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Mr. iL L. Showem He Me If it's f surface to be painted, efnameled, stained, vanished or fin ished in any way, there's an Acme Quality Kind to fit the purpose. 6 'y ? ? :? v-V-- .fi liiili o ? 3 Sa?*? L The wood is thoroughly dry. Summer's sun has removed all moisture. 2. Paint penetrates deeper into dry wood. The deeper it goes the better it holds, 3. Fall weather is warm, dry and dependable. Little danger of cold, damp, rainy days, which endanger the durability of the paint, 4. Wet weather decays and de stroys unprotected surfaces. hack of paint means unsightly and less valuable property , 5. Fall painting keeps out winter moisture. * The greatest enemy to the life and beauty of all structures. Ask us about ACME QUALITY HOUSE PAINT. It insures the greatest protection and beauty, at the least cost per year of service. Questions cheerfully answered. 5. A. BLACK Orangeburg, S. C. t ?. R. Aelliclpfcnjp INSURES Cotton Gins (System.) in one of the "Giant" Fire insurance Companies. CALL ON HIM. ?WOFPOED COLLEGE SPAETi SOUTH CAROLINA. 3ENRY N. SXYDER, President. A real college w:th high standards of scholarship and character. Excellent equipment. Unsurpassed health conditions. Expenses mod erate. Loan funt s for worthy students. Fifty-eigth session begins September 20th. Write for catalogue. J. A. GAME WELL, Secretary. WOFFOEI5 COLLEGE PITTING SCHOOL. A high-grade preparatory school for boys. Small classes. Individ ual attention. $155 pays all expenses. Next session September 20th. A. MASON DuPRE, Headmaster. Spartanburg, South Carolina. John H. Schacte Dealer in Groceries of All Kinds Fruits and Vegeta bles in Season. GIVE HIM A CALL Cotton Seed Wanted. If you have any cotton seed to sell or trade, see me before selling at Adden Bros. Warehouse, corner Railroad and E. Russell St. Car load lots solicited. Be fore buying your Fertilizer see me and get prices. R. N. OWEN, Agent for Kershavr Oil Mill.. Key, But Xo Door. An artist has a key which belongs to a door in Paris. Which one? He doesn't know, but starts on a quest for the door. Read the splendid mystery story, "The Key to Yester day," by Charles Neville Buck. For merly published at $1.50; now FIF TY CENTS, at Sims' Book Store. eis a Pair of Rain] (Continued on 3rd page.) proprietor of the Breeder's Gazette, was president of the international Stock Exporters Association and Chairman of the American Reciproc ity and Tariff League when appoint ed a member of tbe. hoard, lie has ! been prominent' in Republican poll ties in the .Middle West and is a pro tectionist. Tie was secretary of tbe National Cattle Growers' Association i from 1S82 to 1SS5 and United States ! Commissioner to the Paris Exhibi tion of 1900. The author of a "Standard History of Short-Horned ,' Cattle," he has always advocated a duty on bides in his paper. He start- i ed life as a newspaper reporter anu has made a fortune in the publishing j business He is fifty-one years old. James Burton Reynolds is the for mer Assitant Secretary cf the Treas ury who was accused by Special Agent Parr of having 'tried to stop the investigation of the sugar-weigh ins frauds. Just before these charges were made public, Mr. Reynolds ceased to be Assistant Secretary and was amde a member of the tariff board. He is a great friend and ad mirer of ex-President Roosevelt, a staunch Republican and a high pro tectionist. He was Secretary of the Republican State Committee of Mas sachusetts from 189C to 1905 and Assistant Secretary, of the Treasury from 1905 to 1909. rtoosevert pointed him chairman of the Gov ernment commission which visited France, Germany, Austria and Great Britain to consider trade relations. He was formerly Washington corre spondent of the Boston Advertiser and Record and editorial writer on the New York Press. He was born In 1870. William Marcellus Howard iB one of the two new members appointed on March 4, 1911. He served seven ?terms in the House of Representa tives as Congresman from Georgia, but was retired by his constituents at the last election because he joined the Tammany Democrats in prevent ing the overthrow of ex-Speaker Can non. Thomas Walker Page, the other Democratic member, was formerly Dean of the College of Commerce and profesor of history and econom ics at the University of California. He was professor of political economy in the University of Virginia when ap pointed by President Taft. He is an educator whose whole life has been spent in the class-room. He stuaied ac the Universities of Virginia (A. M.), Leipsic (Ph. D.), Oxford and La Sorbonne, and is member of the Amercian Economists' Association and of the Amercian Historical As sociation, but. is virtually unknown except as a contributor to economic, historical and scientific journals. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday the third day of October, 1911, the undersigned will file with the Judge of Probate in and for the County of Orangeburg, South Caro lina, their final account as adminis trators of the estate of Emanuel E. Bull, deceased, and will thereupon apply to the Probate Court fo rtheir final discbarge as such administra tors. All persons holding claims against the estate of the said Emanuel E. Bull, deceased, must present their claims duly proven to the undersign ed, or to Glaze & Herbert. Attorneys, Orangeburg, S. C, on or before Mon day the second day of October 1911, or be debarred payment; and all per- i sons indebted to said estate must make payment to the undersigned on or before the hist mentioned date. (Mrs.) Harriet E. Bull, David G. Dantzler, Adminstrators Estate Emanuel E. Bull, deceased, Vance, S. C. 9-1-4 t-S Document Discovered. A paper telling of a large sum of money which the adherents of Na polean bad busied in Corsica, is dis covered, and an expedition is fitted out to capture the prize. Read Har old MacGrath's "A Splendid Haz ard." Formerly published at $1.50; now FIFTY CENTS at Sims" Book Store. Grand Opening Ball. On Friday evening Sept. Sth new Russell street building with over ten tnousand feet floor space open to public. Dancing 9 P. Of. to 1 A M. Music by brass band. Everything free?everybody invited. 4t. Without advertising your store and this paper could not get along?so let's stick together. r Daisies (Cor. tin nod from 1st Paje.) the effects of food adulteration last, ! year, Mr. Rutherford replied: I think a cor.s:rva'ive estimate i would be 550.000." Three million persons were need lessly ill in the United States last' year, he asserts, and chemicals are charged with being mainly responsi ble lie uair.es sewral diseases that are often the results of chemicalss. Kidney disease may result from .saccharin In foods he declares, as is shown by the government's own re port, r Appendicitis frequently results! from consuming boracic acid. Ptomaine poison is nearly always the result of eating partiaiy decom posed foods, especialy milk and milk products, fish and meat, when the signs of deconvpostion have been con cealed by benzoate of soda, formal dehyde, sulphites or other chemical. Dyspepsia and other forms of indi gestion are the Inevitable conse quences of consuming saccharin in excessive quantities, saccharin being 550 'times sweeter than sugar. Typhod fever is a disease most fre quently caused by drinking milk or eating ice cream and other milk prod ucts in which chemicals are employ ed to cover up the evidence of decay. Bright'? disease is a kidney trou ble which often comes from taking too much saccharin. Headache, drowsiness, nausea, and other ailments are caused by consum ing salicycle acid and benzoate of soda. In concluding a discussion of the effects of chemicals the author says: "In addition to their own harmful ef fects, chemicals are sources of great er danger In hiding from our senses the impurities in the foods which otherw.se we might detect in the ill taste and odor. Milk, eggs and fish are three foods especially which be come dangerous when decomposition sets in. "The vilest, most malodorous fac tory refuse may be made pleasant to the sight, taste and smell through the magical effects of benzoate of soda, saccharin and coal tar dye. The coal tar dye gives- a clear, translu cent appearance to the product, the saccharin sweetens?it, and the benzo ate of soda embalms it so it will keep for a decade without spoiling. These disguised putrid foods are additional ly dangerous in hot weather. We adults who have survived the growiug use of chemical foods for the last twenty years have become some what immune to them perhaps, as they say a person can continue tak ing poison in small doses until he is either killed or betimes so he is not affected by poison. Rut with little children the conditions are different and I doubt not that these chemicals eaten by the child or its mother have very much to do with the infantile ! mortality. Valuable Plantation for Sale. I am offering to sell as a whole until October the. fifteenth, 1911, one of the best cotton plantations in | Calhoun County. If not sold as a ' whole by then I shall cut into small tracts and sell. This plantation is located within one mile of Lone Star. S. ('.. and the ! A. C. L. R. H. runs through place, making: it an easy matter to arrange ; a plantation siding at almost any point. There are 126-1 acres in the tract, 4C0 of which are in swamp and pasture land, C00 acres now in cul tivation, and about, two hundred that can be cultivated very easily. The land is a dark soil, practically level and free of stumps: there are twenty good settlements on the plantation, an 1 thr average rent for the past twelve years has been 2,500 pounds of lint cotton per annum. I am asking S30,000 for the place, and left as i: is entirely to tenants it yields a magnificent return on that amount, but this could be very much | increased by push and personal at- J tention, as the character of this land is the very best and repsonds quick ly to work and fertilizer. For full particulars apply to F. ?. Rates, Orangeburg, S. C. 8-31-tf Notice. All persons are hereby forbidden to hunt o.' trespass in any way on my land. H. A. Gleaton. Aug. 22, 1911. 9-5-4t* Help the Farmer. Every one should assist the farm ers in breaking up the conspiracy formed against them to get their Cotton from them for less than it is worth. Con?e, take a ride in the New Ms.xw.el! Messenger? l.i !?. ,? -,V,r>,i; J _lf>? / 0^^m.gm ? . ??<> -?. ? fis 'E'RE ready to show you the new Max well Messenger? the 1912 successor to the famous Model AB Runabout that's made a name for itself everywhere as the Great Economy Car. '\ ~ \ You can ask any owner ?tUsre&e 21,000 of them? a$q*rt;its. qualities. Every one of t&em is enthnsiastic dtoo&tfie. service it has ren dered .tiiem. Not a weak sloiped-rnot a me needed in to drive it in fifteen minutes. It doesn't take fifteen min utes a day to care for it. It holds non-stop and en durance records, as well as economy records by the ... score. ??:? See it in the new dress with improved finish and optional color scheme? either dark-blue body with Sight-blue wheels or blue body and cream-colored run ning gear. & It's sold equipped with top* three oil lamps, two gas lamps, gen- 4.^^^ eratorandmag- ^f^.j 10 1 e it because it's . ablejmer- n*6~aU for it's quick It is here now. Come in women, be- "!* and we'll demonstrate it for easy to you?glad to have you ride m it. Culler & Salley, Distributors ORANGEBURG, WE HOLD up Red Meat?the chew for men. Always good?better now than ever. No spice to make your tongue sore?no excessive sweetening to make you spit yourself away and ruin your stomach. Just high-grade North Carolina tobacco, properly sweetened by a perfect process Sure s you 're born, it's the real thing in good chewing. Get busy today and find out for yourself.f Cut out this ad. and mail to us with your name and address for our FREE offer to chewers only. Name. Address Made only by LlfPFERT SCALES Co.,Winston-Salem,N.C. TOBACC That E. E. Culler has car loads of Buggies, Wagons, Harness One 8,000 pound capacity Mllburn log wagon at a bargain. Also one, two and three horse wagons. BUGGIES?Any style and any quality. Any price. The High Point Buggy is as good as any that ever came to Orangeburg for the money. The Oxford Buggy is better than any buggy at the Kime price. The Sandford Buggy has no equal in quality. We hav e others in stock, such as: Delker. Parry, Peerless and Capital. All high grade and well finished vehicles. Over 100 sets of Harness to pick over. Such as Montgomery Moore & Go's. None better. Fmoak and McCreary's are made up to-date. The Superior Harness, fine quality is always there. Graft and Moesbtach make good harness. Martin and Robertson are first class Come in and look our sttock over and get prices. The most important Is quality, prices and quantity. Phone 124L E. E. CULLER