Newspaper Page Text
; FOOTBALL IN CHINA, Th? Game Waa Played Thor? Before th? Christian Ere Writing^in the Nineteenth Cen tury on "Football and Polo In Chi na, Professor Giles asee rt? that the -same of football at least was known ?during the Han dynasty before the beginning of the Christian era and -waa even then an imperial favorite ?and an object of censure. The Emperor Ch'eng Ti was fond of football, but his officers rep*e ?ented to him that it was both phys ically exhausting and also unsuita ble to the imperial . dignity. His inajesty replied, "We like playing, ?and what one chooses to do is not .exhausting." An appeal was then made to the empress, who suggested .the game of tiddlywinks for the em peror's amusement. The ball as originally used by the Chinese was a round leather bag -.stuffed with hair. Bamboo poles -were erected, and it was the aim of the contending sides to kick the 'ball over a net stretched on these ?oles. Some of the stories taken y Professor Giles from the old his torians ore not without application today. Thus of a Taoist priest of ?the sixteenth century, who was a :good player, wo read: "He used shoulders, back, breast and belly to -take the placo of bis feet. He could -withstand several antagonists, mak ing the bell run around his body -without dropping." And of a cer tain game played before a certain ?-emperor on bis birthday it is said -that the winners 'Vere rewarded .with; flowers, ? fruit; wine . and even silver bowls and brocades. The cap- ' -tain of the losing t>ide .wrns flogged and suffered other indignities." When Two Virginians Mast. The first thing two Virginians do ?when they meet.ie to take ai mint ju lep together. They next talk kin. Iii they are ot ranger o io ono another -the first requisite is to locate and .thus identify each other; then they -take another julep. Then the wild Imnt for, relationship begins and generally ends in estebUsbtng cous . inahip from a first to a tenth degree irom a marriage somewhere between , 1650 and the present. Then they -take another julep, and the conver sation .takes this turn and goes on? ,-forboure.:, -. ?>. ,-? "You say yoit are ono of the Ban 4olph*o? 'Curls?* - " "ITo, but ray motlier was a Page. Her mother was a Barwell. My ^reat-grondmother wai a Carry.' My ^reat-grandfether vrair a Lee. Hy ^rcat-great-great-grandraother was ^ Washington, and my great-great ^reat-great-?rrandfather was a Ban -dolph of Tuckahob, and, ah" Here another mint julep stops *iin^ ? Jut?? BInton'e Partridge, v .. When Jules Simon waa ten years old he found a small red partridge '. ?dying in the snow. Ho took tho bird Lome ana>arn>ed4t^tovUfel '0ns : ?r its legs had been broken^ and Si nnen, seeing that tho fracture wai '?00 bad f or eettincr. amoiitated' the leg with Iris pookkSTnd W placed it with a wooden one. Two Atys later tba partridge waa as han-' W aa possible, and tho tick tack, -fcc bo beam au over the house. It %ccsm& on inbODorablo 7 companion at Connella, and it. followed; Mm. 'About wbere-rer^hereat *j*h the yc?Di??'ciiC? of wig ?iii?o iamo. J?ut one afternoon Cornelia wafs caught in a hailstorm and killed by the I stones befo; a Jules Simon could go -to her help. And Jules Simon ne?er ; Ate partridge from that day to Ins -death. A partridge always reminded him of ,CoraQlia.~~St.> James Ga i|?||te. . " ^yvj&ggjj To K??a Bree* PtnK NO ENGLISH BILLIONAIRES. In Great Britain the Sum ls Too Vast - For Ftackoniny. "If you had a billion dollars/' bo gan Judson. "I haven't that much about my clothes/' returned Wagstaff, "but if you want it only for a month or BO perhaps" "Oh, quit your guff/' said Judson severely, "and learn something. If you had a billion dollars and took it to England with you, how much money would you have over there ?" "Very little after paying the steward's fees and tips on board ship," admitted Wagstaff. But Jud son went on with the cold, calm de termination Milich characterizes a jnan who has just learned a new fact and is resolved at any cost to impart it to his friends. "YOu would not have a billion when you struck British soil, though you had ?very dollar with which you left here, for in Great Britain a billion is a million millions, while in France and the United States it ia only a thousand millions. It is possible for a man to be a billionaire in this country or France, but no one is ever likely to be a billionaire in Great Britain. The English use of the word is the older and more correct, and how we ever came to take the French style I don't know. I imagine it was because it was han? dy to have something to jump, to] after you said million. Anyway,;'n7# .7 body ever thought of talking bU lions in ordinary conversation until lato in the sixteenth century. ..The t$ was' known only to acientisto great mathematician, and even. speaks ot tho wera as? a fwyreVa/ :W??$a used; to think ami 'count in thousands then, but nowadays we aro as familiar with millions as our ancestors were with hundreds and 'sps^ak of billions as they used to speak of thousands, so much vaster has the world grown. I suppose, in future years trillions and quadril lions, quintillions and sextillion* <? will bo as familiar in the mouths of men as millions and billions are now in ours. Yet, as a matter of fact, you know, there are comparatively few people who are able to grasp the meaning of the tenn 'million;' We uso it every day, but not many minds form a clear idea of what a million of anything would be." New York Press. ; ? ' Wwnfl in His Head. A Yorkshire mill worker charged with having set fire to a large hay rick was. defended on the 'ground that ha was not altogether respon sible for his actions; One of the witnesses, a typical Yorkshire man, testified io tho belief that the pris oner vt?a 4tw?sf!iQ'i?i'h??;iiMS!,9' ' - "Can you mention any occasion on which the prisoner behaved in a manner tb warrant your stats* ment ?" he was asked by the prose ^x*," answered tho witness. "Ah mind once -at he got hawf a crown, ! t too much. I^MnttKl?^^^R ! > "WpU ^'^a|d eouniel as/the wit? "He took it back to " tf manager I" conni? ded the fitness amidst, a roar o| laughter. - ? SoenothfRf Won** .. . ^?istoig^^ lr; ffYon doirt ?" asked tha foa?-htss ^y&t?9 ehe replied? benong anew 0Y3F the column of figures in her, beautifully bound account book. ?(YQVL iola me the way to save mon ?was! not to buy thing^ ; that thus would sato the amount the gooda would have coat us. So I have been ; careful to set down the exact price of everything X baya wanted to buy, but felt I could not agord. I find, in addingitup,it amounts to $524, but I only have $A.50 in cash on hand. wita your theory.1* Ws'r- >? . .. ? ? y "? 1 " A" ; j "Xi you want to bo liked in a newspaper office," said the man at the isak, *^ou must bo careful to write only on one Bide of tho paper." script looked at hint; suspiciously' and exclaim^ " , . 4 ' i ^No, yo^ don't X may look youn? but I can see through some things. . ^on?^ ; one aide of the paper BO that you can tura it over and ^J^8 ^er OW Nst ApetyT ^ . V'1 holidey nt his aunt's he chancea ono dfty-to phkco his elbows on the table ' . ^?..aea? boy,^ s^ his annt? ' 5don*t you know that children of ?i&ti -first families must never put ?^?a*,piy to me, for my father^ boen marnoo" twice, a?d'tl^raif ? . ;?? -^^^j^fl^ip^ three time* . $*>fo$;&oy:^ j Hp&a th? fat spiritualist may be' ^?e4tuWw*??h? '? ? S" ' -::'* ?' ^^^^-da\'?a^r ma?.^ot.. .'ktiowi ?, ^^^|?sl?;'*w?ii;\ : no'??ei?i ;$he-oibi'??--:'-' ???^mere:'n ls notuioglikeit.: S i-i?X:L:Pr^t^?ivnchoil4cri?cf ?eu \go ?ca?d seeing fcfc? alte i GLASSMAKING. Thsbae' Worker? Wero Adopts I? the Art Forty Centuries Ago. Tho glass blowers of ancient Thebes are known to have been as proficient in that particular art as is tho most scientific craftsman of the same trade of the present day, after a lapse of forty centuries of so called "progrese." They were well acquainted with the art of staining gloss and aro known to have pro duced that commodity in great pro fusion and perfection. Itosaelini gives on illustration of a piece of stained gloss known to bo 4,000 years old, which displayed erlistic taste of high order both in tint and design. In this case tho color ia 6truck through the vitrified struc ture, and -he mentions designs struck entirely in pieces from a half inch to three-quarters of an inch thick, the color being perfectly in corporated with tho structure of thc piece and exactly the same on both the obverse and reverse sides. The priests of Ptah at Memphis were adepts in the glass-maker's art, and not only did they have factories for manufacturing tho common crystal variety, but they hod learned the vitrifying of tho different col ors and the imitation of precious stones to perfection. Their imita tions of tho amethyst and of the various other colored gems were so true to nature that even now, after ' they have lain in tho desert sands .from 2,000 to 4,000 years, it takes an expert to distinguish the genuine articles from the spurious. ' -.'It has been shown that besides $>ejng experts in g?a G S makin g and '.glass coloring they used the dia mond in cutting and engraving glass. In the British museum there I a beautiful piece.of stained glass with an engraved emblazonment of the monarch Thothmes III., who lived 3,400 years ago. .vi Polled After Alf. During the peninsular war a num ber of English officers had establish? ed a mess in a Spanish village, with native cooks, whose efforts were fairly satisfactory io the keen apt petites of the campaigners. They were joined, However, oy a certain peevish, cantankerous major, who bitterly complained that every dish was flavored with sttga?, after the Spanish fashion, and quite uneata ble. Finally ha confined himself to a diet on eggs boiled in the shell. 'They can't sugar those 1" he cried triumphantly. But his triumph was short lived. Naxt morning some mischievous suba ware at the mess table before the major and emptied all the salt cellars, replacing their contentsiwith powdered sugar. The major' soon appeared and with pXooS?j wSiplcc-?uey began upon an with which, as usual, he took g^jr ot "iialt" At the first mouth iiiiliia face turned purple with, rage. "Sugared, by Jove!" ho exclaimed .and;; rushed oil? to bia tent. $p^^5a **W a'aHay**" ?*y"*g. !'.;.. ^ A,r^%sic?Qn told a young mother how to eilonee her crying babe. ?1% the child on ita back," ha said, T?d s wf ^ you? thush sad forefinger clone its nostrils gently. Tho eudden stoppage of ita breath will surprise 'A- immoderately. Its hovh will at onco ccaee." ' ?But tba enielty"- the mother Kothii^ the kind,w Said the (mymeian, ^l'nerfl Ii noi? \ ing cruel in stopping a baby's breath ipr a second or two. Try this meth od. ? have tried it on dozens cf ba bies and never nave" known it tc fail* ' ?Pt?i?fi m ir* m aiid the mother ia a cold voioe.-Now York : A Trewala Center.'> i!b^isrt? box. had;)^t':ij^^a^; ??v-BoaV^d gasped, with a trou bled look, "w-where waa dst cigar fi^49Wr.ijk'f '<iVy . i&' ' '. ": ' :/>''?; "That cigar, my lad," replied fha man who had given him the weed, "waa made in Santo Doniingr*/*/ '; ?SK i thought nojy^ . ; flt-^ stared h^lf a dorea m olati^ns in me stomach."----Cliicago ?^^fm. j . : WaWaeaV.'. ' : .*. . An English newspaper has aa item about a little Scotch boy who, while playmg on tbed^^ ^i^^ug^? be very glad I waa repUad the boy. "And Tm so glad'ye got toe out What a iiclrin* I wan got from my mither if ;^Jt?;^ro^ne?d?''" . ' T'..-M'ftav*:etaja?r?eWeai Har!emite -- A f riend of mine Wfc^ rail '?x^nl^ ir. ;0rn^ra^i^: Bhsu??ti?^%?^ LOVE AND PERSONALITY. On? Explanation of Why tho American People Are Beautiful. Personality is always a mystery with its antithetically mingled cle ments in man and woman. Women have loved wrongly and known it, wcro perfectly aware of it-they only know also that they were help less to avoid it. The desire of their lives has been gratified, something has happened. What was there about George Sand, save perhaps pretty good eyes, to send ouch men as Alfred de Mus set and Friedrich Chopin absolutely crazy? Nothing interesting about her-even her unattractiveness en hanced by her constant smoking. Yet she could inspire tho "Pr? lude/' which Chopin composed on Boeing her approach in a garden in Minorca-the greatest piece of mu sic ever compressed into a single page. Goethe's Gretchen, tho little bourgeoise, without apparent at tractiveness, yet inspiring his migh ty genius-what is this mystery of man and woman? Tho beauty of nations differs very much. The Latino are less beautiful than tho Anglo-Saxons. Tho angularity of the north German woman is notori ous-an uncharming person. Why ? It has nothing whatever to do with race. The growth of the Hanseatic cities brought great wealth in north Germany. Money bags married mon ey bags. The result was a people o? severely plain aspect. Tliere are not many money bags in America, [ although ibero are many money ' bags'in the hands of the few. The Americans are a beautiful race. The American is insulted if mention of dowry is made in hio ! wedding arrangements. He marries because he loves the woman and she j him; hence the American people ! have become exceedingly beautiful. Then the facilities for divorce pre sented in the United States are an important factor in the beautifica tion process. Love is really at the bottom of it all-not money bags or race, hut love. . Tho French are always talking about "l'amour, l'amour !" But really there is no "amour" there nt all-people generally talk moat about what they haven't got or don't') know. Yes, indeed, so rare . is "l'amour" in Franco that it accounts for the decline in facial beauty of the Frenchwoman -- not in move ment, for in movement she excels tho world, but in face. Rome and Greece were ruined by treating mar riage as a matter of business.-Pr. Emil Beich in a London Lecture. Mexican Water Jara. , The Mexicans do not use ice, but nevertheless there is no country where a man can get a glass of cool, sweet water quicker than in Mexico. The water jars are made of a porous pottery ?which allows the water to ooze through the material of ' the tanks; and the evaporation keeps it always cool. It. is not cold, like our ice water, but it is all the better on that account, aa a mon can drink twice ts n .nch and never feel .in the | leset injured, no mst ter how larg* i- his .drafts.. Australian ranchmen 1 frequently put water into skin bot I ties which they.'suspend, from th? veranda,/ and tiie au? swaying tho ! sldne back and forth cools the wa I ter and rendare it more palatable. Inflects which spend the major ; portion' of 'their lives in a torpid ot semitorpid state are but seldom in jured and ?ever killed by being fro zen. Instances aro numerous ' of travelers in mountain regions find ing beetles or butterflies above the snow ? line which were frozen stiff and apparently steno "dead..'. How ler, when these sam? insects were 1 down into tho warmer at " ere' of the valleys or into a : mountaineer's cabin they complete ly revived & a very short while, j It appear* that their normal vital pow-, era are eo low, that a degree of cold that would prove fatal to a more highly organized creature seldom hurts them. ; . : . . ? ' V Irreparable* .. i . ?: -*Yott don't eat cheese, Mist Ben derby r* said tho hostess. ''Oh, no,*', replied the smiling youngwoman. 'Tm a vegetarian. The ro waa an embarrassing a Hence for a moment, and she added, somo 'T mean, of course, that cheese is I made from milk, and milk, yon* know; ia an animal product." "What else did yon snppose] I thought you. meant, Miss Bender by ?" freering?y asked the hostess. The Hard P-rt. Miss Komra Feend-I'd like to take a photo of your farm hand at . H^l^crBrowni-All right-cf yew kin spare tho time. Miss Kamra Feend-Oh, this cam era will catch him in just one-twen .t?etn^aa^iid; >.?.; ^Farmer Brown--Yes, but WVL ko wyevjm;-hours ter ketch him mt. . - -?.If ton are fond of ? high etd tias, buy a graod father's clock. - Isn't it surprising wha? a lot of good bargains are offered a mah when W* broke? ,/; .. ii .. ;'- j ; r- Mbn^>ay not mske tbs mayor go, bot it eometimee induje? tbs police o move on. % ' .?*:\<': .' - Many ama*says ha's driven, to drink e)hen you couldn't drive him the other way. ^^^^^^^^^^ THE DIET QUESTION. Eat What You Like, What Agree* With You, but Eat 8lowly. That instinct ia a much better guide to diet than faulty reasoning ia tho conclusion of Dr. Woods Hutchinson, writing on dietetic fads in McClure's Magazine. Here aro some of his findings con lensed: Men should cot wh^.t they Uko and a good deal of it. "Given our agc, a ex, size, horsepower and the \**nrk to bo done, tho suitable fuel is only a question of cost ar 1 O'jces- i sibility." Fish is no richer in pb^pborus than many other foods. Even if it were it would not therefore bo "good for the bmin," as some suppose. Spices do not "heat too blood." That notion confounds the "hot" taste with actual heat. Spices aro antiseptic. The Egyptians preserved mummies in spices. In tropical countries people cat moro spices thnn in cold ones, and tho diet docs them good. Pork is all right, lt digests slow ly, but that is an advantage. Tho more rapidly digested foods are not the most healthful. Thc digestive machinery must havo work to do like the rest of tho body. Vegetarianism is "the diet of the enslaved, stagnant and conquered races." A diet rich in meat is that of the dominant races. Few people who eat much meat ever become consumptive. "Tuber culosis sweeps like a pestilence through the grass and grain eaters -cottle, antelopes, chickens, pheae- I anio, turkeys-but is decidedly rare among meat matero--dogs, cats, ti gers, lions, civets, badgera, hawks, eagles, crows." Breakfast fooas aro well enough If you must have them, but "be euro and eat your breakfast first." ,' White bread w?* tho best, most healthful and most nutritious food which the Bun has ever grown from the soil." Wars havo always been fiercest for the possession of the great wheat growing plains. No na-* tion eats brown bread when it can : get,white. Inst inc f is here also cor rect. Whole who/it meal, or "gra ham," contains nore nitrogen than white, but tho whito has more "available" nitrogen. "Mush makes a superb 'sour mash' in a weak stomach." . "The tortures of the chronic dyspeptic are aggravated and in very 'many cases chiefly caused by the very foods which he takes for thjjr cure. The chief value of "mush iSW milk" ?meaning also other coarse cereal oods) is in the milk and sugar. Eat slowly, eat what'you like, what agrees with you and os much as you need, seems to be Dr. Hutch inson's idea. Th? Nama "Po res', a In.? In the natural progress of nations and the development of trade porce lain was brought iron*. China to Eu rope, and venous legando wore cur rent as to its origin. Magic proper ties were attributed to at-aa, for instance; that a porcelain cup would immediately burnt if poison wore poured into it. lt was said to lu? composed of picoter, eggs, the shelfs Of "marino locusts" and the ?ike, ?nd this suggests the origin i>| 1;he word .^r??laiii.*' The Fortunoso word "porcolia" means "little pig," and a certain shell, being shaped like a hog's oack, waa named porcelana. This shill was used to some estent in, the. arts by being carved into cani??s ,' and personal ornaments. These became porcelana wares, and when the now production ' became known its likeness to the shell work wea recognized. The new material thus acquired the French ?amo "porceisuie," or, in English, "por celain." , . ? f Alban? and Royalty. Among the many anecdotes told of thai famous Italian contralto, Mme. Alboni, is ono which, reading like fiction, is nevertheless perfectly true. Many, years ago at a state concert at Buckingham palace Mme. Albon! was commanded to appear. And appear she did and sang ex quisitely. As she turned to go after her last aria she slipped her hand into her pocket ana drew forth a pair of scissors, sharp and new. Bending down, she quickly snipped the rope which separated the artists from the audience, "I have done ft,"<she whispered triumphantly to a friend and escaped 'as gracefully as might be. Mme. Alboni had re publican tendencies. Cl?*? Breken by the Volo?. It is scarcely credible, but it ia a fact,' that a glass can be broken by the volca. If you strike a thin wine glass while you hold it by the stem it will emit a certain note, in most cases a pretty deep one. On bring ing the glass rapidly to your m outr, and shouting into it the samo note as loudly as possible, the vibrations ot the glass being thereby extended, it wili be shivered into fragments. This %ai*& to be ? favorite experi ment of Lablache, ihei renowned .inger, who would thus break, one after th? other, as many glosses as were handed to him. i T~ Churches opea Ister and dose earlier than ssloons. - What moat merj seed is a spring tonio for the intellect. - Truth may ooma and truth may go, bat a lie goss on forever. - ?* |s col y a genuine reformer who Vats but little sod saws a lot of wood, lose her rubbers in is mud puddle and gat her fest weft because she thinks it is a 8*30 th?>, are small. 1 CHEWING COFFEE. A Pernicious Habit That ls Liable ta Ruin the Health. Physicnns claim that tho habit of tobacco chewing ia dying out, but as insidious a habit has come to take ita place. Thia is coffee chewing, which is a very bad thing for the health, for it creates nervousness, makes the skin yellow, blackens tho teeth and diminishes the appetite. - The habit seems to have originat ed in tho coffee roasting establish ments. When visiting one of these plants one s ?es nearly all tho men taking coffee grains from a little pouch which is sewn on the front of their jumpers. Every little while they take a half dozen or more grains from it and chew them with great relish. The women who work there ure addicted to thc same habit. A specialist of Philadelphia has made a study oi *he coffee chewing habit and s?ws : "Ii is a habit easily contracted, for.-the taste of the crisp, roasted berries is not unpleas ant, and the exhilaration, the stim ulus, that cho berries give is quito as marked *is that which would be obtained fro^u a glass or two of beer or from a drink of whisky. "It is this exhilaration, I am con vinced, that causes tho habit to be formed and that makes it a hard habit to break away from. It should bo broken away from. Its effects oro highly injurious. They are more injurious than those of tobacco chewing. "The coffee chowing habit wrecks the nerves, it makes the skin sallow and it destroys the appetite. I have had occasion to treat a number of men for it. I always advise such men to break off by imperceptible*' degrees-to give three or four months to the task. Some sueeeed and some do not. Men who work in coffee plants find ?*". almost impos sible to succeed." Coffee experts seem to be the only employees connected with the coffee trade who havo not this habit, for if they had their sense of taste would be dulled. The experts, by smell only or by taste only, distin guish without the slightest difficulty or uncertainty between tho Arabian, tho Javanese, the Guatemalan, the Costa Rican, the Bogotan and a doz en other coffees. They could not do this if they were coffee chewers. -Now York Herald. > Mo Took ?he Hint. A clever if somewhat sharp tongued West Philadelphia girl has finally succeeded in discouraging the attentions of a young man whose in tentions may havo been matrimonial, and whom she did not care to con? sider because of his fondness for in toxicating liquor. It had not got to a point of rejecting his proffered of fer, so she was unable to tell him in kind but explicit language that she could never share his heart with the corner saloon. But the opportunity came the other night, when, being alone with him, she had stirred his emotions by her playing on tho pi ano. ''Why," he asked when she would pl?y no tu oro, "do I have such a passion for tho muaio yo? slake?" The girl paused, as if considering. "Perhaps ifs because, it's PO full of bars," she said, and the man has not been hack since.-Philadelphia Rec ord. * . " -: . '. Larg set Loavee In the WorleV The largest lesvcs oi bread in the wp rid are those of Franco and Italy. Tho "pipe" bread of Italy is baked in loaves two or three'feet long, while in france the loaves are made in tho shape of Very long rolls four or five feet in length and' in many cases oven six feat. The broad of Paris u distributed almost exclu sively by women, who go to the vari ous bakehouses et 5:30. a. m. and spend about on- hour pollening up the loaves. -After the loaves are thoroughly deaned of dust and grit the "bread porter" proceeds on the round of her customers-. Those who live in apartments or flats find their loaves leaning against the door. Getting His Meaauro. i Aunt ilium was preparing soup for dinner when one of the neigh bors happened in on a borrowing er rand. "Why, Aunt Filura, isn't that an unusually large soup kettle ?" asked the caller, with a calculating glance at the stove on her passage across the kitchen. "If you're just looking at tho kit tie, it does Beem plumb sizable," said Aunt Filura calmly, "but when you cast your looks on the extents and pliability of my Enoch's mouth I reckon 'twon't look any too large, that kittle wont." Water With Meale. Water taken with meals should be sipped as well as taken sparingly. Ice water should be taken as seldom as possible-never would be a better rule-and the habit of putting cha ped ice in the drinking water is to be avoided, as one never knows what may bo taken into the stomach, through "thia medium. The better way is to fill bottles with water and allow them to stand beside ice to ch?ii._ _ __ - The more a man owes the more he's apt to be sought siter. - Bslt your book with flattery if you would catch silly women. ' - Many a girl is called e. peaoh who hasn't a atony heart,* - Even a jock at all trades bss bis uses about the bouse.. - The early siring poem often meots ?Ith-a frosty reception. - Time flies swiftly to the man wt o has a note ripening at the bank. ?^M^X???i^^S-? 'Opinis ' m??m?????m People's Bai of Andera ANDEBNO0, S. C. We respectfully solicit a share ot your business. Ki LL THi COUGH AND CURE THH LU MC, 8 W,TH Br. Sling's Nsw Disenverv _" /CONSUMPTION Price FOR I OUGHSsnd 60o& 81.00 feajOUg Frc? Trial. Barest and QiM^eafc .iure for all THROAT and LTJN _ TB OEB LES, or MONEY BACT *'" 9 ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office In Old Benson Building? f Money to Loan on Real Estate. W%LL PAPERING. /. fall assortment of Wall Paper, in cluding Tapestry, satin floleh, Ingrain and bath room Tils. The largest stools ever.carried In Anderson. Boom mould* tot? to mstcb^all paper. AU orders Siled on ?hart notice. Tfireoofthe beat paper nangarsan the etty. . We aleo do work out of the ?ty. i Q. L. ARNOLD, Phone No. 20 B. 301 Depot street Notice to Creditors. AU persona having claims against the Estates of Mary Eerie end Fletcher Latlmor, deosaosd, are hereby notified to present them, properly proven, to th? i undersigned within thirty days after publication herof for payment. B, Y. H. NANCE, J nd so r f Probate as Special Referee. Feb 21,1906 86 5 Charleston & Western Cero?los Hillway. Arrival and Departure of Trains, Ander eon, S. C. Effective April 14,1906. DEPARTURES: . 7.27 a? m. No. 22, delly, exoept Sunday? for McCormick sod Interme diate stations, arrive McCor mick ll 15 s. m. . ; \, 4:10 p. m. No 6, daily, for Augusta, eta, connecting ot Augusts with ail Unas dlvergioc, and atMeCor . mtak ?rf th O, ?. W. C. tra?a No. 4 for a roon wood sud iaterms dtffifco stations. Arrive Calhoun Falls 5.42 p. m., Ausjuata 8,25 - . p. as. : . ARRIVALS: ' .' Trahis arrive Union Depot Anderson, No. 5, dally, from Augms&a, McOorraloh, Calhoun Falls and intermediate etetlona 11.00 a. m.: No. 21. dany, ?x?ankHnm^ from MoOormfe* and Intermed?alo ata Uoasft.05p.m. c ' .. ? W. B* Stasis. U. T. A., Anderson, 8. C. Geo. T. Bryon, G. A.. ^ Ernest Wearne, S.FVA'. H.M.EmsmjD, ? ^^^^_ .Tcafflp Manager. . Blue Bidge Railroad. KAettveffor. St, lSQSg .WSSTRO?WD. I No. ll (dally)-Laave Belton 8.50 av I mt Anderson 4.15 p. m. ; Pendleton 4.?y ?m.; Cherry 4*4 p.m.; bsnsoa 6.31p. s arriva Walhalla 5.55 p. m. .No.* (daUy except Sunday)-Leavo Belton 10.45 s. m.; Anderson 1L07 a. m.; Pendlaton 1L?2* m.; Cherry 11.59 o, a%? arrlvo at Senses 11.57 a. m. No. 5 (Sunday only)-Leavo Bo?twa 11.45 a. na.? Anderson 11.07 a. m.? Pets dletoa 11.83 a. m.t ?bewylL? J*m* Seneca 1,05 p. m.; arriva Walhalla LS, P,No. 7 (dall? exoept Sunday)-Leave Anderson 10.80 a. m.; Pendleton 10.59 a? m.: Ohsnry 11.09 a. m.; Sonsos 1.05 p. ra.; arrive Walhalla 1.40 p m. Nc, 8 (dally)-Lesvs Belton 9.15 p. nw, jr,:, arrive Andereon 9.43 p. m. * .. ? . No. 28 (delly exoept Sus lay)-Lssysv . Belton 9.00 s. m.; arrive Anderson 9M? ? am. > vi BASBOUND, M No. 12 (dally)-Leave Walhalla 8.85 aX. m.: Seneca 8.56 a. sr ; Cheri y 9.17 a. m.;', Pendleton 9.25 a. tn ; Anderson 10.00 a. {. m.; arrive Belton 10.25 a. m. If No. 16 (dally exoept Sunday)-Leave f Seneca 2.00 p. m.; Cherry 2.19 p. m.; Pea- ? dleton 2 26 p. m.; Anderson 810 p. m.; arrive Belton 3.85 p. m. No. 0 (Sunday only)-Leave Andarse* > 3.10 p. m.; strive Belton 8 85 p. m. . No8(dsUy)-Leave "Walhalla 8.10 p., m.; Seneca 5.31 p. m.) Cherry 5.59 p. au; j Pendleton 6.12 p. m.; Andereon 7.30 p. m.; arrive Belton 7.58 p. m. ? .* No. 24 (dally exoept Sunday)-Leay? ' Andereon 7.50 a. m.: arrive Belton 8.20 ? a. m. H. O? BEATTIE, Pres., GreenvUle,S O j. R, ANDERSON, Supt. Anderson,d. O. SO "'EARr EXPERIENCE < P YWAOI MAS??] .X??^^*itbo?.rtx*w? ta tho * |,,nrt?omi!rOl?<*?^J? fSffsSS v'ir: ?nur monti)*, AL BOM by WI n?ww??M?J