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?THE NST? BM OF AUGUST I L. C. HATN2, Pree't, F. 0. FORD, Cashier. J Capital, $250,000. Undivided Froflts '$125,000 Facilities o? our magnificent New Vailti leontatniue -Jiu Safely-Lock I'.oxcs. Differ. >n: aiz< a are offon.-j to our patra?a a:id the public at ?3.00 io $10.00 per annum. . THE PLANTERS LOAN ANO SAVINGS BANK. 1 AUHUSTi, GA. 8 Fays Interest on Deposits. Accounts Solicited. JL. e. Ha jue. President. Chas. C. Howard, Cashier. VOL. LXVI??. EDGEFIELD, S. C.. "WEDNESDAY. JUNE IT. 1903 NO 25. THE NEWLY DISCOVERED HIPPARION y V THANKS to the result of an ex pedition sent (?ul Inst year at tho cost or Mr. William C. Whitney, tho story of tho evo lution of the horse J'S .now complete. This expedition, planned by Professor The Thiee-tceJ jttip.-arfon, Just E Henry Fairfield Osborn, of the Ameri can Museum cf Natural History, and led by Mr. J. W, Gidley, went explor ing In the Xiobrara beds ?ii the south ern part of South Dakota. Nothing was found uuril tho very end of tho season, when a herd of threc-tood hlpparlons was uncovered. Bones enough in perfect preservation were found to make one complete skelot"!.. with many fragments for exhibition and study. The ancestor of the horne I. EOCENE. 2. 3II0CEXE. 3. PLIOCENE. 4. QUATERXARV AND RECENT. had three toes. The picture hore given Illustrates the progn-ss of tho beast from that condition to his present state, when his weight rests on hoofs which represent. tho enlarged and thickened nail of the middle too. Tho second and tbivd toes-are represented by splint bones, one on each side in the roar of the cannon-bone, not visible on tho sur face, but well known for their tendency to go wrong and make horses lame. In the earliest ages of man there were wild horses on all tho continents, but probably on none of tho islands, such as Australia. They differed from modern horses in having shorter skulls and deeper jaws. Their legs also were shorter and their feet smaller in pro portion to their bodies. They resembled overgrown zebras. Tho quarries con taining their remains are so common In river and lake beds of tho latest geological epoch that the name of Equus beds has been applied tn them. In South America has been found an ancestor of tho horse of tho s 'ino epoch called nippidlum. with many of tho peculiarities of the hinparions, but with a hea'd as largo as that of tho modem horse. Neolithic men loft pictures of j the early horses of Europe on their monuments of polished stones. SM I ANTHONY, "TH riiss Susan Bro (TJit! Doan <>r Wuiiiiiii'; This portrait of Miss Anthony u'us on February 15, 1003, ber eighty-third Madison stree, Rochester, N. Y. Miss the daughter of Daniel and Lucy (Bead school maintained by her father for hi; she became a student at Quaker Upar at fifteen began torching. Fifteen year ber splendid career a's a temperance, a ganizer. Since tho Civil War she has movement, and its progress is largelj age. She is the grand old woman of At As shown in tho chart, thc evolution of tho horse may be traced in unbroken line from tho Cretaclc period down to the present time. From an original an cestor the size of a cat, the horse grad ually came to bo known as we know him to-day.-Harper's Weekly. I'srtnble Shipping Stall For Live Stock. ^.irne improvements in the method of shipping live stock arc covered in thc patent recently,granted to Alexander Moffitt. Besides providing a portable and knock-down stall, moans aro pro vided to protect tho animals from hard flscover?J, Up to Now the Missing Li usage on shipboard or on the rail. The stalls are designed in groups of three, and are designed, among other tilings, to make au ordinary box car available for thc purposes of transporting high class animals. A car of this description will contain four of these outlits, tims affording menus of shipping twelve animals. The construction is such that it is readily possible to take it apart and store it in a small space "when it is not desired for use; and when there is a demand for ils services it cnn be quickly put together again whenever lt is desired. Such a device Is particu larly desirable for servlco on shipboard and as a part of railroad equipment, as it dispenses with tho necessity of keep ing a number of cattle cars on hand for this class of traffic. Another feature of this invention ls tho means afforded for suspending or Iftfrftffn'11'' - :- - the animals by adjustable [gB?iaj"ls- whemh2^t'ifir^g,on >;e y;w? held in case of sudden jars or in rough or tossing movements of cars and ves sels; also, to provide novel arrange ments of rope fastenings to keep the animals in position, without injuring or STALL ron sniPPXSG noitsns. hurting them, while preventing their rearing or kicking out of their proper places in the stalls, yet permitting thc desired freedom ol' the limbs, so that they will not-be unduly harassed or re stricted. When thc recent act of Congress be comes effective the Navy will have til most 30,000 officers aud men. Thc Korean Government is consider ing the advisability of introducing uni versal conscription. wncll Anthony. s Sunray* America..) engraved from a photograph taken birthday anniversary, at her homo. 17 Anthony was horn 'n Adams, Mass., I) Anthony. She was educated in a s own and neighboring children. Later ding School, West Philadelphia, and s she taught, and in 1K52 sire Ocgifn lUti-slavery and woman's' rights or glveu her whole 'imo to the suffrage . due to her ze..l and unflagging cour nerica, whom all delight to honor. HOT BATH FOR ROBBERS Novel Merris of Beating Off Train Thieves. By moans of a recently patented idea, it is now proposed to fl?ht train rob bers by the use of r. bath of hot water. Thc train robbers vu mos cases resort to tho strategy of Hagging the train luk in the Ancestry of the Horse. -From Harper's Weekly. and boarding thc engine, which they take possession of and take tho train to a convenient place for the continu ance of their work. Tho invention re ferred t<? contemplates a system of piping encircling the engine in such a way that till avenues of approach aro covered and when confronted by the weapons of a gang of thieves tho Bath of Hot, Water engineer, without tho use of his hands and even when his hands are hold over his head in compliance to their order, ho can surround the engine with a curtain of hot water so that thc thieves will be blinded and otherwise disabled and forced to desist their further ef forts to secure their plunder. This sys tem is designed to protect in this man ner, not only thc entrances to the cab of tho engine, but also the stops and other parts of tho tender and the plat form of thc front car. This apparatus may be thrown Into operation from either side of tho engineer's cab in like manner, thus placing this means of protection at the command of tho fire man as .well as the engineer. Tho Idea, which is tho invention of George A, Copp, of Chicago, 111., calls for a system of piping connected with tho boiler, below the waterline, and carried around tho engine and tender and covering all tho vulnerable points. The pi]>os are supplied with spoon noz zles at frequent intervals and are man ipulated by lineo valves convenient to thc feet of thc engineer and fireman. Each of the valves control a different part of tho system in order that thc scalding waler may bo directed to (hat part from which tho advance ls being made. Thus om; lever will cause a curtain of hot water to fall around the rear of the cab, while a no titer projects streams around tho front of tho eu gine and the third throws a steaming jet over thc tender to tho platform of the first car of tho ti a in. which is gen erally the express car and the ono which tho robbers would naturally at tack at the outset of their operations. If the engineer linds himself confront ed from all directions, ho can press all three lovers and immediately sur round the engine with an envelope of hot water and steam. Mus.-um ls ??OO Yean Old. A museum of tho sixth century, B. C.. has come into the possession of the University of Pennsylvania. The mu seum is not big, being contained in a large earthen jar. but tho contents arc very valuable from a historical point of view. Whether the specimens were exca vated or purchased is not known, but they undoubtedly represent a collection which must have been made during thc time of Belshazzar, since it was found in one of the upper strata at Nip pur. Thc best specimen in the jar is an in scription containing the titles of Sar gon J., who lived about 3800 B. C. There is a black stone votive tablet of Ur-Gur, -Tot' B. C., which tells that this king built the great wall around the city of Nippur. Then there is thu tena cutta brick stamp of Bur-Sin. which is Hu? rust yoi found ul! that king. Another tablet slates that the large hall ol" thc temple was called Eniakh, and that there were twenty-lour other sillines to gods in the .temple besides the ones that have been found of Bel mid his consort, Ileitis. Chicago Berord-Hornld. The congested counties of Ireland are all on thc Western coa** A PRIMITIVE AUTOMOBILE A Road Locomotive Made in 1??4 in England. While lt is a matter of history that the first locomotive made and run in England was a small model of an or dinary road locomotive constructed in 117S4 hy William Murdock, lt is prob ably little known that this original en gine is still In existence, and has, wlth FinST LOOOMOTIVE MADE IN ENGLAND. in the past year, boen exhibited in Lon don by Messrs. Tangy es, Limited. The little locomotive is about fourteen inches high and nineteen inches long, with a width over the driving wheel of seven inches. The annexed reproduc tion of a recent photograph of lt illus trates jts makeup very clearly. There is an oblong board, mounted upon three wheels, with two driving wheels nt thc rear attached to a cronk axle, and one steering wheel in front, ar ranged under tho board, and running in a swivelling fork, which cnn be set by a tiller handle above. Behind the driv ing wheels is tlie boiler, which is a rec tangular vessel, three aud three-eighths inches-high, four and one-fourth Inches long, and three and one-eighth inches wide, made of copper. Through the boiler a flue passes obliquely, contract ing from a circular chamber forming the firebox to a s mall'fun ucl in the top of the boiler, which serves to carry off tlie products of combustion from a spirit lamp arranged to burn within tilo lirebox. The steam cylinder of the engine .is mounted on tito top of the boiler and the lower part passes Into it and is surrounded by steam. The piston rod passes upward and is at tached to the end of a vibrating beam, which passes to the front of the car riage and is pivoted in an upright pillar. The diameter of thc piston 16 titree-fourths inch, and the length of Its stroke is about two inches. As the For Train Robbers. piston passes up and down it causes tlie beam to rotate the driving wheels by means of a connecting rod attached to tho crank axle. A leaden weigh' is placed above the steering wheel t< balance the machine, and to prevent ?; tipping over when water ls In tin boiler.-Cassier's Magazine. "OREGON BOOT." Extraordinary Contrivance to Prevent Prisoner* From Kscitplnjr. Owing to the desperate character of William Rudolph and George Collins, alias Fred Lewis, the Union Bank robbers, writes Chief Desmond, of St. THE OKEGOX BOOT. Louis, in The Republic of that city, it has been decided to use the "Oregon boot" when the mon are placed in the train to bc brought back to Union, Mo., for trial. I have seen tho Oregon boot used but once in my experience in tlie Police Department. That was when Marion C. TTedirpcth was brought back to St. Louis for tlu> Glendale train robbery. Hedgpeth was regarded as a dangerous man, and thc California authorities who brought him back decided to put the boot on him. Hedgpeth say that it was useless to try to get away with lt on his leg and they got him here safely. Tho Oregon boot is so made that the weight ol' the lend band which en circles thc leg just above the ankle rests upon the floor when Hie prisoner is not walking. The weight is about eight or twelve pounds. It is fastened to tho heel of the shoo by strips of steel, which run down on either side. These strips are screwed lo the heel. When the prisoner stands or sits down the weight, therefore, is not upon the J leg. But when he walks he must lift ! the entire weight, and If he tries lo run ' or jump I nm told it will break the log. Some New <:illce ttnlc*. Any employe arriving on time will be discharged. j Our private correspondence is for your inspection. i '?Vc uro in't hore Sundays, but if you need es cull 'phuue-. Call the hoad of the house "Tho Old Man." He likes it. ! Should we mnke a mistake, do not forgive us; there's no excuse for it. 'Boston Herald. ! . _. I A beneficence to thc unfortunate in Cern?an cili?s ls tho municipal pawn* shop. I 9 Vf<?f\ ru BJ The Paraffine D'p for Cheese. Tho paraffine Jip UM;'heu of putting m choose is gaining ground, some of tho meetings of rho esc-makers having declared strongly in Us favor. It costa a little moro than tho common salting 2nd binding proco, s, but is considered far more satisfactory and effective. The paraffine la applied when tho ohcoso is being curod and made ready for shipment. Somo daity instructora advise that thc cheese should ho loft .on the shelve- tn the factory for sev eral weeks In a moderate temperature to grow firm before they arc packed away, but the advocates of tho parai - . finding method think that as soon as the product has boon shaped and boa .Recomo suiTuion'.ly dry it should bc dipped in the hot paraffinc and then placed lmmedlr---'? .< cold ste:ago. - . . . ! 1~? Roc* Cy3tcn.? .. .-orest Trees. , Hickory produces a strong persist eat tap root, and those species per sist on account of ihar.o. lap roots seek ing crovlccs in rocks pud penetrating the ao'd deeply, so that they can flour ish in peor, rocky soils. On tho eth er hand, oaks do not have such a per Extent tap root, hui scon develop sec ondary roots, and on thia account, oaks in general rcqulro a moro moist ?soil than hickories. j Tho tap root of the beech dcvoVps strongly fer a time, but in thc course cf a year a broad system cf lateral roots ls developed, the tap root be ing chocked in Us further growth. Similar root systems arc found In thc maple and rod n:;h, and thous trees, require a 1 ich soil for their host growth. Tho sugar maplo dovelo]?, lateral roots quito early, and In gen eral trees which develop strong lat eral root systems In their early stages aro not adapted to grown on sterile soils. Attention ls cabed to tho fact that In desert re?.'ons all thc shrubby plants develop long tap roots.-J. W. Tourney, In American Cultivator. Lima Beans. The Lima beans are natives of warm count rici;, and therefore require a longor season. Tho gardener's ef fort is to shorten their period of growth in every way possible. He plants the earliest varieties obtainable, In light, ivarm, sandy soil, and gives as siduous cultivation. Coarse, rev/ sum mer is not thc bo:-.t. for Lima beans, as lt induces a rank and late growth. If such manure ls to be used lt should be applied to thc ground in tho fall In order that lt may boccmc thoroughly incorporated with the soil, and be in good conJltion as available plant food JD. the spring. Concentrated fertiliz v_ers; -rich In"' potash and phosphoric 'ri-id. arc'suitable, ' while-those con taining much nitrogen should be avoided. Although desirable to give the Limas the largest room possible, lt ls useless lo plant them in open ground before settled weather. They may germinate, but only to be checked and retarded, and therefore nothing will bo gained. As a rule, they should not be planted until a week or lo days after lt Is safe to plant ordinary bush garden beana. Um. they may bo plant ed In a forcing-house or cold frome in pots, or an inverted sods, or in boxes, two weeks before It is suitable to plant themo out of doors. It ls not a difficult matter to transplant. Yet, in spito of all tho gardener can do, lt is practically Impossible to induce Lima beans to mature a full crop before frost comes. A half crop Is all thar can usually be counted on. At frost time the-green pods, containing beam; partially grown, may bo picked, the beans shelled cut and dried, and used to advantage.-Connecticut Farmer. Business Side of Fsrmmg. In almost every section we see men who have failed in business, and as tho last resort have gone to farming. It used to be a popular opinion that a man could farm when he had failed In everything else, but that time is past. A farmer today needs brain, coupled with muscle. He must bo the master of his operations and not the servant. A true farmer mal es hie farm furnish him the necessities as well as the comforts of lifo, and come luxuries, but above all, content ment and satisfaction. Three ele ments are necessary to make a suc cess in any calling, intelligence, In dustry and economy. Education, tho very best a farmer can acquire, should bo his, as a farmer needs Information In many lines. He is a manufactur er, salesman, chemist and entomolo gist, and coupled with some of those things he must he familiar with his farm. He must study bis environ ment and govern his operations ac cordingly. He must work his farm so as to get as much profit ncr arre as possible, and at the same time make his soil more productive. He must know what he wants to do, and thou stick to it through thick and thin, through high prices and low. By so doing he can establish a reputation as a producer of a certain article, and his profits will be much larger. The sec ond is industry. The man that is lazy and indolent and is always at thc corner grocery cultivating the soft side of a store box will never make a success at farming, such men will never be able to go to the bank and draw more than his breath. "He who would succeed must either hold or drive." Tho last is economy. The young man or old to succeed must practice economy. He must never never buy something he cannot afford just to koop up in a certain social set. or for any other reason. If we apply business methods to all of our observations as closely as other men do, success will crown our efforts, and the world will bo better by us having lived in it.-M. C. Tilomas in Thc Epi iomist. Hinte on Raspberry Planting. Red raspberries are similar to black berries in their manner of propagation and growth. They are easily cared for and should be planted much tho rame as blackberries. They are also easily winterkilled, and for this rea con aro not a meccas In this and many other sections E lac kc ap raspberries are propa r ; i iho tJp ci tho vino which c IJC gruiad In midsummer and tl out root i in the fall, la rosnovin plant fer ?p.nsplantlng a plexo c vino ia 'oft-attached for conven In hand!';i;r. This old r?ne dies i he plan; ia cutablishcd in it? homo. Raspberries grow boat when ph in lir-li, weil drained sdi. Tho gr should be deeply plow .d and thon ly pulverized bofore planting. A i furrow may bo run where a row bo planted', cr holes thrown out a spade for each plant. Straight make easy cultivating. They si bo about seven feet apart and plants half aa far apart in tho roi In tho fall, the tip of thc old makes a i/ud or sprout. This is ? grows in the spring. When plant: carried directly from one plantatlc another this sprout caa he kept : injury and an early and rigo g:owrh secured. When the plants received item nurseries tho sp ..viii usually bc found to have 1 broken off lo hand?ng. New spr will spring up and take its place, growth ls retarded and tho plant r or leas Injured. Like ail trees and plants, rasp rles should have their root3 expt aa little a3 possible In transplant Tho lower ends of the roots ahouh placed deep In the soil, but the sp should he near tho surface and erod with only an inch or so cf 1< dirt. It will not come through lot of packed dirt is placed on to] it. Over tho rooty the dirt should packed solidly three or fcur inche: thc ground ls In proper tilth at. pl ins time it will settlo considera Remember this and got the plan! deep enough so the cultivator not disturb tho roots after the gro has settled.-0. H. Barnhill, in ? England Homestead. - I Waking a Pretty Lawn. Though we call it a front yard, : no difference what its (.intension gt cat or small-lt really is a la' And if it prevea a "thing of beaut wc must give it thought and caro tho first making as well as afterwa There are new houses, finished ?atc in the fall, that have left I lawn-making until tho spring. Tb .ire now houses going up, of which I plat around will soon be calling .onie consecration. Its situati mu3t bo studied, and plans made ?is shape and slop-?. Where thc lot Is a scries of depr -ions and inclined places, much gn lng ami filling in Is usually requin ;:tt where it is comparatively lev :hc dirt thrown from th? cellar a foundation, with dirt thrown ba from the edges to give the slope, m be all the extra filling required. / tho house Gtands well in the cent! the ground looks better to slope eve ly from all sides cf it. A little sh? lng of its own soil to make this rm be ail-that , is required, if the Jav bo a small one. If the lawn is not extra size the grading can be doi bj hand, but if very large, lt is mo quickly and better done by machine: made for the purpose. It will not do to put poor soil on lawn, or io stir Its own soil If it 1 poor, and leave lt in that shape fi .he planting of seed. Poor grour will not grow lawn gross, especial thc kind that grows thick, low and rich green, and under foot feels lil* soft velvet plush. That kind require a deeply rici soil. Two lawns, side b side, both equally well cared for, wi shew a vast difference in looks, tx cause of difference In thc soil. If tho sell used In tho making of th lawn be of poor Quality, lt should b mixed to a depth beyond which th roots roach, with seme good fertilize] Well-rotted manure is good for th purpose were lt not for the seeds o weeds that spring from it. To avoii future work in the way of spuddlnj out stubborn weeds, one had bette invest in bone meal or Borne fertilize freo of weed seeds. In getting the soil ready Tor th< seed it must be well pulverized wit! hoe and rake, and every' clod broken that tho seed may come lip evenly All depressions that shtw after a firs: tilling should bo evened up and pound od down firm ^lth a maul. It usuallj takes two years to get a lawn in good shape. Oij heavy rains find soggy pface? in tho soil and hollow thom out. Bul after that, time it will remain In good condition for years, with a slight at tention each spring and fall. In selecting the seed great caro is necessary. There arc mixtures cf lawn seeds put on the market that are worthless, and there aro salesmen who will sell you such as good. A mix ture of grass seeds that makes a low, spreading growth and stools out well is tho kind wanted. There are deal ers with a reputation tn sustain, who will sell you the righi .lind, and toll you to an inch hew much your lawn, bo it large or small, will need of seed. They wiri tell you that lt. must be sown thick. Inquire for such a dealer before you buy. If you arc not an ex perienced hand in sowing grass seed, then got someone to sow it that is. Let it get eight or nine inches high before it gets its first cutting, and then ft should merely be clipped. To run the lawn mower often and close ly over new grass is one good way to kill it. After the roots are well sci and matted and the grass grows thick on the ground, it will not require so much water to keep it alive. Thick grass holds moisture arcusd thc roots, and will withstand long dry spells. Keep a wire rake with which to take off thc cut grass and leaves. Sharp-toothed rakes tear and loosen the grass roots. As a thick bed of grass draws fertility from the ground laster than it gives it back, the lawn must got. a dressing cf bone meol nt least twice a year. If you would keep up Hs strength and beauty. In May . or June ls Hie time Indicated for tho first dressing, ?.nd then again lat'- in I the fall. The snows and rains of win ter will gradually wash lt into the roots.-Indianapolis News. Mo Danger. "Do yon think there is any danger of America being dor/, i na ted by Europe?" "Nc. ri:-." answered Mr\ Meektcn with extraordinary cmphads; "not sc ions as rminenl Europeans continual lo marry American girls."-Washing ton Star. Wagons. aggies. Lnrge Shipments of the bos. m ikes of wagctau ana buggfeodust . received. Our stock of furniture, hous?furalshlngs is com plete. Large stock COFFINS and CASKETS always oil hand. All callg for ?ur Hearse promptly responded to. All goods sold on a small margin of profit. Call to see me, I will save you money. -a-Vii-% G. P. Unparalleled Chance. The Greatest Bargain Ever Offered. hundred and forty-five thousand of Closes July 1st. .Between now July 1st wc will sell our concert grand upright Mendelssohn piano for ono hundred and seventy-five dollars and will prepay freight and furnish stool, music book and handsome scarf with . each instrument. Wo have over oae I our Instrumenta now in use. For over twenty years our pianos w-ere one ot the leaders of the well known south ern, house of Luddon & Bates. Wo also sell organs and our world re nowned Sterling Pianos. For full Information address THE STERLING CO., Derby, Con II Cement, Fi rd Ready Roofing Write UsTI Corner Reynolds ami AUGUSTA, = There will now ns tiansfer.-eri from ;he Treasury D?partaient to the Dr. partment of Commerce and Lahor th*, following divisions: The lighthouse establishment, tho steamboat, inspec tion service, the bureau of navigation, the United States shipping commis sioners, the na;ional bureau of stand ards, the coast and geodetic survey, the immigration servie* and the bureau cl statistics. This transfer is of doubla significance in that mewt of the divis ions transferred never had, by any con sidera! ion of consistency, a place irj the Treasury Department, and many 0/ them have conseqw ntly nover been en abled to develop their full measure 0/ usefulness there. The eeneus oilier also becomes part of thc new depart ment, os do also the d?partaient of ta bor, wf herwvot'oro constituted, the fish comirnission and the bureau of for-alg* commerce. "In Denmark no respectable old man or woman need ever beoorce a pauper; no respectable old man or woman ever crosses the threshold of a work house," writes Miss Edith Sellers iE The Nineteenth Century and A:'tor. "Should a man-or a woman-who hat completed his sixtieth yar, find him self without the wherewithal on willoh to live, he applies to the local author ities not for pauper relief, but for old age relief; and this, by thc law of lSifl, they are bound to guiuc mm, provui? lng he can prove not only that hrs de>_ titution ls owing to no fault of his own, but that he' has led a decent life, has worked hard and been thrifty; and that, during the ten previous years, hu has neither received a single penny as poor-relief, nor been guilty of vagran cy, Dor of begging." GROWING PUMPKINS. 1 Growing a lot of pumpkins in a field of corn Is au old practice, but it is Joubtful if pumpk?us so grown are as profitable as when grown as a separate ?rop from corn. Thee pumpkins will prevent the proper cultivation of corn, v? working the corn destroys ?ht pumpkin vines, the result being that lat? weeds get a chante io grow and mature. It is urged in defense of glow ing pumpkin:-, in the corn field that they do not Interfere wi'h cultivai ion until the corn is "laid by," bat much depends on the land, rainfall a,td thor oughness of cultivation. Corn should never be "laid by" as long as woods' :ind grass can have an opportunity to I grow, cultivai ion being given if iL is possible for a horse io pas-j along the i rows. ?THE NST? BM OF AUGUST I L. C. HATN2, Pree't, F. 0. FORD, Cashier. J Capital, $250,000. Undivided Froflts '$125,000 Facilities o? our magnificent New Vailti leontatniue -Jiu Safely-Lock I'.oxcs. Differ. >n: aiz< a are offon.-j to our patra?a a:id the public at ?3.00 io $10.00 per annum. . THE PLANTERS LOAN ANO SAVINGS BANK. 1 AUHUSTi, GA. 8 Fays Interest on Deposits. Accounts Solicited. JL. e. Ha jue. President. Chas. C. Howard, Cashier. VOL. LXVI??. EDGEFIELD, S. C.. "WEDNESDAY. JUNE IT. 1903 NO 25.