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MOCHA COFFEE. Moat of lt Taken by the Sheiks and Governors of Arabia. "I don't believe there is a pound of genuine Mocha coffee on this con tinent/' a coffee merchant informs me, or that 200 people in this .country have ever tasted ic unless they have at some time visited Ant hia and drunk it at the table of some sheik or governor. "The true Mocha ia tho finest cof fee grown. It has a delicious flavor that makes it as superior to the very "best of other brands as silk is supe rior to cotton, but the crop is ex tremely limited and hardly ever more than satisfies purely local de mands. Some Arabian coffee may find its way to this country. It may even be called Mocha, but it is not the real article, I am sure, and none of U8 have ever had it here, though we do get the best of other brands that are grown in Ceylon and Java, and that means some mighty fine coffee. It is not Mocha, however, for the whole of the true Mocha crop each year wouldn't supply tho coffee demands of one ward in St. Louis alone for a period of six months. The best and plumpest berries of the Mocha growth, those ?with the most exquisite flavor, are eagerly taken by the governors and sheiks in the vioinity, and they have to get their orders in in advance, so that they may be sure of their an nual supply. Tho second grade ber ries go to the wealthier citizens, not .of the governing class, and the third, or poorest, grade berries, ?which are not much superior to the best J ava coffee, are sold to the peo ple, and the demand invariably ex ceeds the supply tenfold. "Sometimes a few pounds of this cheapest grade of Mocha find their way to Constantinople, but it is very, very seldom, and I don't be lieve an ounce of it has ever got any farther west than that. We get the best coffee grown, apart from the Mocha, but the local conditions :which prevail where that coffee is raised prevent us from obtaining .any, and I hardly think the real thing will ever be found in our mar kets."-New Orleans Times-Demo crat. _ The Maid and the Bell. The maid had just come over from Ireland, and a Brooklyn wom an engaged her. A bell hung in the .girl's room, and the morning after her- arrival her mistress rang this Dell to get her up. But the maid did not get up, though the bell rang and rang. F* nally, therefore, the mistress arose herself, and, slipping on a dressing gown, she hastened to the new serv ant's room. There, wide awake, the maid lay, laughing at the top of her lungs. "What on earth are you laughing at, Nora ?" said the mistress. "Faith, mum," Nora answered, 'Tm laughin' at that bell. As shure as I live I haven't touched it, an'-j just see-it's wagglin' yet."-New lYork Tribune. Opinions Change. [ (First Baby.) ' Fond Young Mother (to proud young father) - Albert, dear, did you he$r the sveet, precious darling cry his little eyes out last night ? Proud Young Father-I thought I heard our angel twitter., (Second Baby.) She-Albert, you unfeeling wretch ! To hear that child screech ing all night and never offer to take lum I He-Let the little demon howl! London Chronicle. Too Industrious. Employer-I have . noticed, Mr. ?Timson, that you, of all the clerks, seem to put your whole life and soul into your work; that no detail is too small to escape, your critical at tention, no hours too long to cause you to repine. Clerk (joyfully)-Yea, sir. Employer-And so, Mr. Timson, I am forced to discharge yon at once. It is such chaps as you that go out and start rival establish ments after they have got the whole thing down pat. Senatorial Thoroughness. ' * "What are the duties of the Unit ed States senate?" inquired the vis itor from abroad. "You see," said the man who now admits that he can't tell you all about everything, "there is invari ably a great deaf to be sa?d on both sides of any question." "Yes." "Well, it is the business of the senate to see that it is all said." ?Washington Star. '. He Couldn't Understand. ' An eccentric minister in Virginia wes noted for quaint sayings. Ho was the owner ox a fine yoke of oxen and, losing one of them-a loss he could ill afford-was well nigh in consolable. His good wife, endeav oring to comfort him, quoted, "Tho Lord giveth, end tho Lord taketh .way.** ^^BHisbttb,* X know, but I can't s?9 what the Lord want ed with an odd steer." . ...Wi ? -! Kind Yea tfavs Always Boult Signature o? - An officeholder needs little pnsh if he has a putt. -r Whiskey drowns a litl?o trouble and floats a lot more. CHINESE EMBROIDERY. Resplendent With Pearls, Co. a Beads and Gold Thread. "P'utz" is the name given to a richly embroidered square of silk worn as a badge on the breast and back of a dark colored pelisse by civ il and military officials of China, aa well as by their wives. Every square embroidered "p'uti," being; indica tive of rank, belongs to either the civil or military order, the two great social categories of the Chinese em pire. In the former, naming them in proper order, a stork, gold pheas ant, wild goose, crane, silver pheas ant, egret, partridge, quail and blue jay are exclusively depicted, mostly standing upon a rock in the midst of waves and looking toward the sun. Each of these symbols is con fired to one of the nine grades of the upper ten. In the second divi si?n quadrupeds alone are allowed. They include in proper rotation tho ch'ilin, or unicorn ; lion, leopard, ti ger, bear, and tiger cat. Thc color ing is also specified by the strict sumptuary laws of the country. A beautiful specimen of this em broidery recently on view in Lon don was about thc size of a large meat plate and was resplendent with ?caris, coral beads and gold thread, t disployed a stork, wrought with seed pearls of a good size and flying toward a fiery wafer in coral, stand ing for the sun. Hocks, clouds or waves, deftly simulated by a few strenks of gold thread and cunning stitches in floss silk, occupied the background, while on the brimlike border, between a double line of gold passing, couched with red silk, were arranged in a circle pearl bats, tortoises and other symbols of lon gevity, brightened up with coral eyes, riveted on the sun. No fewer than 40,000 bored pearls were used in this rare sample, intended for a mandarin's robe. Clouds and running water con stantly appear on the embroidered robes of the grandees of the far east. Tho way these mysterious waves are mide to run straight or across helps to tell approximately the date o? the work. Apparent trifles are of the highest importance. The director general of the Yellow river, for instance, could not don at random a robe bearing an out burst of water escaping from a breach above the level of the sur rounding country. It would be con sidered by the superstitious a bad omen or a warning against a want of power in the officer to control the most ungovernable river of the em pire. He is, therefore, bound to dis play on his garments calm, limpid water, made to glide horizontally. Queer Blunders. Years ago the British parliament passed a bill for the rebuilding of a jail at Chelmsford. It was decreed that the prisoners should be con fined to the old jail while the new bne was building. The . new one, however, was to be constructed from the materials of the old one. In the reign of King "William IV. a statute was passed fixing the punish ment at fourteen years' transporta tion for a particular offense. It added, "Upon conviction one-half thereof shall go to the king and one-half to the informer." Just Why the king should be transported for half the term the person who drew the act found it impossible to explain, since he had merely made a ludicrous blunder. Saw the Moon Go Round. , "There is a little boy at my place/' said the thin young man, shaking the pepper over his eggs, "a five-year-old that we call Johnny. Johnny had been told that the moon goes around the earth, and the oth er night he was out making astro nomical observations. Pretty soon the little fellow came running in and Baid : "'Oh, mamma, I saw the moon going round the world !' "IMd you, dear?' " *Yes. I saw it run up past two clouds.' " 'And which way was it going?' "It was going toward the rail road station/ " An Irreducible Fracture. "Dr. Splintem, tho surgeon," de clared the man with the red shingles bn his house, "is the most expert man in his profession in the city." "indeed ?" politely asked the man with the iron dog on his lawn. "Yes, sir. Why, there isn't any kind of a fracture that he can't set," and set perfectly." "Is tnat so?" murmured the man with the iron dog on his lawn. "Now, I wonder if ne would be any Sood at setting a broken egg." udge. . _ Nothing U nusual. . Jolkley-That's nothing: I knew a young fellow who went, to sleep one night and the next morning awoke a whit? haired paralytic. Polkley-Oh, come now? I My! J??kley-Fact. Tba young fel low was a bell boy in * hotel, and the whits Imirod paralytic was a ?ycs^t.-~Fhihvdelphia P*SM. fcwwtl. _^TtwR^^HiwfifoBgrfet - When a man practices hamiHty Iii? may humiliate you if you don't look ont. - Ma? Hage ie a : failure only * when the wedding altar isn't used as mo altar for mutual sacrifices. . - Every girl ort earth imagines ehe ? would make an ideal wife. STILL AS A MOUSE. An Anirr?il Adage Not Founded on tho ; t Facts In the Case. Of all restless creatures on the face of the earth, the mouse can, when it will, be the liveliest. But do wo not persist, we grown people, in gravely asking of a child that it shall be "as still as a mouse?" "Don't be as active or as noisy as a mouse" is what wo should say to those young folk who willfully dis turb our peace. In all honor to the time worn adage, a sleeping mouse only may be as still as other sleeping animals. We do nor. dispute it. But the mouse awake! The mouse in tho wall at work, tooth and nail, to make a passageway into a human being's bedroom at dead of night! The mouse trying in vain to escapo from the waste paper basket into which it is invariably attracted by curiosity, from which it can never find the way in silent haste! Are even the tamed mice still-unless sleeping? Was the mouse ever known to move slowly in crossing a floor? Did it ever gnaw in silence or tread softly over the papers and other rustling materials on which it delights to disport itself? Stillness means more than vocal quiet. Yet the mouse, poor crea ture, can squeak when frightened or when hurt, and mice have been known to sing, as it is called. The adage, as we very well know, does not refer to the still, small voice of the mouse at all. It refers to the "still" ways which, we have conclu sively proved, are not still. The quickness of the mouse helps it to escape its natural enemy, the cat. Nature ?9 good to every creature. She has, of course, given the mouse a fair chance for life. The cat suc ceeds in catching its prey only by the exercise of the greatest watch fulness and by wonderful quickness, so cat and mouse are fairly matched. When does the mouse trot along at a slow rate of speed? Never. Is it willing, if awake, to stay still for any length of time in a given place? Never. Let us suppose that in a thoughtless moment the poet, Mr. Clement C. Moore, had happened to write : 'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house Every creature In stirring was still as a mouse. The funny part of it is that we might even then have believed that he intended to show us a quiet house. How is it that an adage con tinues to mean to one's ear what the thinking brain has years ago shown to be untrue in fact?-Our Animal Friend. Timing an Egg. Cooks are often accused of want of method, but the Aunt Dinah in Howard Paul's egg story is not open to any such reproach. Invariably when she put the eggs in the sauce pan she began singing "Rock of Ages" and sang through two verses. "Aunt Dinah," asked Mr. Paul, "are there not three verses in that hymn ?" "Dar is, massa, but I sings only two when I wants 'em soft and three when I wants 'em hard." His other egg story is good too. He was traveling on a Pennsylvania railway, and when his breakfast was brought the eggs were underdone. "What time are we making on this train ?" he asked the waiter. "A mile a min ute, sir." "Then boil the eggs an other mile, and they'll be quite right."--London Truth. Fish and Wator. Fish are nearly the same weight as the water in which they live, so that they can move in it with great ease. The majority of them also have an air bladder inside of tho body, which enables them to go up or down in the water at will. When a fish desires to go down deep it can press the air out of this bladder by means of certain muscles and thus increase the weight of its body, and when it wishes to rise again it takes off tue pressure, the bladder fills with air again, and its body becomes light enough to rise. Sho Know His Skill. He had been out for a day's fish ing, and as he proudly displayed the contents of his basket to his wife she exclaimed : "Oh, John, aren't they beauties? But I've been so anxious for the last hour, dear!" "Foolish little one I" said John ea* ressingly. "Why, what could have happened to me?" "Oh, I didn't worry about you, love, but it grew so late I was afraid before you got back to town tho fish markets would all be closed." i Just What He Wanted. Sarcastic Father - Julia, that ^youag man Smily has been hero 'three nights in succession, and it has been nearly midnight when he left. Hadn't you better invite him to bring his trunk and make his home with ns? Innocent Daughter-*Oh, papa, may I? It ia just what he wanted, but he -was too bashful to ask yon. Hell be delighted when I tell him tina evening. - it's absolute proof to a woman that she it a good mother to her chil dren wheo their uncle and aunts tell her she is spoiling them. _ ; -It makes a woman quiver with Joy to think that if she were a duoh 088 aha could be haughty even to the cook. . -; Girls are now parting their hair on ono side so as not to bo mistaken for those misfit men who part theirs in the middle. RUSSIAN THEATERS. Where People Can See Plays For a Sma:i Price. It waa between acts at the thea ter. The man just a row ahead did not think much of the chow, and he was determined that every one with in earshot should know his ideas on the subject. "That fellow ought to go to one of tho people's theaters in Russia," remarked a man to tho friend with him. "There is where one gets real dramatic art in the rough, and it is pretty rough at that. I visited sev eral of them when I was over there a few years ago. The country towns in Russia abound with them, and several of the big cities havo them. But one has to got out into one of the little towns to get the real worth of his money. In such a place the theater is generally a large wooden building with a thatched roof and little squares of tin nailed around the door by way of ornamentation. Inside the men sit on the right and the women on the left, and the way the babies yell is a caution. The plays arc mostly of the blood and 1 thunder ?ort, beginning like a day in June and ending like a political caucus. The actresses quarrel over 'turns/ and the honors are carried off by some young man with long hair and an overfed ambition. Aft er the agony is over a fat man with a flushed face tells the audience how low down a man must bo who will drink whisky. Then they go home. "Oh, no, they aro not all like that. Some of the buildings are of stone and are very nice, and the perform ances are of a much higher stand ard. The admission charges are al most incredibly low-about one fourth of a penny in our money. Think of it! "Probably the finest of these pco flo's theaters is in St. Petersburg, t is called the People's Palace of Nicholas II. and is a fine building. Englishmen visiting St. Petersburg generally visit the theater. "I have no doubt that these thea ters arc the means of accomplishing much good in Russia by keeping tho poor people interested and away from worse resorts. The example might perhaps be followed with ben eficial results in other countries. "But there goes the curtain." New York Tribune. - If adversity does not crush a man prosperity will not spoil him. - Two can play at the game of love, but three make it hard work. - One woman dislikes calling on an other almost as much as the other dislikes for her to do it. - A man usually takes his pen in hand, but the umbrella he takes in hand usually belongs to another. - If you see a lot of women coming out of church crying it indicates that a wedding has just been pulled off. ? - Any P'an who can hold a bab for an hour without saying naughty words is in the same class with Job - Usually after marrying an un earthly angel a man kicks himself be cause he didn't marry a cook. - It's natural for a girl lo waut to have beaux as for a boy to want to read dime novels. - What a woman likes about fre quent fashions is that she has to get new clotho ; every time. - Give a woman fine feathers to wear in thia world and she'll trust to luok for wings to wear in the next. - i- ? **i Cures Eczema, Itching Humors, Pim ples, and Carbuncles.-Costs Noth ing to Try. B. B. B. (3otaoio Blood Balm) is a certain and sure oure for eczema, itoh iog skin humors, scabs, scales, watery blisters, pimples, sobing bones or joints, boils, carbuncles, pricking pain in thc skin, old eating sores, ulcers, etc Botanic Blood Balm cures tho worst and most deep-seated cases by enriching, purifying and vitalizing thc blood, thereby rjiving a healthy blood supply to the skiu. Heals every sore an i gives tho rich glow of health to the skin. Builds up tho broken down body and makes thc blood red and nourishing. Especially advised for ohronio, old oases that doctors, patent medicines and hot springs fail to cure. Druggists, $1, with complete directions for home euro. To provo B. B. B. cures, sam ?le sent free and prepaid by writing Hood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Dc Bcribo trouble, and free medical ad vice neut in sealed letter. For sale by F]vans Pharmacy. - THE - Farmers LOSE & Trust Go., ANDERSON, S. C., IS nu thorned by its Charier to act as Executor, Administrator, Guardian or Tiustee. It is also authorized to lend mouey at lowest rates ou satisfactory paper. Interest paid on deposits. - THE - Has plenty of money to lend the Farmers to help them make their crops cheaply. R. 8. HILL, President. J. R, VANDIVER, Cashier. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ANDERSON. Ex Parte Sam'l. R. Tims In Re M. P. T ribble, C. C. P., Successor, Plaintiff, against Mary J. Tim?, in her own right aud an Administratrix, et al., Defend ants.-Foreclosure of Statutory Mort gage. ALL claimants for funds in mv hands arising from the saleof the Real Estate of Isaac Tims, deceased, are hereby notified to establish the same before me as pre scribed by order of the Court, dated March ll, 1904, or they will be ba.-red of tbe right to the same. JOHN C. WATKIN8, Clerk of Court Anderson Co., S. C. March 23, 1904 10 Um Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Executors of the Es tate of H. B. A. Robinson, dee'd, hereby (rive notice that they will on Monday, 23rd day of May, 1904, apply to the Judge of Probate for Andereon County for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from their office an Executors. G. It. ROBINSON, J. O. ROBINSON. J. W. ROBINSON, Executors. April 20, 1904_44_5? Superior It is sold everywhere!; lessoN co. " SAVANNAH GA. A FEW NEEDFULS FOR YOUR DAILY MEALS. TRY THE3E. They may be new on you, but all are good. X-CEL~0-FLAKES-They are ready to eat and are better than Force. Ten cents a package. MOl&BCH SWEET CORK-The sweetest, juicy Corn, guaranteed to please. Fifteen cents, or two for twenty-five cents. MEADOW DEW TOMATOES-These are extra quality, very '.bes pot up. A trial of these will certainly please you. Ten cents the can. If my Goods please you tell your friends for me, if not please tell me of your complaints. " C. FRANK BOLT. Cash Grocer. . Phono 279.______9 MOVED I , WE have moved our Shop and office below Peoples' Bank, inT'front of Mr. J. J. Fretwell'a Stables. We respectfully ask all our friends that need any Roofing done, or any kind of Repair work, Engine Stacks, Evaporators, or any kind of Tin or Gravel Roofing to call on us. aa we f*re prepared to do it promptly and in best manner. Soliciting von/ patronage, we are, Respectf?Hy, * B?RRISS & DIVVER. j N? I ARLY ^vEK" "?AK Mt???l NLEDS A j J PORTABLE ENGINS j ^^^^^^^^^ '.H flip ont? to u*?*. "Tho Machinery People" will ix? dad to ??inti i'Atnlojrut* and name price oil n j > i 111. ? : i .?..ri. >rV. H. ClbDHS (EL CO.. COLUMBIA. S. C. Knrinett, Holler*. Saw Mille, Cotton Oln-I I niii.i; M ai'lil fiery, Kio. 1 he Gibbes Portable S limul* Machine 1 Notice ot Final Settlement. The undersigned, Administrator ot tbe Katata of P. F. Farmer, deceased, here by gives notice that he will on Friday, Juno, loth, 1?HH, apply to the Judge of Probate of Anderdon County, 8. C., for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from his office as Admin istrator. E. B. FARMER, A din'r. May ll j 1001_ 47 . 5 THE STATE OF SCUTH CAROLINA, County of Anderson. COURT OP (OMMON PLEAS. John W.Shearer, PlalotltT, azain.t iohz F. Mc Lure, Grace McLura. Kessle McLure, Wallace Mcl.ure, Johnnie McLure and George McLure," the l*st Are hoi ti? Infanu UMIAT the ?ge of four teen year?, and Mn 8. H. Cunningham, Iiefond ants.-Summons tor Relief-Complaint not Herr ed. To tho Defendants John P. MeLu-e, Graoe Mc Lure, Heinle McLure, Wallace McLure. Johnnie McLure. George McLure am! Mrs. H. II. Cun ningham : YOU aro hereby summoned and required to an swer tho Complaint In this action, a copy of which is this day flied with the Clerk of the Court above nate od. t>nd to *ervo a copy of your answer to tho said Complaint on the subscriber at hts ofllco, Anderson c. H , 8. C., within twenty days aflor the Berrico thereof, exclusive of the day of service ; and if you fall to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plalnttflf in thia action will apply to the Court for the relief de manded in thu Complaint. April 16th, 1904. B F. MARTIN, Plaintiff's Attorneys. To Grace McLure, Bessie McLure, Wallace Mc Lure, Johnnie McLure and < ieorgo McLure, tho infants aboted named : Take notice, that you are required to appear and apply for a Guardian Ad LMeiu lo tho above eu t tied case lu tbe time required by law, nul If you fall to do so th J Plaintiff will apply for the Guar dian Ad Litern for you in this case. B. P. MARTIN. Plaintiff's Attorney. May ll, 1904_?7 _ ? THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY or ANDERSON. COURT UP COMMON PI.EAS. William C. Branyon, individually, and as Admin istrator cum testamento of Thoa. M. Branyon, deco sed, Plaintiff, against Lucinda Smith, Mar tha Ollre Saul, Thoa. Oscar Saul. Saauol La fay it te Saul lfenry Clifton Haul, Moffatt Pruitt mid William Sherwood Branyon. minora under the age of Vi years, and Reeu Pruitt. Joo R. Kay, W. G. Smith, Leila K. Smith, Tara K. Smith, R.O. Branyon, J.L. Branyon, Monroe Pruitt, Mrs. Benian Banister, Perry Pruitt, Mrs. Llllio Callabam. Mrs. Lula Lowe. Mrs. Talula Da^by, Ellas Pruitt, Henry Haul, Mrs. J. D. McCleskoy, Mrs. Kl la Terrell. Mrs. Rosaline Robinson, W M. Doneboo, Mrs. Ade Westbrook, J. W. Donohoe, Mrs Carrie Warreu and Mrs. Maggie Young, Defendants.-Summons for Relief. Complaint not Sorved. To the Defendants nNovo named : YOU aro hereby summoned and required to an swer tho Complaint in this action, which is filed In the office of the Clerk ol the Court of Om - mon Pleas for Anderson County, H. C., at Ander son Court House, S. C.. and to servo a copy of your answer on the subscribers at their office in Peo ples Bank Building, at Anderson, South Carolina, within twenty diiys after the service of this Sum mons on you, exclusive of the day of sorvico. If you fall to answer the Complaint within that time the Plaluliff will apply to the Court for tho relief demanded in the Complaint. Anderson, H. C., May 0, A. 1). 1DX. BONHAM A WATKINS, Plaintiffs' Attorneys, [SEAL] JNO. C. WATKIHS.C C. C. P. To the absent D?nudants, W.O. Hui Uh, Jno. R. Kuy, I.eU.i K" Sail h., Ta va K. Smith, Lucinda smith. Henry Saul, Martha Olivo Haul, Thoa. Oscar Saul, bamuel La/ayotto Haul, Henry Clif ton Saul, Mrs. J. D. McCleskoy, Mrs. Ella Ter rell, Mrs. Rosaline Robinson, Rev W. M. Dono hoe, Mrs. Alla Westbrook, J. W. Donehoo, M.a. Carrie Warren and Mrs Maggie Young - You will please take notice tnat tho Sum tr ons and Complaint in the above sia*ed action were filed In the ollie i of the Clerk of the Court of Com mon Pleas for Anderson County, 8. C., at Ander son Court House, H. C. on May 9th, 190i, and that the object of this action is to procuro a count mo tion ni the Will of the late Thoa. M Branyon. de ceased, and to remove tho cloud from the title of the Real Estate of said deceased, ihe fee simple title, of which aatd Real E.tato the Plaintiff al leges lo be In himself. Anderson, H. C., May 9, 19)4. BONHAM A WATKINS, Plaintl?Fa Attorneys. [SEAL.] JOHN C. WATKINS,C.O.C.P. To the minor Defendants, Lucinda Smith, Martha Olive Saul, Thos Oscar Haul, Samuel Lafayette Haul, Henry Clifton Saul, Rood Pruitt, Moffitt Pruitt and William Sherwood Branyon : You will please take notion that unless you ap ply to the Court within 20 days after the service of ihe foregoing buo n ons upon you. exclusive of the day of such service, for the appolntu ent of a Ouardlan ad lltem, or buardlanB ad Utera, to rep resent you in the above stated action, the Plain tiff will at such timo apply to the Court for tho ap pointment of such Guardian orGuardlansfor you. May ?th, A. D. 1904 BONHAM A WATKINS, Plaintiff's Attorneys. [SEAL] .TKO C. WATKINS, C ?\ C P. May ll, 1904 _ 47_6 SKIN TORTURES Thousands of wretch ed people are miserable--driven almost mad by the terrible Itching and burning sensation of Eczema and other skin dis eases; many Imagine they are suffering from bad blood, when as a matter of fact the blood has nothing to do with lt. These awful tortures are caused by little germs that attack the skin externally, which can be rooted out In a hurry, leaving the skin clear, soft and healthy. Such misery now cleared away as surely as the sun shines above. Not merely attempted, not a mat ter of Improvement merely, not a temporary relief-but a clearing of it all away abso lutely and permanently. THE D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION a specific formula? put up In sealed bottles with authen tic label, has proven to be the only certain cure for these diseases. Its record of eurea ls astonishing/amazing, al most miraculous, lt isa liquid, used externally, non-greasy* TRY IT OH OUR GUARANTEE. i li FARMERS ?Our money winning book?, written by men who know, tell you ab about They are needed by every man who owns a field and a plow, and who desires to get the most out of them. They are/V//. Send postal cara GEKJI AN KALI WOUKS Hew York-88 Siwa Street, ^ Atlanta, ?e.-*?H Bo. Broad Bt? - THE - BANK OF ANDERSON. J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice President. B. F. MAULDIN. Cashier. THE largest, Btrongost Bank in the County. Interest Paid on Deposits By special agreement. With unsurpassed facilities and resoor* ces we are at aU times prepared to aa} oommodate our customers. Jan 10,1900 20 ss' Bat of ANDERSON, S. C. We respectfully solicit a shara of your business. G. H. GEISER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ANDERSON, S. C. Millee Over Post Ofllee. ?'?- Money to Lend on Real Estate. April 13, 11)01 43 ly ' J. L. SHERARD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ANDERSON, S. 0. Office over Post Office Building J. W. Quattlebanm. | Ernest F. Cochran. Quattlebaum & Cochran, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ANDERSON.8. ?. Praotiae in all Court-, State and Fcde raL Money to Lend on An donn n County Real Estate Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and Madder right,' Notice to Teachers. An examination for Teachers' Certifi cates will he held at Anderdon on Fri day, May 20th, 1004. All apolioants are requested to be present at 0 o'olook, pro? vided witb the necessary stationerv, &o. R. E. NICHOLSON, Co. Supt. Ed. May 4 1904 40 3 O YOU SPOT? It ts a sign that you need It feeds the bair, cleanses the scalp and maka? the hair (trow. Makes the hair soft, light and flu fly. Your druin; 1st has lt or can get it for you. SIEAL-8TREIT CO., 78-81 Cortland! 8t.,HowYorfe Drug Sales Co.. Chicago. General Sales AgOoflS* For sale locally hy EVANS PHARMACY. Foley's Honey and TOf cures colds, prevents pneumonia? General Repair Shop? ALL kinds of Blacksmithing, Wood Work, Painting, Trimming. Rubber rims and Rubber Horse Shoeing. All lone at short notioe by first-class work men. We don't claim to be the only 8rst>ol&us workmen in town, but aa good is any in the South. Our work shows For Itself. Work and Prices guaranteed. Call and see our work and get pilcas. Bring your Baggies and have them re S?aired and made as nice and good as nsw br Spring and Summer drives. Yours for business, J. P. TODD. P. S.-Horse Shoeing a Specialty. March ll, 1903_88_ Foley's Honey and TOT /orch!ldrent??te,8ure. No opiata* 80 VlAUf? EXPERIENCE! ATENTS Tuan? MARKO! Dassen COPYRIGHTS Ac. Aaron* ?e?aln* ? rte?** and ?wrlptUm ?xi FoM?trtctjr ?or.r d eift^X^IlMJ?Tbookcm P??L?u? ?nt fr??. OMfWt M?iey for ?eeortntf p?U*iiUu Pat?uw taken ?Wah Mun ACo. recefv? ?pretal noti?*. wit hon?, ch&w, tn tho Scientific ?rican. I nandeomaly ninttr&ted weekly. Ijinrcst cir niatlon of any nelenUflo Journal. Terme, |3 ? our: bur mouthe, IL. Sold byAli newed euler?. HUNN4C0.?'-?""?IsvM Branch Offloo. 626 V BU Vaahlngtou, U.A.