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I Office Supplies] 3 C HI S U P P We have a full and comple as Pencil and Ink Tablets, Ink, ^ gieia Dustless Crayons, Dustles m. Conklin and Waterman Founta M flfl \ A J Harness, Saddles, Grain Drills, Etc. Yours to Williamsburg I Kingstree, WATCHES JEWEL1 OPTICAL GOOD CUT GLASS s. ars:oiv?. I QUALITY JE1 257 King St.. - < fPHO^ > "= ? Everything found i nto-date Drug Store. IV tary Soda Fountain in t ; .All prescriptions er fully and promptly con druggest. Exclusive Ager q Exquisite 2 Scoff 3)rui ^,==0= THE WA ji bl f S * i c*nr* IJ. Lu 31 HAS] Horses ai For Sale or J. L. ST Livery, Feed ai Lake City, % Wm Also a full line of stationei I styles and shades just received I KINGSTRE I I Magazines and | B I Periodicals | V^OIIl] Farmers of Wil Dear Sirs: Bring your tol tree, the best tot the State, and see Mules, Buggies, S . icy for Norris' Candies o =T=1i 1 \^ompamj ^ RISON JT 1! UCKEY1 BOTH I ad Mules J Exchange. | UCRE Y| nd Sale Stable gj South Carolina ?| Iiamsburg: J I Daccojto Kings>acco market in us for Horses, Surreys, Wagons, I Mowers, Rakes, please, ive Stock Co, - s. c Vi DIAMONDS ,0 CITVCDU7ADC I J OIL T Ll\ TV ill\L | NOVELTIES ETC. <^.S ds CO., I WELERS, | CHARLESTON, S. C. I HBBHHHnBnBOCi iTHT| n a high class and up- O lost modern and sanihe County. . .trusted to us are careipounded by a licensed* I DqL I Toilet Articles"! I LIES teline of School Supplies, such Pens, Penstrffs, Pencils, Hys Erasers, Bookstraps, Rulers, in Pens. y for all uses in the latest . Call and see this line. :e drug I Kodaks and | GAGE Fall M . Ope Wednesday i m September Every La S. M THE BIG STORE Kingstrei II T1 W hen in 101 Store Headq All Fresh Meats and Veg THE PEOPL H, A. MILLE ? F( mm inii SI LEWIS i Phone No. 143 ??????? hpi /> mis coupon u< For Miss P. O. A Candidate in the "Beauty ? burp: County Fair as the mo: County. 11 Coupons Must be Neatly 'HATS illinery ning If I Thursday 29 and 30 dy Invited arcus ON THE CORNER a r Uj V/# | Arn Make Our | uarters. 1 wmammmmmmmmmmamammmm I Us Yn Caitle Best Market Price Paid etables on Hand in Season* E'S MARKET R, Proprietor. | HHBHnnBBMR OR || ngs to Eat EE : CARTER ? -I 3od for 100 Votes tueen" Contest of the Wiiliams2r Viomitifill milnrr lo/Tir in +Viir? w^muvuu x J VUU5 1CIU J 1 ;i LlilO Trimmed Before Being Sent In Assist Your i Stomach To Get Rid of the Poisonous Gases and Fermenting Food. ! A good long fast will do this I sometimes. A trip to the mountains. Tramping. Roughing it Yes, very good remedies. But are you going to avail yourself of either one of these remedies. No? Then the next best thing is to try a bottle of I Peruna. Take it according to directions. You will have a natural appetite. All gas and fermentation in the stomach will disappear. Read what Mrs. Emma BeU, Box 204, Fort Pierce, Florida, says: "/ was taken suddenly with swelling of the stomach and bowels, and great distress. Very paintui. i nree doctors gave me no relief. Could not eat anything. Everything soured, i was starving to death. / began taking Peruna and was soon strong enough to do work. After taking five bottles I can truthfully say I am well. I gained twenty pounds." The Poets Sing High and Dry. Since South Carolina went dry there is more pathos in the rhymes /)f her poets. One sings in The Pickens Sentinel: "Hang the corkscrew high above us, Put away the shaker, too; Plant the old mint-bed in onions ? We have met our Waterloo. "Jugs will now be used for cider, Ke^s and barrels for preserves: Soda mint will cure our snakebites, l>romo-seltzer fix our nerves. I "Put away your old umbrellasLay the mackintoshes by; What's the earthly use of rubber, When the darned old State's so dry? ; "When our arid throats are parching For the good old cups that cheer We can go to bed and dream of Sweitzer cheese and ice-cold beer." , 9 , \'olicB lo School Trustees. 1 We want one big meeting of the j trustees this fall. October 8 is the \ time set; the court house the place.! Every trustee in the county is de-1 i sired to be present, as matters of vital interest will be discussed. We j realize that you are busy men, but we believe that you will lay aside other matters for this one day.; ! Your presence will be appeeciated; i your absence will be noticed. Mr Swearingen will be with us and we ! shall have an afternoon session. We j thank you for the interest you have j already shown in your schools, and j in advance for your presence at the ; meeting. Yours sincerely, J G McCullough, j It County Supt of Education. Biliousness and Constipation. j It is certainly surprising 1 hat any! I woman will endure the miserable j feeelings caused by biliousness and constipation, when relief is so easily | had and at so little expense, Mrs Chas Peck. Gates, N Y, writes: "About a year ago.I used two bottles of Chamberlains Tablets and ; they cured me of biliousness and constipation." Obtainable everywhere. | Cow Hides j |t WANTED I HISHEST CASH PRICE + PAID FOR EVERY HIDE I CAN GET. BEFORE | % YOU SELL BE SURE j t TO SEE ME. % Is F EPPS| <f How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hi;n perfectly honorable in pi. business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. NATIONAL. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, ae.lng dire< tly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all I)ruggi3ls. Tak*- ilall a Family Pills for constipation. Malaria or Chills & Fever Prescription No. 666 is prepared especi~..y for MALARIA or CHILLS &. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. (t acts on the 'ivcr bcttc- than Calomel and does not ?r:pc or sicken. 25c In digestion we have to deal not merely with simple solution, but with the chemical conversion of insoluble into soluble substances?a much more difficult process. For this reason a one inch cube of solid food would take much more than 10,000 times as long to digest as the same quantity which had first been reduced to fine bits by the action of the teeth and the saliva glands. Science now believes that much modern dyspepsia arises from our having lost the habit of living on hard, dry foods. When all our food was so hard and dry that it had to be well- chewed before we could swallow it our salivary glands were kept more active and our teeth cleaner.?New York American. Odd Signs. A tinman in the south of England has a sign which reads, "Quart Measures of All Shapes and Sizes Sold Here." At a market town in the midlands the following placard was affixed to the shutters of a watchmaker who had decamped, leaving his confiding creditors mourning, "Wound Up and the Mainspring Broke." In one of the principal streets of another small town the same shop was occupied by a doctor and a shoemaker, the man of medicine having the front and he of the leather working in the rear. Over the door hung the sign, "We Repair Both Body and Sole." On the window of a coffee room there one day appeared the notice "This Coffee Room Removed Up 6tair3 Till Repaired." ? London Mail. ? * The Fulmar Petrel. The fulmar petrel somewhat resembles a common gull at a distance, but has a much more graceful flight, skimming the waves or hovering by the cliffs without perceptible motion of the wings. It makes its nest upon the grassy ledges and cliffs of St. Kilda and is caught with a rod in the same way as a puffin, only as it is found on the precipices it is more difficult to secure. It was greatly valued for merly for its oil, of which each bird lias about half a pint and which it uses as a means of defense and ejects with great force at an enemy. It i3 the purest animal oil in existence and is still used for various purposes and also medicinally by the natives for sprains and bruises. ?London Mail. Why Turkish Women Go Veiled. Turkish women do not wear veils because of their religion, as many suppose. It is merely the survival of an old custom. When the Turks still lived in Tartary, before the fimp nf Mohammed. it was the hab CHEW YOUR FOOD WELL", This Will Aid Digestion and Help to Banish Dyspepsia. "Chew your food well/' is a motto which should bo written large on the walls of dining rooms, restaurants and every other place where human beings eat. The reason ii that in order to digest food in the shortest possible time and with the least possible effort it must first be dissolved, and this can be accomplished only by adequate chewing. Just how much thorough chewing lessens the strain on the digestive apparatus can be seen by a very simple experiment. Take a one inch cube of hard, solid, nonporous sugar candy and drop it inir) a pint of water. It will take at least half an hour and perhaps much longer to dissolve because a cube of this size has only 6ix square inches of surface exposed to the soNent action of the water. If, however, a similar cube of candy is broken into 100 smaller pieces before being placed in the water it will dissolve 10,000 times as quickly, because there is now 10,000 times as much surface ar^a exposed. it of the men to steal such women for wives as attracted them. This led to so much fighting that about the second century after Christ the Turks came together and decided that henceforth the women should go veiled and should not meet men, but dwell in harems, as 60on as the/ arrived at womanhood, which waa at about eleven years of age. Unconscious Self Criticism. Mr. X., the subeditor, was asked to write an article on superstition and imbecility. When the article was printed the opening sentence was found to be as follows: "That imbecility i? not on the wane perusal of the following lines will amply demonstrate." ?Paris Figaro. Their Natural Place. "The waves of laughter in the audience"? "What about them?" "Naturally, they passed over a sea of faces."?Baltimore American.