The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, March 01, 1905, Page 6, Image 6
THE WORK
Dorothy Dix in ISTev
The other day a w< rking ^ir 1 asked |
me why 1 did not talk inure through
this column to working girl?, aud I
answered her truly enough that it was
because I had .^o much to say to them
I should never know when to leave oil
if 1 once began. Tor in all the world
there is nothing else closer to my
heart than tho brave little recruits in
the great army of bread-winners, and
I never watch them on their way to
their cilice or .-tor'' without feeling
like taking oli my hat and saluting,
for I know that courage and valoi and
honor are marching by.
I think that the lir.st thing I always j
want to say to working girls is a word
of cheer. Don't think it an unparal
leled misfortune that you bave to j
work while other girls of your age arc
going to dances and parlies. Of
course, if we could, all of us would
keep girls safe and warm aud shelter
ed in the home nest, and we would
lavish upon them all the luxuries and
gayeties girls love and crave. This
would be kind and it might be well
if there was some way in which we
could guarantee the future for them
and be suro they never have anything
to do but
"Sit on a silk cushion and sew up n
seam,
And feed upon strawberries, sugar and
cream."
Unfortunately this is impossible.
American life is full of hazards, and
the petted belle of today may be
facing starvation tomorrow. All of
us have known cases in which a man
reported to be a millionaire has sud
denly lost his fortune, or dying, has
left his family absolutely penniless,
and thrown them destitute upon the
world. Under heaven there id noth
ing else so pitiful and so helpless as
these women who are trained to noth
ing but extravagance and self-indul
gence, and who are ignorant of every
profitable thing on earth, but who
must work or starve.
Believe me, little sister, when I
tell you that tho girl who has solved
the bread and butter problem for her
self and who has a trade or profession
that makes her independent, has not
the worst of it in life. She has aoap
ital in her own clever brains and hands
that absconding cashiers and failing
husbands and fathers cannot rob her
of, and she will never be broken on
the wheel of fate as many a poor but
terfly of fashion is. There is alBO a
joy that passes understanding in the
money you have made yourself, that*
you don't have to wheedle, nor beg,
nor cajole, nor weep any man into
giving you, and that you can spend
absolutely as you please. The woman
who has never known the delights of
an independent pooketbook has miss
ed half the pleasures- in life, and
that is something many a rioh woman
never experiences. Sho is a beggar
inpMisded Soil
Impoverished soil, like impov
erished blood, needs a proper
fertilizer. A chemist by analyz
ing the, soil can tell you what
fertilizer to use for different
products.
If your blood is impoverished
your doctor will tell you what
you need to fertilize it and give
it the rich, red corpuscles that
are lacking in it. It may be you
need n tonic, but more likely you
need n concentrated fat food,
and fat is the element lacking
in your system.
There is no fat food that is
so easily digested and assimi
lated as I
Scott's Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil
It will nourish and strengthen
the body when milk and cream
fail to do it. Scott's Emulsion
is always the same; always
-palatable and always beneficial
where tho body is wasting from
any cause, either in children
m adults.
We will uend you a sample tree.
Be sure that this pic
ture, m the form or a
label is on tho wrapper
; of e?ory*bottle o?Emul
fucm votl hnv.
8G0TT & BOWflE
. . CHEMISTS
409 Peansr., HewYom
. GOe. nnd *l,0O.
All Druggists.
;iNG GIRL.
/ Orleans Picayune.
from the ciadle to tho grave, and ask- ]
ing alms is a humiliation whether you
radie a tin cup on the street corner
< r ask fur checks across the break
fast table. Don't forget your pocket
book when you count up your hlo> Mngs.
It may bo light, but it is your own.
1 wouj'i uix'o you, as a mutter of
sensu and happiness, to adopt what
Stcpben.son ciljcd "that brave atli
tudt towards life.'' lie-cheerful. Ail
11.' world loves a bright face and u
genial smile. The silliest thing a wo
man ever does is to cultivate a martyr
pose. Suppose you do belong to an
aristocratic*old family, and never ex
pected to have to work. Nobody on
earth cares one rap about that or
wants to hear about your ancestors,
and the (juickcr you forget about them
yourself the better. It isn't sympa
thetic and it may not be right, but
everybody has a horror of people
who have tales of woo to tell. Don't
join their number. Keep a bright
face, and it will pay just in a buni
nens way. All of us turn to cheerful
people just as naturally as wo turn to
the sunshine, and we flee dull people
and complaining people like wo do the
plague.
Be feminine. I think the most
fatal mistake any woman ever makes
is when she tries to mako an imita
tion mao of herself. Imitations are
ucver any good, and the working wo
man who wears mannish clothes and
short hair and swaggers and tries to
talk like n man is the worst of the lot.
The very thing in woman's work that
ought to make it valuable, and that
will when women have sense enough
to quit trying to do things like men,
and do them like women, id its femi
nine rquality. The time will come
when woman's intuitions, her tact, at d
her adaptability will count in busi
ness life just as they do now in social,
and when she loses these by coarsen
ing herself because she thinks it man
nish, she is simply losscniug her com
mercial value.
I [would also call your attention,
little sister, to the fact that it is
along the eternally feminine lines
that., women make the greatest suc
cesses, r There is always going to bo a
demand for good housekeeping, for
well-kept^boarding houses andthotels,
and for good dress-making and milli
nery.^ I am not discouraging any girl
from studying iaw or medicine, or
anything clcc she wants, but I do say
that if she would put her same amount
of study, training and intelligence into
keeping a good boarding house or es
tablishing; a first-jolass dress-making
establishment, the rewards would he
ten times cgreater. The women in
every city'.who make money are the
ones who have followed thoue lines.
Bo polite. It pays. You haven't
any idea of the wild ' gratitude that
surges up in the breast of a mere cus
tomer when we find a shopgirl who
takes any interest in us and tries to
find us what wejwant. Of course, we
are aggravating. I realise that; but
you see we don't know what you have
in stock nor just what we want our
selvcB half the time. We are bound
to look about a bit, and it's heart
breaking to a timid woman to know
she is being considered a nuisance and
a bore. Don't be supercilious. Every
body oan't wear silk stockings and $30
petticoats and embroidered satin oor
sets, yetjwhen aswoman goes into a
store aud^asks.for one of theso arti
cles, the/clerk invariably takes down
something whose price is enough to
give one heart failure.
"I want something cheaper," tho
poor, C humble creature before the
counter murmurs, and tho wny the
haughty divinity behind tho counter
shoves tho cheaper article at the buy
er is the most ek quent i repression of
disgust and contempt that tho human
mind is capable of conceiving. Don't
do that. Wc would all be million
aires if we could, but we can't. Boar
with our misfortune.
Don't know too much. This is a
favorite fault of typewriters and
stenographers. Let your employer
know something, and let him manage
his business his own way. I knew a
olever and competent woman who lost
her good place because she persisted
in spelling "cinch" cinque. She said
that was the right way. because it was
derived from the French numeral, and
she broughfdown a lot ?^dictionaries
to provo it. L She carried.[the point,
but her employer got somebody who
would let him boss hiajown spelling. ,
Don't flirt:*with your enployer,
whether he is-reamed or single.'Don't
go out to*lunch with him. Business
is ono thing and society is another.
If he wants to pay you?aitcnlion let it
be in your own homo.fnot in the office
or store. If you are working for a
married man^don't let him tell you
*>bcut bia domestic infelicities and
hov he, made a mistake in marriage,
and bit wife, doesn't understand atd
sympathize with bim. You ar<* not |
hired to be a comforter. My dear
little bister, pull the man up short
who starts to tell about bis home trou
bles. It's very ca?y c*sy to listen.
It's very hard hard to refuse when he
your employer and your place de
pends on his favor, but don't do it.
From sympathy '. > love is the short
est step in the wot Id, and many a jiirl
has taken it before ehe knew it. The
married man who talks to another wo
man about his wife is a dastard. Have
nothing to do with him.
Finally, bclov'.-d, never forget that
then i- always a demand lor good
work. It is because women's work is j
so often bad that it is bo poorly paid.
M very working woman should remem
ber that when she does bad work that
she hurts not only herself but every
other woman. Noblesse oblige was
the motto of the old French aristo
crat. Let us) adopt tt t't our own
and make it meto that every work
ing woman is in honor bound to give
of her bust, and to so work and so
live that she will make the road easier
for every woman who shall come after
her.
?
The Negro to Redeem Africa.
Dr. James Fid ward Mason, secretary
of the Livingston College and Indus
trial School, a colored institution at
Salisbury, N. C, dilivered an address
yesterday at the 231 street branch of
the Y. M. C. A. on "Darkest Africa
and the Way out." He took an op
timistic view of the negro question.
The only remedies he proposed for the
present evils of tho race were the
Bible, the spelling book and the home.
Then all that is needed, he said, is
fair play.
After referring to the great progress
tho negro has made since the war and
to his general prosperity at present,
the speaker took up sonic of the plans
proposed by both colored and white
sounsellors.
"Some," hnid he, "propose segrega
tion. Hut how are you going to segre
gate? As y ou know, we have mulat
toes, quadroons, octoroons and down
South we lind some who are fifteen
sixteenths white. How would these
bo classified? Clearly such scheme is
impossible with any degree of attend
ant fairness.
"There are those who propose de
portation. The weakness of that plan
is that no one wants the ueproes de
ported to a poor and barren country.
And if they wcro sent to a rich, pros
perous country, somehow or other the
progressive and aggressive Anglo-Sax
on race, would s-oon get in there, gain
the upper hand, and there would be
now troubles. For the present, at
least, deportation is impracticable. Not
can I counsel absorption. Racial
characteristics had better be kept un
mixed, for sooner or later they will
out. The Celt to this day remains
tho Celt and the Saxon the Saxon.
"Tho Biblo, the home and the spell
ing book are the things I pin my faith
to. I maintain that the susceptibility
of tho negro !>o these influences is un
derrated. There are in the United
States 3,000,000 negro communicants
and negro ohuroh property amounts to
$40,000,000.
"A quarter century ago only 30,000
negroes oouldtaad and write; now
2,000,000 oan do so and 300,000 are at
tending 200 schools and colleges in
oharge of 2,700 toaohers. There are
900 negro doctors and over 1,000 law
yers. We have 500 papers edited by
negroes and 500. authors who have
published 1,400 books. This looks
like a good record for forty years.
"Tho negro is a worker. Down
South ho is tho most important factor
in the labor markot. lie owns land
aggregating as muoh as tho area of the
State of Massachusetts and represent
ing $25,000,000 of taxable property.
Patience will give roFults as satisfac
tory as oan be wished. And in time,
perhaps, tho negroes will succeed in
working -out their ultimate t mission,
which I deem to bejthe redemption of
! Africa."?Now, York. Sun.
Au immigration Association.
Charleston, Feb. 19,? Tho Southern
Colonial Immigration association will
opon it s -books of subscription to tho
capital stock on Tuesday and the or
ganization of tho oompany, which is
promoted by some of the leading cap
italists of Charleston, follow
soon after. The association has tot
its purpose the turning of the tide of
immigration from northern Europo and
of desirable settlers from northern and
western States'into South Carolina
and development of thia State. Op
tions .bave been secured on 70,000
asres of land in Aiken, Chesterfield
I and Ksrsbaw counties. It is
estimated th at'110,00? immigrants will
( be brought to South Carolina and tho
' company proposes to induce settlement
of these people in tho lower section
of the State as well.
E. Lindberg, an immigration agent,
is to be the general manager of the
corporation and arrangements hive
a'ready -been made for the routes of
transportation of the, immigrants,
The company is to be capitalized at
$100,000, each share to be of the par
value of $100 and not to be sold for
fffcf.' -
I no promoters count or, annual
dividends, of fruto MUu 25 pir cent.
Foolish to Worry.
- :
It's mighty ea^y to say, "don't I
worry," but you must agree that there
are ouly two things in the world that
cause worry; first, the things over
which wo have control; and, second,
the things,over which we have no con
trol.
If your worrying is of the first kind
you can fix matters up so there will
be no need of worrying; if it is of the
second kind you cannot fix matters up,
so there is no need to worry.
There never have been any circum
stances that were helped io the slight
est degree by worrying.
Nearly all the worrying in this
w -rid comes through anticipating trou
bles which never occur and crossing
bridges before you get to the streams.
We can remember when some impor
tant matters were to be settled, how
we planned and arranged our argu
ments, and how we figured out what
the other fellow would Hay, and yet,
when the time of the meeting came
and the question at hand was to be set
tle.!, some new phase of the situation
aroac and the matter was settled pleas
antly and in a manner we had not
previously thought possible.
When we worry we cannot see things
in their true colors; the world looks
blue; every one wo meet seems to
frown; the weather is not what it
should be; our food does not taste
right and there is an indescribable
something within us, a peculiar feel
ing which we cannot explain, which
makes us despond and gloomy, and
life does not seem what it is cracked
up to be.
On the other band, if we make up
our minds not to worry, tho sun shines
brighter, every one we meet seems to
have a smile, wc have gocd appetites
and the whole world looks differently.
One of the first things we learn in
natural philosophy is that no two ob
jects can occupy tho same Bpacc at
the same time, and if we fill our minda
and occupy our thoughts with pleasant
things, thero can bo no room for wor
ry, aud as an illustration of this wo say
to you that just while you are reading
this you are not worrying, showing
plainly that "is is possiblo to have mo
ments when you do not worry, and
your study should be to make ?s many
momenta free from worry as possible.
Her Diagnosis.
Uncle Harry was a bachelor and not
fond of babies. Even winsome two
t year-old Helen failed to win his heart.
Every one made too muoh fuss over
I the youngster, Uncle Harry declared,
? says the Indianapolis News.
One day Helen's mother was called
> downstairs, and with fear and trein
l bling asked Uncle Harry, who was
stretohed out on a sofa, if he would
[ keep his eyes on Helen. Unole Harry
I grunted "yes," but never stirred from
his position?in truth kept his eyes
- tight shut.
I By and by wee Helen tiptoed over
' to the sofa, and leaning over Unole
Harry, softly inquired:
"Feep-y?"
I "No," growled Unole Harry,
i "Tired?" ventured Helen.
"No," said her uncle.
I "Sick," further inquired Helen,
with real sympathy in her voice.
"No," still insisted Unole Harry,
"Dus' feel bum?" inquired the
> baby.
? Unole Hairy sprang to his feet, hug
ged the little oomforter, and kissing
her, declared she had oorreotly des
cribed his feelings when she said,
"Just feel bum." From this time on
ward Unole Harry was Helen's slave
and with the rest of the household
voted her a great success.
To Prevent Spread of Boll Weevil.
Washington, Feb. 10.?The offer of
a Texan to scatter the boll weevil
through the entire cotton section of
the South io order to. alloct the next
crop prompted the house committee on
agriculture to report favorably today
a bill of Mr. Lovering of Massachu
setts to prohibit the interstate trans
portation of io?ect pests and the use
of the United States mail for that pur
pose.
S?me time ago a prominent cotton
firm in New: York received a letter
from a man in Dallas offering to un
dertake the spread of tho pesl for tho
purpose of affecting the cotton crop in
sections outside the present boil weevil
area. This letter Was turned over to
the department of agrioulture and Sco
re tary Wilson put some of the depart
ment's d?tectives on the track of the
Writer. Ho wits sound "to be a man u?
aome prominence in Dallas. Tirera
was no way of reaching him for punish
ment so tho matter was presented - in
confidence to tbo members of the agri
cultural committee and Mr. Levering)
drew a bill providing ' for punishment
for any suoh attempt* as he had sug
gested. The* letter he wrote the New
York cotton brokers wan read to th?
committee today, bat H was withheld
from publication and the member*) of
tbo committee wove bound not to dis
close the name of tho writer. ^
? When a man has tbo presence of
mind to sq^/eeee hia wife s hand when
people: are lookrotr, she will forgive
him for a Whole lot of. timesh,e didn't
when nobody was around. .*\ ..
Things fur Girls to Learn.
The modern girl's education is in
complete unlee? ?he has learned?
Sew.
Cook.
Mend.
Be gentle.
Dress neat.
Keep a secret.
Avoid idleness.
Be self-reliant
Darn stocking:*.
Respect old age.
Make good bread.
Keep a house tidy.
Make home happy.
Bo above gossiping.
Control her temper.
Take care of the sick.
Take care of the baby.
Sweep dowu cobwebs.
Head the very best books.
Take plenty active exercise.
Be light-hearted, fleet-footed.
Keep clear of trashy literature.
When she has learned all this, if
she does not grov; wings to fly to a
better land, she will make some lucky
mau a most excellent wife.
The great difficulty in her case will
be Iba? no man on the face of this
earth is worthy of to good a woman.
- ?^ m ? -
The Jap Baby.
How do you suppose the babies take
an airing? In baby carriages, you
Bay? Of course not. The Japanese
never do anything the way we do it.
When the baby's about three days
old it goes out for its first glimpse of
the world strapped on somebody's
baok, and that's the way it goes every
day till it can go on its own feet.
Sometimes its mother or it.s nurse
takes it, but very often it rides on the
back of a brother or sister, who is, per
hapSj not more than four or five yeaiB
old. These little nurjes don't seem
to be troubled at all by their charges
as you would suppose; they play ball
and tag, and run races and fly kites,
in spite of the heavy loads on theii
backs. What is more remarkable, the
babies are perfectly happy, and hard's
ever cry, though wheu their young
nurses run with them tho poor babies'
faces bang back and forth against
their caretakers' shoulders till at
American baby would howl with pair
and race.?St. Nicholas.
She Had a Fellow.
^Tho story is told of a shook receive*
by a Duluth paslor after the Bervici
the other night in the Philadelphi
Telegraph.
He makes it a point to welcome an:
strangers coidially, and that evening
after the completion of the service, In
hurried down the aisle to station him
self at the door. A Swedish girl wai
one of the strangers in the oocgrega
tion. She is employed as a domestii
in one of the fashionable East Eut
homes, and the minister, nolioing tha
she was a stranger, stretched out hi;
hand.
He welcomed her to the church ant
expressed the hope that she would b<
a regular attendant. Finally he sait
that if she would be at hcs.*; % ?tp
evening during .the week, he . woult
call. ' . ',
"T'ank you," she murmured, bash
fully, "but I have a fella."
Three of the members of the con
! gregation beard the conversation. .
? A woman calls it having a gooc
time when she is haying a bad timo t<
make Somebody, she loves happy.
?The reason a'girl.'is* so cool al
her wedding may be because she wai
so excited when she caught him.
Notice of Trustees' Sale.
~ - ' *
By virtue of the power conferred ot
na In a detd of trust, executed by Wil
Ham Green and Lucy Noble, dated Jan
81,1005, we will eoll at publin outcry u
the hiebest bidder In front of tho Ooun
House, at Audtrson, B. C., between. tb(
usual hour* of pale, ou ?aloiday in Marc!
next?
A certain lot of land contain In ft about
one half of an acte, situate within,th<
corporate limita ot the Town of Pendle
ton, and bounded by Church street
Oreonvllle street, Bma Webb, Jak<
Towns, T. D. Williams and Mrs. Nanci<
Crayton, it being the lot forrrerly be
longing to liiezie Green.
Terms of Sele?Coab, Purchaser - t<
pay extra for papers. '
H. H. WATKIN3,
B. F. MARTIN,
Truateea.'
PebSjlOOS : 14 4
\ Notice of Election. '
Notice is hereby given to the ouelliW
electors of Zlop School ? District, No. 53
that an election will be held at Zlor
EtUooi K6?^ .?,? 'Ssiardwi' Meww^l
1906, on tba question of levy lnx a epecls
school tax oi 3 mills on all the taxnbl?
proper of saiddiatrict. "
HARRISON MOOR%Sf
aajaBHBMBWwiBIrWr^ > Trustes?. ' ":
^>b 18,1905 . ' ftS ^"::'-''?-. :
Notice to Administrators,
Ezeeutore, Guardians
And Trustees,
ALli Administrators, Executors. Gnar
(Jl?ir.o awJ T r not am am hp.rath v Unti flm? tr
make their annual Returns to this 6mc?
during the months of January ?n? Foa
? ' ' , ; Judfroof Probate.
^ _ : . ~'
HONEY, <fcc.
Bast possible nfio?>aW In Gfaih or
Groceries. .y- '^ :-<>:?
:3J North Main Si.
Altruism.
I
Alfred H. Love, of Philadelphia,
pre Bid *?t of the Universal Peace
Union. -?8 talking on the topic, pecu
liarly cuogeuial of him, of kindness.
Said he:
"I once knew a remarkable kind
boy. He was a great angler. There
was a trout stream in his neighbor
hood that ran though a rich man's es
tate. Permits to fish the stream now
and then could be obtained, aud tho
boy was lucky enough to have a per
mit.
"Uoe day he was fishing with an
other boy when a gamekeeper suddenly
darted forth from a thicktt. The lad i
with the permit uttered a cry of fright,
dropped his rod, aud ran off at top
speed. Tho gamekeeper pursued.
"For about half -mile the gamekeeper
was led a swilt and. difficult chaBe.
Then, worn out, tho boy halted. Tho
man seized him by the arm aud said
between pants:
'Have yuu a permit to fish on
this estate?'
11 *Y?s, to be sure,' said tho boy
quietly.
" 'You have? Then show it to me.'
"The boy drew tho permit from his
packet. Tho man examined it and
frowned in perplexity and anger.
" 'Why did you run when you had
r,his permit?' he asked.
" 'To let tho other boy .get away,
was the reply. 'II; didu't have
none!' "?Harper's Wtekly.
? Too many quarrtls aro picked be
fore they are ripe.
? Paying your debts is one kind vf
a paying business.
? A poor man may be a orank, but
a rich one is eccentric.
? City soil is said to be superior to
country soil for wild oats.
? When a doctor gives a rioh pa
tient up it's up to tho undertaker.
? Tho individual who keeps his
mouth shut seldom lives to regret it.
? Revenge is a gun that kicks much
harder than it shoots. J
Up And Down Witt; the Bishop^
Bishop Dudley of Kentucky "was
ruuob addicted to t-port, especially
liking to hunt a~d fish, says the New
York Press. Ouce, when on a shoot
ing trip, the' Bishop chanced to fall in
with an old mountaineer, .who, accord
ing to Representative Ollio James,,
took a great fancy to his new acquaint
ance, whom he did not in the (esBt sus
pect was a bishop. When Bishop
Dudlcy was preparing for his 'return
home he invited tho old man to visit
Louisville, so that he might hear him
preach.
"Preach?'' gasped the old mountain
eer. "What, you preach) Kin yeav
preach as well as you kin shoot?''
"Muoh better," responded the bish
op, smiling);. "Be sure to como some
Sunday. I'll see that you get a good
seat in front."
The old man availed ??mse?f of the
invitation thus etended. At the con
clusion of Che service- he ouickly
sought out his friend, the bishop, andV
grasped, his hand.
"Mr. Bishop," he cried enthusiasti
cally, "I don't know much about your
creeds and dogmatics, but I riz and
sot with you every time!"'
Low Rates via Soulhern Railway.
Tbe Southern Railway gives below a.
few special low exoursloj rates-to the
following point?:
To New Orleans, Mobile, Alp...
and PeoBBCola, Flc, One first-class fare
plus twenty-live cents for tbe round trip
from all coupon utations. Tickets on
sale Match 10, limited March lltb,.
1005 ? mav be extended to return
March 25th 1905, ao onnt. Mardi?Gras?.
To Washington, 1), . C?Presidential
Inauguration?For civilians rate one>
Orst-olass tare pins twenty five cants for
the ronnd trip / from all coupon stations,.
For military companies and brass bands
in uniform acoompanylng them In ,pav- .
th-r>'20 or more on one ticket?at one*
.-eni per mile plus nrbltrarlep. Tickets
sold March 21 and 8d,?limbed March
8tb, 1005, but may be extended to March'
18th, 1905.
Very low rates to other points now in
effect..
The Southern Kali war is the best route?
to the above' points?operating through*
Pullman and dining cars on all through
t raine. :
For foil information apply to any
agent Southern Kallwav or, '
R W. Hunt,
Division Passenger Agtnt,
_ Charleston 3. O.
Ryd&le's Stomach Tablets.
i INDIGESTION
Causes belching, gas, or wind in the
stomach, heartburn, sour stomach, etc
DYSPEPSIA
Causes Cramps andpain La the stomach, '
sick stomach, etc*
Rydale's Stomach Tablets ^/?jTC* Ryd-te's Stomach Tablets
digest all kinds of food and prevent 1er- 1
mentation, and the formation of gas and
acid in the stomach* They never fail to
digest the food* and rest the stomacm- )
They stimulate, tone the digestive organs^,
and cure dyspepsia in its worst forma* * 1
Indigestion and a general run down condition ot tho eystem.
manufactured and guaranteed by tho
fUJICAL, REMEDY COMPANY, Hickory^NTcl
FOR SALE BY EVAHB PHABISACY.
RUBBER TIRES !
We are in apoaition to put on High Grade Bubber Tie?
with good aeryic^ and nri??a tft GorrAflttond * it_ Bobber be
fore it made a bounce.
QNEv OAB OF HQ
; Have just receivedone Car l^a'd of HOG PEED
(?hortS) at yeiy close prices. Come before thi. y are
all gone. Now is tho time for thro wing?
Around your promises to prevent a cate of fever or
some other disease,i that will cost you very muoh more.
than the price of a barrel of Lime ($1.00.) We have
a fresh shipment in stock, and will be glad to send you *
;.j;Vs>v: ; some. If you contemplate building a barn or, any
other building, see us before buying your? " ' : '.'<
As we sell tho very beat, qualities oi iy.
we_Lj__jLi.j.Mj
JRJIpND
r
CfHce.Cver F?f niera and Mer chante?
ik.:
, SPECIAL lUt?nt^iji^
elsett?ot Dental wotk. Crowns,Bridge?;
and PoiceJain Inlajg, auch an aie rfo_oin
the larger cities. ;
Al| ktnda of Plalea made. Gold Fill
Trngs in artificial t?oth any time after
Plates are! made. ' -.<(.*} >: - - :
-v 'e-?^^f.-_*ft-;.,???l- In**V :Afl^_J?A*lfl|.
glyea for tbo Pslnleas Extractlon?tafli^
r> Bleeding aod dlata&td gums treawS^
,v. ^_r?{AlVcalla to tfc^ eoun.waWiiil?
, bj Tow_*ior the PA)h]SMi??l?ato_ C#
-Teeth promptly atttndid to by a oomp?
;tent aaa??tant. ..v.-v ^
'A man thinks it is "tvhen the matter
iEMirance suggesie isssji?bat circs
s'?mM%i?'h^i^^himh? ha_v
it!*^-**^^
oaoeMcak^
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