University of South Carolina Libraries
AMERICAN COTTON OIL CO. Useful and Highly Prized Emanations from Cotton Seed? Once Almost Useless. FACTORIES ALL OVER UNION Chemically Pure, Nourishing and Healthful Products. A thousand things pleasing, useful, meritorious and highly prized in the mechanics and arts have within the past thirty years emanated from the frowzy cottouseed, at one time considered practically useless by the cotton growers in the Sunny South. Step by step have these things been attained. Days and months have the chemists toiled to reach the goal of success. Millions of dollars were expended to extract the virtues that were known to exist in the little brown embryo that ignorance wasted and continued blindly wasting until science intervened j^nd turned the river of waste into a sea of gold. Columbus found cotton in use by the natives when he touched America's shores in 1492. Cortez mentions it as being rudely manufactured into cloth by the Mexican Indians. The snow-white bolls were found growing wild in Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley as early as 1536. Virginia colonists cultivated it as long ago as 1621. No one dreamed then that it would be a world commodity?no one thought of the value of the seed. Contrasting the wastefulness of those days with the economies of the present, and the various uses to which the seed and its component parts are put, is the purpose of this article. The American Cotton Oil Company, No. 27 Beaver Street, New York, with lactones in various States of the Union, export annually cottonseed oil and other products obtained from the seed to the amount of $50,000,000. The enormity of this sum is almost incomprehensible to the lay mind, yet that does not wholly represent the wealth obtained from a material that thirty years ago was deemed of small consequence. This great American industry is not chiefly supported by foreign trade. Its greatest market is at home. More than half of the production is consumed in the United States, where the purity and wholesomeness of the oils and the usefulness and values of the cake, meal, linters and hulls are making new friends and wider markets year by year. From the seed come compound lard, cooking oil, salad oil and soap oil, chemically pure, nourishing and healthful. The lard is recognized as a mixture of cotton oil and beef stearine, and produces a vegetable product that is unequalled. Having the indorsement of leading physicians, the cooking oil, which is made strictly without smell or taste, ranks high for the use of persons suffering from indigestion or weak stom fcchs. Dmi'am a flirt annnftvionf rvf fKn Piirn JL uui ivi kuc cuabtLucut vi iuc x uiv Food law cottonseed oil was exported in large quantities and returned to this country as olive oil, having had 20 per cent of olive oil mixed with it, and then sold at the price of pure olive oil. The profit to the adulterators on the other side was eQormous, as the cotton oil sold for 46 cents a gallon, as against $2.00 a gallon for olive oil. Pure cottonseed oil, as obtainable today under the protection of the Pure Food Act, is preferred for salad purposes to olive oil, it being readily assimilated and of lasting benefit to weak > stomachs. Stearine, which comes from the pressing of salad oil under ice. is a natural butter by its consistency and taste. Nearly all of this is sold in Holland to manufacturers of butterine, who ship it to England, where it has a large sale. Toilet soaps of the highest grade, the use of which imparts to the flesh the softness and smoothness of the babe's cheek, are made of oil from the seed that wa? thirty years ago looked upon as worthless. Cottonseed meal with its agreeable nutty flavor, is, from the agriculturist's point of view, the most important, because it has proved the best food for live stock. It enriches the product of the dairy and imparts to the cattle the smooth, sleek, glossy hide so highly prized by dairymen who take pride in the appearance of their stock. Thousands of tous of cottonseed meal are used annually by tobacco growers and planters in the Connecticut Valley, New England States, Pennsylvania, Virginia and wherever the prized weed is cultivated. A fine, light-oolored leaf that commands the highest price results from the use of the cottonseed meal, and the ?v? oiiAAaoafnl fnKn nnn f?rAnrn?-Q asvnr liiuot DUtV/CODiui ivuavvu gtVTTVio ovn prime cottonseed meal on their land broadcast immediately after ploughing. The American Cotton Oil Company's products may be found in the kit?hen and on the tables of every civilized country in the world. It is burning in tbe altar lamps of churches, and is lighting armies of miners as they delve and burrow in the secret places of the earth. OVERTAXED Hundreds of Abbeville Bead XT ? U ?/.??. Cits uuuw n xiat lb rnoauo. The kidneys are overtaxed ; Have too much to do. They tell about it in many aches and painsBackache, sideache, headache, Early symptoms of kidney ills. Urinary troubles, diabetes, Brigbt's disease follow. W. L. Gresbam, living at 317 Crayton St., Anderson, S. C., says: "Several years ago while living in Birmingham, Ala., I was attacked with severe pains in the small of my back. These came on suddenly and lasted for several days dur ing which time 1 suffered intensely. There was also a soreness across my kidneys and these organs were very iwegular in action. I learned of Doan's Kidney Pills, procured a box at a drug store and it required but a short use to prove their curative powers. After usinc two boxes I was entirelvcured. and have not been bothered since with any sign of kidney trouble. I can say to others that Doan's Kidney Pills act up to representations and are a very reliable remedy." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name?Doan's?and take no other. If you don't want your goods promptly, please do not phone aa, aa promptness la what we go by. C. A. Mil ford <s Co. Oarden bote at Harrison's. 1 LI i University of i Wide range of choice in 6 and Professional Courses It lor of Arts, Bachelor of ? tion, Bachelor of Laws, M and Electrical Engineer. Well equipped Labora volumes. Expenses moderate?n expenses. vr?< t1f\Atu\ u. IlOAl ucooiuu \ivtiu; ut For Announcement wr President, ! A LARGE | Gar der | Bought at a di j be sold at a ( f Tf vnn npprl 1i Jm-a. jvm. "wv. All kinds of pi] | sonable pricei J MOTTO: "LIVE | G. A- HA Dili1 lest F DUE W With the best modern coi high standards of teaching i for preparation for the greal Terms moderate. For attra REV. JAMES BOYCE, Special Sumo . . . 1 Extremely low round tri; now on sale for all trains Sa trains only, to Isle of Palms Mountain Resort Points, from lina. Tickets good to returr sale. Also special Sunday Augusta and intermediate sta For details, rates, etc., appl J. L. MEEK, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ga. SOUTHERN THE SOOTH'S G Unexcelled Dinning Car Sei Through Pullman Sleepir Convenient Schec Arrival and De] No. of Trains. 114 Leaves at 10:20 i Columbia. 115 Arrives from G at 12:18 p.m. 116 Leaves at 4:30 p 117 Arrives at 5:35 f 112 Leaves at 5:50 ft 111 Arrives at 7:05 p For full information as to rates, i Railway Ti J. L. MEEK, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ga. VALUABLE \ Land for Sale Mrs. J. A. Stevenson offers for sal a valuable tract of land, containln about 228 acres, situate, nearest poin within one and one-half miles < Hodges, splendid branch bottom lan and well wooded over about threi fonrthB of the whole. Will sell rei sonably on easy Urms. For informf tion apply to W. W. Bradley. Buy You a Home Anderson, S. C., June 29,190* Press and Banner. Abbeville, S. C. Cut out the ad sent last week?hav sold the place. We now offer 300 acres near Lowt desville, S. C.. at $12.50 per acre. On< third cash, balance lone time. Writ me if interested. Good land and goo country. Buy now and quite renting Will cut you off 100 acres if you life* Quit renting, buy a home! Writ us for further information. Anderson Real Estate am Investment Comyany. E E. Horton, President South Carolina. Scientific, Literary, Graduate >ading to degrees of? Bacheicience, Licentiate of Instrucaster of Arts, Civil Engineer tories, Library of over 4u,000 lany students make their own jgins September 23,1908. ite to the Columbia, S. C. STOCK OF | * !! I X IUiJW | iscount and will ^ >rice to suit you. i ; buy now. ^ pe fitting at rea- ) s. J " AND LET LIVE." ? lRRISON. I 'emaJo Coif, EST, S, C. iveniences and equipment, and ind living, this is an ideal place ; responsibilities of womanhood. ctive catalog write Doe West, S. C, ner Excursions riA . . . f RAILWAY. p Week-end Excursion tickets are turdays and for Sunday morning: i, Tybee; also to many attractive i principal stations in South Caro ? *+{! Tnoc/lov fnllAU'lnct rlflfp nf 1 until X ULC7UWJ IVtiWTTOig V.??.v Excursion rates from Columbia, tions to Isle of Palms and Tybee. y to Southern Railway Agents, or J. C. LUSK, Div. Pass. Agent. Charleston, S. C. RAILWAY. IREATEST SYSTEM. vice. ig Gars on all Through Trains, [ules on all Local Trains* parture of Trains. i.m. for Greenville and reenvllleand Columbia . m. for Greenville, rom Columbia. >r Columbia. >. m. from Greenville. routes, etc., consult nearest Southern icket Agent, or J. C. LUSK, Division Pass. Agent, Charleston, S. C. ______ Blue Ridge Railway Co. Effectl ve J angary 5.1907. No. 12 No. 10 No. 8 Eastbound. Daliy Dally Dally Ex. 8un Stations? A.M. P.M. A.M. Lv Walballa 8 30 5 IS 12 80 ? Lv West Union 8 85 5 10 12 40 e Lv Seneca 8 53 5 38 1 10 g Lv Jordanla 8 55 5 40 2 05 t Lv Adams 9 10 5 55 2 28 .i Lv Cherry's 9 13 5 58 2 83 'r Lv Pendleton 9 25 6 10 2 58 d Lv Antun 9 38 ? 18 3 08 ?_ Lv Sandy Springs 9 86 6 21 3 18 " Lv Denver 9 41 6 26 3 48 ** Lv West Anderson 9 55 6 40 8 43 I* Lv Anderson (Pais, aep). 10 00 6 45 3 53 . Lv Anderson (Fgt. dep)... 10 08 0 48 4 48 I Ar BeltOD...., 10 30 7 15 5 15 Westbound. No. 11 No. 9 No. 7 8tatlona? P. M. A. M. A. M. Lt Ballon 7 80 11 15 t Lv Anderson (Km. depot) 7 56 12 21 ? Lv Anderion (Pass. dep).. 7 59 12 24 8 10 m Lv West Anderson 8 05 12 30 0 20 w Lv Denver 8 18 12 42 8 40 Lv Bandy Springs 8 23 12 47 8 50 Lv Autun 8 26 12 49 8 55 Lv Pendleton 8 84 12 57 9 10 i Lv Cherry's 8 44 1 07 9 40 * Lv Adam* 8 47 1 10 9 45 Lv JordanU 9 05 1 28 10 10 e Lv Seneca 9 07 1 80 10 15 Lv West Union 9 25 1 50 11 20 Ar Walballa 9 80 1 55 11 30 >. Will also slop at tbe following stations and take on and let off passengers?Pbldney's, ~ James, Toxaway, Welob. d J. R. Anderson, Superintendent. t% ; ? DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY ^ Will Surely Slop Thai Cough. Sllka. Silks. Don't forget that we always keep the blue ribbon tafieta, the beat money oan boy. Tb^H. M. Uaddon Co, i MW SECOND ASSIGNMENT. 4 Leaf Oat of a Newspaper Reporter** Early Experience. "My first assignment," said an old wporter, "was to find out whether somebody was in town, or something of that sort. I know there was nothing to b? written about it. I got the information and reported to the city editor. That was all I had to do that day. For the rest of the day I sat around the office and looked od with an Infatuation that has never decreased. Tbe next day I got my second assignment. In this there was something to write about. , "The city editor handed me a narrow little strip of white tissue paper out from a aheet of ship news and containing, in two lines of writing, Information that two laborers had been washed overboard from the barge So-and-so, laden with ore, com* lng up the bay In tow of the tug So-andso. What I was to do was to get the facts about the ooourrence and write them. "The city editor said that if I would find the consignees of the barge or the owner of the tug I would ffat on the trace of the story. The names of the consignees were In the two lines of Bhlp news, and limply by looking In tbe directory I found their office without the slightest trouble. There I learned where tbe cargo was tied op. It was at a wharf In Hobokes or Weehawken, I don't remember which, and I made for th&t. When I turned from tbe fcreet down the whfcrf, there she was, tied up alongside, her name on the wbeelboude. 1?*'* L-t# on/? man one was auuuv uou uuiuun^, UUv. ware still at work carrying off tbe ore. "I was not altogether without expert* nee In life, but I had never done anything that gave me quite tbe satisfaction that it did to find that ore barge in my first; notual experience as a reporter. Tbe captain was aboard, and so were tbe surviving members of tbe little party of laborers who had started up the bay in her, and so tbe whole story was right there. I sat on tbe stringpiooe of the wharf and talked with tbe captain of tbe boat. He told tbe story with entire willingness. Of oourse there was no reason why he shouldn't, and then I went back to the office and wrote It up. It was not a great story. I knew that. It was like thousands of stories that the newspapers are sending after all the time, of the manifold dally oocurrence of life, but I must put it together in gcraj shape, get in all the facte and put the story in the smallest space. "In the morning I went out and got a paper before breakfast. I wanted to read my story of tbe loss of the men from the ore barge. I looked the paper over; atad, my gfaokrus, I couldn't .find It nil I I thought they must have left It out altogather, tut when I came to look the paper over %giiln: I found it?a scant stickful, wlth^a single line bead. "But when I oame to read It over I found that the facts were all there. They bad simply been brought' closer together by a method of condensation far mpre acute than mina and bad then been set In agate type. "?New York Hun. Importance of Regular Living. A question has lately arisen as tn the increase or tbe reverse in nertous diseases, some arguing tbat tbe oanse of tbe supposed increase in such nervous diseases lies in tbe Increased demand made by tbe conditions of modern life upon the brain. It 1b quite true tbat tbe conditions of life are very different nowadays from what they were a few years ago. We now live In a high pressure age, and in one of keen competition, when greater effort is needed in every branch of life to attain a successful positlon, when the brain is always working and there is constant tension. Such conditions, It will be perfectly obvious to all, are not favorable to a diminution of nervoos diseases, but rather tbe reverse. At the same time, it cannot be denied tbat tbe oomforts of life haye increased. We have better sanitation, oleaner houses and fresher air. There can be no question that men of regular bablta are healthier, happier, live longer and do more than those who obey saprice and impulse. The adoption of hygienio habits saves tbe nervous system an enormous amount of friotionand waste. It preserves vitality. Regularity economises not only pbysioal stamina, but time as well. The man who knows no system In tbe details of his life, who exhausts nainn> at the instance of a passing whim, who drinks and smokes to excess, who wastes the talents bestowed upon blm, If Ibe one who must sooner or later fall a viotiro to disease. Regularity and moderation In all things should be the motto of life, and it should be remembered that regularity does not necessarily preclude the enjoyment of variety. A certain amount of variety prevents man from beooming a mere machine, but variety should not Interfere with those regular habits of life which are necessary to the maintenance of health.?New York Ledger. Puziled Author. The San Francisco Argonaut tells an amusing story about Alpbonse Daudet, When be brought out "Sappho," an Amerloan publishing bouse that issues religion# boobs,, not knowing its character, offered M. Daudet a large sum for advanoe sheets of the work. He accepted the offer, and tbe advanoe sheets were sent. When the publishers received them, they decided that tbey oould not issue the book, and they cabled to tbe author, " 'Sappho' will not do.' This dispatch puzzled Daudet. Ha oonsulted with numbers of friends, and '* * ? * ? -I?* mKInK Akoo (010 was tee coutiuoiuu a If nuiuu *MW^ eventually arrived: "Sappho" in French la spelled with one "d"?"Sqpbo," after the Greek fashion. In English it la spelled with two. An unusually aoute friend pointed thla out to Dendet, which muoh relieved the novelist, and he oabled baok to the publishers, "Spell H with two p'f." It is needless to state that the publishers were more astonished at Daadet's reply than he had been at their cable dispatch. JsptiMM Journalism. "Japanese Journalism," says a missionary's wife, "is a singular profession in many of its features. There Is pwotioally no saoh thing as freedom of the press in Japan. Whenever a newspaper publishes something unfriendly to the government it is suppressed and the editor is sent to prison. The real editor is never lmprisoned, though. Every newspaper has what the Japanese call a 'dummy editor,'and it is hiB sole duty to go to jail every time the paper is suppressed for offending the mikado. Then the real editor changes the Same of the paper and keeps on publishing it. Dummy edltprs spend most of their tine In prison." Biff Eri. In tbe British museum, London, tne museum of tbe Academy of Soienoe at Paris, theNatiooai museum at Vienna and In the several institutions for the advancement of science there may be seen specimens of birds' eggs whioh are almost ai 1 Lavge as ft two gallon jug. These eggs were laid by the eplornls, an extlaot and gigantic bird ai Madagascar. i George JohnHtone. Geo. B. Cromer J. Moore Mar?. Johnstone, Cromer & Mars, ? - -?TT-T-r-mT?a I i A. W X OFFICE OVER GLENN'S STORE. G. M. BEASLEY, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, ABBEVILLE, S. C. Office over Philson, Henry & Co.'a Store. Loans negotiated on well improved real estate. < n . . VJ ' " ' *' " 'J'lZ" Calvert & Uickles ? Headquarters for ? White Hickory Wagons Owensboro Wagons, Bock Hill Buggies, Summer Buggies, Cheap Buggies, Harness, Laprobes, etc. Calvert & Nickles. Feb 24. 1904. tf Abbeville-Greenwood MUTUAL i it n f i n i ii n n IHSUIAIM ASSOCIATION. Property Insured, $1,500,000 January 1st, 1908, YX/RITE TO OR CALL on the undertl ;nec. or the Director of your Township for any Information yon may desire about our plan of Insuranoe. We lnanre yonr property against destrut tlon by FIB, W1UX K LIBITUM, and do bo cheaper than any insurance Con. paoy In exlsteuoe. Remember we are prepared to prove to yot that ours Is the safest and cheapest plan cf Insnranoe known. J. R. BLAKE, Gen. Agent Abbeville, S. C. J. FRASER LYON, Pres. Abbeville, S. C. BOARD DIRECTORS. 8. G. Majors,..? Greenwood J.T. Mabry - Cokesbury W. B. Acker ....Donalds M. B. Clinkscsles Due West W. W. L. Keller -Long Cane I. A. Keller jSmithvllle W. A. Stevenion Cedar Spring W. W. Bradley - Abbeville Dr. J. A. Anderson Antrevllle S. 8. Boies Lowndesvllle A. O. Grant Magnolia J. W. Morrah Calhoun Mills 8. L. Edmonds .....Bordeaux H. L. Rasor. Walnut Grove W.A. Nlckles .Hodges J. D. Coleman Coronaca D.8. Hattlwanger ?Ninety-Six / C. H. TowDsead ......'...Klnards J. Add. Calhoun Fellowship Joseph Lake Phoenix Rev. J. B. Muse Verdery J. H. Chiles. Jr Bradley J. W. Lyon Txoy W. A. Cheatham Yeldell G. E. Dorn Calllson G. E. Dorn Klrkseys J. H. Brooks Brooks Aboevllle. S c., Jan. 1. 1908 REGISTRATION The attention of the public is called to the Act of the recent Legislature, approved the 24th day of February, 1908, which reads as follows : An Act to Provide for the Re-Enrollmeut aud Registration of the Qualfied Electors of this State During the Year 1908, and to Provide Com gensation for tne Supervisors or Registration. Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Btate of South Carolina, That the Supervisors of Registration in each County of the State are required to re-enroll all the qualified electors in this Stale during the year 1908. Sec. 2. That the same time the said Supervisors shall register all persons who may make application therefor and who may be entitled thereto. Sec. 3. That for the purpose of such enrollment and registration the said Supervisor shall keep the books of registration open at the several county J eats every day (Sundays excepted), between the hours of nine a. m. and six p. m., during the months of July and August, 1908; and in addition thereto, they shall attend, during the month of September, 1908, at least one day in each township, in their respective Counties, of which at least ten day's notice shall be given by advertisement in a newspaper published in the County ; and In Counties containing fifty thousand inhabitants they shall attend in each city, town, or industrial community, containing three hundred or more inhabitants, at least one day, upon similar notice : Provided, That the provisions of this Section shall only apply t > the re-enrollmentand registration for the year 1908. Sec. 4. That for the purpose of said re-enrollmeut the Secretary of State shall furnish the Supervisors of Registration with all the necessary books, and the sum of five hundred dollars shall be appropriated for supplying said books. Sec. 5. That the Supervisors of Reg IMllaUULl BUSH CUUU ICMits iw tuvti services, during the year 1908, the sum of two hundred dollars, to be paid by the State quarterly, as otbef State officers are paid: except in tbe Counties of Anderson, Charleston, Greenville, Sumter, Orangeburg, Bichland, where they shall each receive two hundred and fifty dollars for the year 1908; Provided, That in Spartanburg County they shall receive this year three hundred dollars, to be paid as above provided; that, after the year 1908, the Supervisors of Registration shall each receive fifty dollars per annum in of! years and one hundred dollars in general election years: except in the above named Counties, where they shall each receive seventy-five dollars per annum in off years, and in general election years they nhall receive two VmnHrorl rtnllnra oanh npr annum in. eluding tbe County of Spartanburg. Sec. 0. All Act? or parts of Acts inconsistent with this Act be, and the same are hereby, repealed. Approved the 24tb. day of February, A. D. 1908. All persons having business in the matter of registration wjll call on the Chairman, W. C. Sherard, in the store of E. R. Thomson on the public square. W. C. Sherard, Chairman. A. F. Calvert, R. H. Armstrong, Board of Registration. We have the store, we have the goods, we have (he clerks. Phone 107, and that's all yon have to do. C. A. Mllford & Co. Huyler'a ! Huyler's ! Yes, Huy ler's. We double our orders almoit every week. Trade Is Increasing. Goods always fresh. C. A. Mllford & Co. Fountain syringes, bot water bottles, Ice bags, in tact anything you want In tbe rubber goods line can be had at tbe op-to-date pharmacy of C. A. Mllford & Co. ,' ( I JUS! A LARGE SF Silverware, Out GIj Hand Pai If you are in nee ents of any desc to your inte We have W. E. J( THE JE Summer Ex ... \ Southern Round trip Summer Excurs tain resort points are now on sa ly reduced rates. Tickets good Asheville, Waynesville, Hend Sky;" Lake Toxaway and th now in their glory. Apply to Southern Railway J. L. MEEK, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent. Atlanta, Ga. \ FARMERS' M State, County an President: Yice-F F. E. HARBISON. P. B. JtJOara OX JL/irouturi Vieanaka, J. H. I>uPre, R. M. Haddoi Clinkacalea, C. C. Gambrell. We solid yonr business t it safely and We are in potion to make yon 1 when placed in Our Saving's I T. EDGAR ANDER ROOFING AND II Guttering. Ventilators, Skylig Cresting, Ridge Capping, Gravi Mill and Repair Work a Specia The Famous Kelse ....Phone or W: 1 ? J.W.SIGN ABBEVi: Office under th Is well equipped in his line of bus Caskets ranges from the cheapest to tt His funeral car is a fine one. Air tigl the old brick vault and which is muct side casket. Drop couch caskets. CI Phone 88 ^Tm A HOI IS GO] See about ar and keep cool W. N. Tl Boston, Mass Very Low Rates vii Account Supreme Lodge, Knij way announces very low round ti to be sold July 30th, 31st, Augus gust 10, 1908. Extension of final 1 September 10, 1908, can be had b paying fee of $1.00. Stop-overs at Washington, 1 York. Round trip rates from prii Abbeville * 32 If, Anderson 32 00 Charleston 31 95 i Chester 2!) 50 Columbia 31 25 Greenville 31 25 For detailed information, etc., apj J. L. MEEK, Asst. (len. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Cia. . ? IN! X a [IPMENT OF ISS, inted China. . ;d of Wedding Presription it will be rest to see us. the Goods. )HNSON, IWELER. I cursion Rates IA... - l Railway. lion Tii-kets to Seashore and Mountle via Southern Railway at great- ' ? returning until October 31st, 1908. ersonville, in the "Land of the p Beautiful Sapphire Country," y for ntfes, tickets, etc. J. C. kUSK, Div. Pass. Agent, Charleston, S. C. I ABBEVILLE 1 City Depository. resident: C&aMer: 8PEED. J. H. DuPEZ. s * F. E. Harrison, P. B, Speed, G. A* a, W. B. Moore, W. P. Greene, J. F. ind are prepared to handle conservatively. oans, and to pay interest on depoeita, > Department. ARCHER, SON, S. C. LETAL bts, Conveyors, Cornic Finials, el Stops, Gasoline Tanks, Cotton Ity. y Hot Air Furancea. rite for Price*.... : 7 Funeral Director. LLE, S. C. I e Eureka Hotel. ? iness. His complete stock of Coffins and H le finest. Burial Robes always on hand. H ) t water-proof steel vaults which replaces H ) more reliable. Metal lined cases for in- H larges reasonable and service acceptable. H| W. SIGIV. I TIME I MING! I wmm v l Electric Fan M iH HOMSON. I ., and Return I a Southern Railway. H l*hts of Pythias, the Southern Rail-, ip rates from all stations. Tickets MpB t 1, 2, 3 and 4,1908. Limited Au- 9R imit to leave Boston not later than HM y depositing ticket at Boston and jaSj Baltimore, Philadelphia and New Hflj ncipal stations as follows: |9| Greenwood $.3170 T x? 1-H1 nB i jit master ?- " ? BM Newberry 31 50 M Orangeburg 31 00 . MM Rock Hill 29 05 BH Spartanburg 30 40 BH ily Southern Railway agents, or J. C. IjUSK, fi|j Division Passenger Agent, Hflj Charleston, S. C. jggH I