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- PJdfLISHED WEEKLY. WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1905. ESTABLISHED 1844. WHEN You Drink COFFE You want it to have the right taste and to pro= duce the right feeling. All right; then get a 5-lb. Can of Pinnacle, a high grade mixed Mocha and Java. Costs only $1.00; and the number of those using it is daily increasing. For good Oatmcal use Scotch Oats; 15 cents a box; 2 boxes for 25 cents. Everything for that fruit cake==Raisins, Cur= rants, Citron and Figs. All fresh stock. Phone 25 for all your W . C. Boyd. Grocery Wants. Do You Like TO SEE GOODS WELL DISPLAYED? IF SO, DROP IN AND TAKE A GOOD PEEP AT OUR BEAUTIF'JL DISPLAY OF FINE CR OCKERY AND. GLASSKARE! It is the large and varied assortment that makes the display possible. It is the reason able prices for superior goods that will make it to your interest to call. J. W. SEIGLER. Hirr hfnr Kinr Cotton! Cotton is booming, but goods are cheap. So don't Miss your chance to get them before they get higher, and the place is Geo. R. Lauderdale's. NEVER; NO, NEVER! Bargain hunters never go away from this store without a feeling of genuine satisfaction, for they always find what they come for. This season is certainly no exception; in fact our larger and better stock makes it easier for them to be fully pleased. The men will be sure to be pleased with our showing in Suits and Pants. A full line of Underwear for all. Our stock in these lines is full and up=to-date. 16o' & Chilbren's Clotbing & hocs in endless quantity. See those insoles and foot warmers. We have Shoes for Men, for Ladies, for Boys and for Girls. Shoes for all. Trunks, Traveling Bags and Suit Cases for those who are going off or stay-at=homes. Big assortment of Dry Goods, Dress Goods and Notions. You will find our prices right. Yours for business, L. LANDECKER. Stands Like a Stone Wall Turns Cattle, Horses, Hogs-Is Practically Indestructible EL I L~ Buone feceyers tem.Get ebihevres, the hinge joint, the good galvanizing, the exactly proportioned quality o te tha ncan sho 'ouortis fne in our stock and explain its merits and supericrity, not only in the rull but in the field, Corne and see us and get our prnces. For sale by R _v. TLURNER GOVERNOR GLNN ON PROHIBITION Address of North Carolina's Chief Ex ecutive Before Temperance Conven tion at Raleigh. Whatever may have been my acts and course in the past, and I have tried ever to be consistent, I say here and now that the last bridge is burned behind me and I stand squarely with the great temperance forces to drive out this hideous monster from our fair state. A man must take a square out unmistakable stand for the right or for the wrong, for righteous ness or for evil, for happiness or for misery, for justice or for oppression. As for me, I am heart and soul against the liquor traffic. There is nothing advanced, either in the industrial or moral sphere, by strong drink except the liquor traffic itself. Can you point to me any benefit resulting from the sale of liquor except to the pocketbook of the man who engages in the traffic? I can see none. The great corporations and the business men have set their condemnation upon those who indulge in strong drink. I say to yon deliberately, that after thirty years' experience as an attorney and as a prosecuting officer in the courts, that I am firmly of the opinion that 60 per cent of crime is directly the result of strong drink and 95 per cent is indirectly caused by in dulgence in strong drink. Can we then, in the face of such an appalling array, hesitate to say where we stand? Not long since, I was making a speech, I shall not say where, and I tried to picture the future of this great commonweatlth. I told those people that I trusted the day would come when books instead of bottles would be in your young men's hands and schools and churches instead of saloons and gambling places would be scattered the length and breadth of the state. When I finished my speech a man came up to me and said: "Look here, you attacked my business to-day. I voted for you, but I want to say that I am sorry and I will never vote for you again." I told him: "Well, my friend, I don't know that 1 shall ever ask for votes again, I don't know that I I shall be a candidate for another office, but I'll tell you that if I must secure votes by stifling my conscience then, so hell) me God, I shall remain a private citizen for the rest of my life." The man seemed indignant. "Dont't you know that Christianity and my business can't stand together?" he said. "Won't yur write that down over your own signature," I told him. "I wish I had that statement to show the people from one end of the state to the other, that they might see your own indictment of the traffic." Christianity and the liquor traffi," will not stand together Choose ye this day whom ye will srve. God or Mammon. But some one says money derived from the liquor business is neeessary to run the schools I say it is not. The schools do not depend on this blood money Wipe out the liquor business and if necessary the state can well afford to ~increase the tax on property to sustain the schools' and save the boys and girls of this land. I have seen Prohibition that did prohibit. I h ave just return ed from the New England states. the ho~me of Prohibition, and I teli you that from my observation Lnd ir quiry Prohibition is a suc cess. I traveled thousands of miles, visited the fairs in those states, and in all tha.t journey I never saw but three intoxicated men. On the other hand, abstin en ce from drink is the rule among those people. I saw them tested. I saw fourteen young men, strong and prosperous, offered on one occasion champagne by a South er man, be it said to his shame, but I was glad that he was not a member of our party and every on of the fourteen declined, say ing that they used no intoxicants. Some one will ask, "How about Termnt? That state had Prp hibition for fifty years, and two vears ago the people voted it out Iand substituted local option." Yes, that is true, but have you 'heard the result? I talked to the governor of Vermont, an ex~ ceert Chrisian gentleman, about th condition there, and here is what he told me: Two years ago. because of abuses of the law it soepae the people of Ver mont threw off Prohibition. As a result seven cities in that state voted to great license to sell liquor. So disastrous in every way, so the governor of Vermont told me, has been the affect on those cities that five of the seven have now voted out the saloons and returned to Prohibition, and it is only a question of a short time bef or the other two cities do +he same thing and Vermont, will again be a Prohibition state. "I thank God that af ter two years experience Vermont will go back to Prohibition," said the governor of that state. I thank God that North Caro lina can not be called a whiskey rtate. Already Greensboro, Char lotte, Durham, Goldsboro, New berne, Elizabeth City, and sceres of other places where liquor was sold have voted for Prohibition. The people are aroused. During the session of the legislature some people came to me and said: "But, Governor. you do not seem to be for the Ward bill.', I told them: "No, I am uot for the Ward bill; it means nothing; it is a mere makeshift. If I was a whiskey man in a big town, then I would favor it because it would help my business. "Why don't you let the people of North Carolina vote on Prohibition?" I said. The reply was that the people were not ready for it. I tell you, now that the people are ready for it. The time is ripe. Submit the question of Prohibition to the voters of North Carolina and I believe it will sweep the state* by from 75,000 to 100,000 majority. I pledge you my earnest aid in that great fight. I will canvass North Carolina, speak in every county, and use the strength God has given me to win this battle for temperance. Astonishing Incident. It was, to all her friends, an astonishing incident, that Mrs. I. B. Hunt, of Lime Ridge, Wis., was cured of her dreadful sick ness. "Doctors," she writes, "had given me up; friends were ready to bid me the lirsifarewell; clouds of despair darkened my horizon, and I was a wreck on the shores of despondency, when I began to take Electric Bitters, for my frightful stomach and liver complaint. To the astonishment of all, I was benefited at once and am now- completely and mira culously restored to health." At McMaster Co.'s, Obear Drug Co.'s. and John H. McMaster & Co.'s drugstores; price 50c; guaranteed. INDIAN SUfl1tIER. The Origin of This Name for the Beautiful Days of Autumn. In response to an inquiry from our Longtown correspondent Inst week, the following paragraph is reproduced from the New In ternational Encyclopedia as to the origin of the name, Indian Summer, as applied to the beauti ful days of autumn. As to the origin of this expres sion, Mr. Albert Matthews has shown that it does not occur anywhere either iu printed books or in manuscripts until the year l794; but at that time it was in use throughout the Atlantic States. The popular belief that Indian Summer weather was predictedc by the native Indians in conversation with the first European settlers finds no do cu mentary corroboration, and the idea that the term Indian summer was employed by the early set tlers seems to be a myth. In general, neither this term nor. anything corresponding to it is to be found in any Indian language. The term Indian summer in its present usage. was introduced into England from America. In 1778 Horace Walpole used the same expression but he evidently had in mind the intense heats of the midsummer weather in India and the West Indies. For Over5ixty Years Mis. WINsuo~w's SOOTrITING SYMR P nas been used'for over. 60~ years by ruiil ius of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect svccesss t sootes the child, softens the gumis illaya dll pain; cures wind colic, and is ?he best remedy for Diarrhoa. It will relieve the poor little suff'erer inmmedi atel. Sold by druggists in every part f the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure end ask for "Mrs. IWinslow's Soothing Syrup,'' and take no ther kind. EgWill sell you steel traps to catch the animals with and buy Iyour fars at highest market price. IMATTER#FEALTH ~POWDER *bsoIstuIrPuro HAS 0 aBSTItUTE A Cream of Tartar Powder, e free from alum or phos phatic acid JOVAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Thanksgiving Joys. The Almighty Father has bless ed our Southland, bountifully this Season. Our fields have yielded thei increase. Cotton is King once more, ani is doing his best to make thi land smile under his beneficen reign. And rejoicing ourselves, do no let us forget the hundreds o: little fatherless children gatherei into our Orphanages. Let us make this year the bes they ever had. Send money that answereth al things. In our own plenty, do not le us forget to spread the table o those who have nothing. It was Job who said: "If have eaten my morsel, mysel alene and the Fatherless have no eaten thereof, then let mine arn fall from the shoulder-blade ani mine arm be broken from thi bone. Never Ask Advice. When you have a sough orcold don ask what is good for it and get som medicine with little or no merit ani prhaps dangerous. Ask for Foley' ney and Tar, thegreatest throat an lung remedy, it cures coughs and cold qui kly. Sold by MeMaster Co. He-They say that people wh< marry soon grow to look aliks. She-Then you must conside: my refusal as final.-Chicag News. Every Two Minutes Physicians tell us that all the bl1o od in a healthy human body passes through the heart once in every two minutes. If this action be comes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor health follows poor blood ; Scott's Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why SCOTTS EMULSION is such a great aid is because it passes so quickly into the blood. It is partly di gested before it enters the stomach; a double advan tage in this. Less work for the stomach; quicker and more direct benefits. To get the greatest gmount of good with th least pos sible effort is the desire of everyone in poor health. Scott's Emulsion does just that. A change for the better takes place even be fore yosi expet it. -we wili send you a sample free. Be sure that this picture i the~ fan of' a label'h the wrap per ofevery bottle of Ernulsion you buy. Scc-rr & BoWNE FOR SALE-A good scond hat buggy and harness. Apply . M. Harden. Horses and Mules. A good lot of Horses and Mules now in. Another .big lot to arrive soon. Be sure to see them. Will buy your mules if you want to sell. HARNESS! HARNESS! Big lot of Harness in stock. Will be sold at close prices. Prepared to meet all your Livery Wants too. Sling ROCK HILL BUGGIES. D. A. Crawford. Mr. Merchant: PLEASE BEAR IN MIND THAT I f through the ordering of your [ HEAVY GROCERIES and f FEED PRODUCTS.... You can get anything you want in this line right here at your door any day in the week. Prices guaranteed to be as low as you can get elsewhere. Jus; let me quote you prices and you willisee that this is so. TaIl be pleased to serve you and all orders will be given the best atten tion. Many thanks for past patronage. Your Broker, L. A. Rosborough. Over 100 head.on Hands, Now is the time to buy your horse or mule. Never in the history of Columbia could you do better than you can now at our stables, considering the rise in prices. It is a well known fact that horses and mules are higher, but for the next few days we name prices that are equal to wholesalers' price, prices that will eclipse any and all competitors, prices that will get your business if you will only hear them. Gregory=Conder Mule Co. 1115 Plain Street, - - - COLUMBIA, S. C. : The Rush is Over Now : Let us repair your * break-downs. - -- U N Can give prompt attention to such troubles. -0 : W. 0.. McKeown & Sons, * Cornwell, S. C. 0 * ei@e.e.I.IeI@3e0sE@0E0es0e COTTON GINNERS AND MACHINERY OWNERS Write for prices on the following Babbit Couplings Gauges Lubricatorm Belt, Gundy Drilus Gauge Coc.ks Oil Cups Belt, Rubber Drinl Press HIack Saws Oil Cans Belt, Leather Ejeetors Hammers Lace Leather Packing all kinds, Shafting; Collars for shafting an anything else in machinery supplies. dColumbia Supply Co, - - - - Columbia, S. C.