and, returning home, sup posed ?he would never again hear of her middle-aged admirer. Recently the notice of his death came, with thc statement that he had willed his en tire estate to her, haviug no noirs. - Laborers digging an artesian well at Bonesteel, S. D., have unearthed a human skeleton fifty feet beneath the surface. Tho skeleton was in an ex cellent stato of preservation, aud is be lieved by scientists tobo that of a pre historic man. Thc Bad Lands of South Dakota, in which Bonesteel is situated, have been prolific in fossels. - An Arkansas editor who read that a young lady in Now York kneads bread with a glove on, says: Wo need bread with our pants on; wo need bread with our boots on. and if our subscribers in arrears don't pay up soon we shall need bread without any thing on." -.It is said that a'profitable hen eats Bixteeu times her weight in a year. Her eggs are six times her own weight, and worth six times thc cost of her food. ps 'Ni fe i ne ? niet-sw .aeoi BeoLuty IB Captured by Bradflold's Reculator. Thousands of young; women are awaking to tho fact that inherited corni ines has been stolen away and Instead of gio wing cheeks, bright eyes and smooth brows, the tell-talo wrinkles of pain have taken the place of these former charms. Theso are the warning f ecllngs I Weak, tired and exhausted In the morn lng, no Hie, no ambi tion to enter upon their former pleasures, Irrit able, cross, discouraged, dull headaches, general dispirited feeling, sleepless nights, cold feet, poor circulation, ''bearing down*'pains. AU these symptoms Indicate deranged and weakened or ?ns. Shattered nerves and exhausted energies How the weakened condition of ihe female organs as surely as night- follows day. Save yourself from more terrible results, redeem your youth by toking :. ?. i Bradfield'* Female Regulator Tho most strengthening, invigorating..,?An Strual regulator rn tho world. . 5.N I ' It relieves painful menstrua!!??, profuse men struation, obstructed menstruation, injamma tlon of the vagina, displacement, membranol gtanti, nervousness, .?? headaches. *t etttra. isuty of face and symmetry of form are the result of tho uso of theo? health drops. Of druggists ?1.00. Our book, Perfect Health for Women, malled Tees. THC BRADFIELD,REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA. OA. A Oaj3r.ii of rUP.E LINSEED Olli mixed vita a galton of Snakes 2 gallons of the VsHT BUT PiOff tU ti? VOBLD cfyoufcnalut MIL Xs TAM Mon CTTKABU thoa Pr BI Win TB LtADnna tuABSOLTJTCLY MOT FOI? SONOOS. HAMMABPAIMTU nudo of tho EIST Off PAiirr WATXJUAI>?-?neb. aa all goodjpalntero uso. end ls ground THJ?X. VBKT THICK. Ko trouble to nix. our boy eon dolt. It lo tho COMMON antra or ii o ua? FAINT, JNO mm point caa bo mad? ot AMT coat, and ia WOT TO COACK. BL?rrra. PEKL or Cnn?. y.HAMTH anPAiyTOO.,8t.ljoutg,Mo. CAPITAL PAID IN $500.000. SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY EVANS PHARMACY. BUDS AND FLOWERS OF HOWE LIFE. Paine's Celery Compound Makes and Keeps the Children Well and Strong. Mothers Make It the Home Met?c?r.e For Hie Little Ones. Thc children, God Mess then?, arc thc buds and flowers o? our homes. Without their prattle and hearty laughter, our homes would l>e desolate. They should ever l>e carefully tended in childhood and youth, if we expect them to ripen into perfect men and women. In the home and at school, thc children have their times of ill health and suffering. We often note the pallid and bloodless cheeks, 1 ivy eyes, nervous movements, and twitch-, ings of limbs and muscles. They complain of headache, drowsiness, weariness, dyspepsia, and indigesti m. All such symptoms and ail ment* mean thal the seeds of disease will have a fast and linn hold, unless proper measures ar,- taken :.> icstoic a perfect condition of health. l'housaml { wise ami prudent parents have made their children happy, healthy, and vigor ous 1 y giving them nature's medicine, l'aine's Celery Compound. In many severe and com plicated cases, raine's Celery Compound has restored health when thc lillie ones wire given up by physicians. if your dear ones au- not a-, hearty, strong, arni rugged as they should bc, try tile health giving virtues of t aine's Celery Compound. lt makes and keeps the children well. Thc house la made bright ami con with DIAMOND DYES Pillow cod table covers, curtains, port loros, afghann, tldloo, and choir coverings, may bo dyed beautiful ond artistic colors. Direction l>o;>k nnd -Ti dyoil samplci free DIAMOND DYES, BurUngtou,Vt. FOR SALE. About Twenty Second-Hand Buggies Cheap. Apply te W. M. WALLACE, Noar County Jail. MONEY TO LOAN. WE can negotiate Loans on improved Farm Lauris for sums exceeding- ?3.00 on reasonable torrup, on the installment plan. It 1H worth the whim of persons contemplating borrowing money to see us. Briug your land naners with you. BONHAM Si WATKINS, Olllce lu People's Bank. Sept 30, 1003 If._ I AR?DEB?fS??', S. d . Of We respectfully solicit a share of your business. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right* - THE - BANK OF ANDERSON. J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice President. B. F. MAULDIN. Cashier. TUE largest, strongest Bank in the County. Interest Paid on Deposits _ By special sgrooment. With unsurpassed facilities and resonx* eea we aro at all times prepared to ao commodato our customers. Jan 10, 1000_29_ BELTON HIGH SCHOOL ! PREPARES for College and oilers a thoroughly practical course for students unable to tako a College education. Tuition rates r?nHOuable. Next session bogtns Sept. 7, 1003. For further information, writo to A. G. HOLMES, ?rlnolnal Aug 10,J003__Bilton,'a. e. Foley's Honey and Tar cures colds, prevents pneumonia. CITY LOTSFOR SALE. SITUATED on and near North Main Streot. Five minutes' walk Court House. Apply to J. P. Cllnkscales, Intelligencer office._ General Repair Shop. ALL klndf of Blacksmithing, Wood Work, Painting, Trimming, Rubber Ti roil and Rubber Horse Shoeing. AH done at short notice by firat-olass work men. We don't claim to be the only first-class workmen in town, but as good as any In the South. Our work shows for itself. Work and Prices guaranteed. Call and see our work and get prices. Bring your Buggies and have them re paired and made as nice and good as nsw for Spring and Summer drives. Yours for business, J. P. TODD. P, S.-Horse Shoeing a Specialty. March li; 1003_38_ Foley's Honey and Tar tor childrens te,su re. No opiates, KIDNEY DISEUSES are the most fatal of all dis eases. EM CV'Q KIDNEY CURE >M rULtl O Guaranteed Rutty or money refunded. Contafna remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder trouble*. PRICE 60c and $1.00. FOR ?ALB BY EVANS' PHARMACY BAK NCR 8a LYB th? moot healing salva In the world. Page Woven Wire Fence Co., Adrion, Mich. Anderson County Mutual Ben efit Associaion of America. Tho AnderHon County Mutunl Benefit ?BHooiatton of America writes the cheap est Insurance of the day. Tho plan ie to t:iko ono thousand people, men cr?d wo mon, bind them together in a business way to help eairh other in time of need and trouble. You only pay whon one die-, ii you join now your drat paymonA. pays you up until January, 1904, unie? we Icseono of our momborn, If tho hana of Providence nhould ?ever the ?livor thread th? holds tho lifo of ono ot our j loved on????, friend or neighbor, vrho I would hesitate a moment on paying tho little HU II i of Ono Dollar and tou cents to replace the amount and pay expenses paid mu --ii death claim. Consider the mnttor, ?xamiue and study our plan You are receiving Insurance o protect your family at actual cost. Don't atand back. 1? tour agencien write you up at once. If there is anything you wish to know in r??gard to the policy call on any of tho agents and they will tako pleasure in explaining tho pulley to you. Komem ber this \? tho only opportunity over prestMitcd to 3*011 at actual cost" You owe lt to your family, you owe ittoyour Belf lo secure their protection in caso you aro taken away from them, .'f you ?re over thirty yearn of ago this in tho only chance you will have ol getting ?n. After l.UO'J members have boco st-cured no ono over thirty gem in, and ho only to replace a decaasod member. N. R. G KEHN, Pres. . J. M. PAYNE, Kee. and Treas. Here is our Ne^ T'~e Setter ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ j We worked so successfully last ?eason. >cts 'cm cold, right on thc wheel, and keeps tho dish right, too. With plenty good seasoned lumber, oproved machinery, well selected ?lock of differcut sizes, shapes and parts, we give you the service you ex pect in short time. Overhauling Car riages and lluggies from start to finish, is our specialty. PAUL E. STEPHENS. TAX NOTICE. THE Book? for tho collection of State, School and County T?xos will bo opened from October 15lh, 1U02, to December Mst, 1993, Inclusivo, and from January Isl, 100?, to March 1st, 1901,1 will collect with thc penalty-for January 1 per cont, February 2 vcr cont, and from March 1st to the 16th with 7 per cent ponaliy. After tho 15th ot March Executions will bo issued. 1 ho rato of Tax Levy is as followj : State Taxes.5 Mills Ordinary County. 8J<j" Behool. 8 " Past Indebtedness. 1 " Public Hoods. 1 ?* ? Total.18'.4" ! An additional levy of 3 mills has boon made for Ko. vi, H?oiOl School District ; aa additional tory of 2 nilli' has beei: made for the Town of Wll Itamaton, which is College Diatrict. No. - ; also Gantt School District, No. -.levy mada additional 8 mills for School and VA initia for interna on' School Bonds, the total additional for Gantt School District 41.: milla ; making tout tax levy for Hun ter School'District 17 mills, College School Dis trict 16 milln. Total tax levy for Gantt 8chool District 18' . mills TheStal? Constitution requires all mahn be tween twenty-one and sixty years of age, except thoso incapable of earning n support from being maimed or from omer cuises, and thoso who surv ol in the war between tho States, to pay a Poll Tax of Ono Dollar. All persons between the ages of elghteon and flf y years of age, who are obi" to work the public roads, or causo them to bo worked, except Preach ers who have charge of congregations, aud partons who served iu the war between the States, School Teachers and Trustees aro exempted from road duty, and in lieu of work muy pay a tax of Ono Dollar, to bo collected at the same time other taxes aro collected. I will collect taxes at Slabtowa, Mt. Airy, Pied? mont, Polzor, Wllllainston, Belton and Honea Path, but will give notice later tuetluielwUl visit thene placea. _J. M. PAYNE,Co.Treas; SUMMONS. STATK OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Anderson County. By II F. WILSON, Esq . Maglstrato in and for said County of the said State. To J. If Acker : Complaint having been mado unto mo by Tho Peoples' Furnituro Company, a corporation doing; business nt Anderson. 8. C.. that you are indebted to it in tho sum of T ?elvo Dollars on open account lor goods sold and delivered to you at yourrjquelt at Anderson, S. C., which you rofuso to ply, and for which sum tho said Peoples' Furnituro Com pany ask judgment agaiust tbe said J. II. Acker. Tdeso are, thereforo, to requlro you, the said Defendant, to appear before mn, in my oQico, at Anderson, on Ute 2ith day of October A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. tn , to answer to tho Slid Complaint, or judgment will ba given against you by dorault. Tho Sherill is hereby appointed Special Consta ble to sci ve this Process. Given under my hand and seal at Anderson, 8. C., tho 16th day of Septotuher A. D. 190J. B. P. WILSON, [SEAL-,] Magistrate. Sept IC, 1903 _13_6 SUMMONS. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, I Anderson County, By B. F. WILSON, Esq , Magistrate in and for said County for tho said State. To J. U. Acker: Complaint havinr been made unt?me by Mrs. Nannlo M. Toombes that you are Indebted to her in the sum of 8even Dollars ,oa account of Board Bill for board furnished for two week?, on ling September 12,1903, which ls due and which you have failed to pay, and for which sum the ?aid Mrs. Nannie M. .Toombes ask judgaiont against the said J. H. Acker. ? . These are, therefore*, to require you, Unsaid Defendant, to appear before mo. lu my office, at Anderson, C. IL, 8. C., on the 2ith day of October A.D. 1003, at 10o'clock a. m., to answer to th 1 said Complaint, or judgment will bo giren azalmt you by default. The Sheriff ls hereby appointed Special Consta ble to servo this process. Given under my hand and seal at Anderson C. H- 8. C., the 18th day of 8epi*tuber A. D. ltfB. B. F. WILSON, (suai. ] Magistrats. Sept. 10,1903_18_ . SUMMONS, STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. t County of Anderson, Magistrate's Court. . J. C. C. Featherstone, Plaintiff, against J. Matt t Cooley, Defendant.-Summons.! By B. F. WILSON, Magistrate in and for the said H County and the said 8tate. 1 To J. MATT COOLEY. Defendant: b Complaint having been made unto me by J C f C. Featherstone that you, (complaint ) , These are, therefore, to require you, the said Defendant, to appear before mo in my otfioeat ( Anderson,8. C., on the 80th day of November, ? 1908, at. 10 o'clock a. m., to answer to the said ' complaint, or judgment will bo giren .against you [? upon proof of claim. Given under my hand and seal at Anderion,8 ' C., the 10th day of October A. D. 1903. B.F.WILSON, [L.8.] Magistrate. To the Defendant. J. MATT COOLEY: I Take notice that the complaint in this action, j together with the summons of which the above is . a copy, was flied in the office of B. F. Wilson, ? Magistrate, at Anderson, in the County;of Ander- { son, in the Stat? of South Carolina, on the 10th dty of October, 1903. 1 G. B. GREENE, Plaintiff's Attorney. Oct ll, 19?_17_6t BO .'EAR?' EXPERIENCE PATENTS "maa mxsxer* IRADK raaiwau ^?fiPOT^F ro-tmoiHt 2 ' -COPYRiaMTS &<2l Anyone Beadles a sk dcb end desertpUoa rna* Quickly ascertain oar opinion free whether ssl invent/?n U probably paasjltablc Communie? tiona strtetlr eo?ndeaUsJ. Haw?toopk ox. ??fs?s tent free. Oldest agenty.for_seeartngj>?*eaU. Patents taten th"*"nah Nunn A> Co. rocolv? special not*?, without cb ame, in tho ** Scientific African. A handsomely llhistratod weekly. Larweet ctr? ca lat lon of f.ny ne ion title lou rn ni. Terras, S3 a year: four months, $L Bold by oil nosredoalera.