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1 HMHMHiHBI 4. B. HfOLMAM Ready For fNTERPRISE H I Is now ready w 1 stock of Hardwai 1 plements, Mowers 1 ons, Harness, Ge 1 trade of this secti 2 see us. We gua | . with goods and ; I compare with anj 'raj I Enterprise N ffrfc flici 3? V/SLt !iV JLf I Lexington, . . i ^ ? ? f NOW IS THE TI Use DEVOE, Fewer Gal >? 5 House Paints, Stain; amels, Colors in Oils,. !* ing Paints, Polishing Linseed Oils, Golden and Glass, complete li: es, all sizes and kinds, i: Lubricating Oils, such (ess, Neatsfoot and Aul Guarantee Every Barmon Drug lexiiiaton. - IT i ' I Am Headq Doors, Sash High Grade ar See me before placing your < N. H. DF C0LUMB1 S. OSCAR FALI (if Monthly i) ^??r se \aJJ^WMa/ Poverty on wt " ily be al J. T. COLEMAN Mgr. i - Charleston, S. C THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANt incorporated as 3 stock compai ] John F. Dryden, President. Columbia Lumbt luring C MAXUfACT Sash, Doors and Finish, Pine, C3 Flooring, Ceiiing, Weather! and Wind< Columbia, rj0^c0\ " } I SHAFTING j |"PULl I 'Wohjacaa1 ? } LfliSflBB jgea WORKS, W. J. MeCARTHA, Managtr I your We mm. co. nth a complete | re, Farming Im- g 5, Buggies, Wag- | ars, etc., for the i on. Come and | rantee to please & prices, that will | r market. . . if jatch Office | South Carolina | ME TO PAINT | ilons, Wears Longer - < i 5, Varnishes> EnFloor Paints, RoofOil, High Grade Floor Oil, Putty ne of Paint Brush- j j i as Castor, Harnto Oils. Product We Sell. I Company < South Carolina J [uarters For and Blinds. id Low Prices order for building material UGGERS, [A, S. C. AW, Sales Mgr. e Prudential f income Policy is the parting Comfort From a ich side wil| your famter your death? ALFRED J. FOX, Special Agent, LEXINGTON, S. C. 5E COMPANY OF AMERICA, iy by the State of New Jersey. Home Office, Newark, N J. i[ & Manufac! 0* msa m umpiy TREKS OF 1 Blind, Interior ^press and Oak hoarding, Moulding Door >w Frames South Carolina I ' " ' II ... ' ll.l.. I.WII ^ I !EYS"| f~~3ELTS I ft W.-ITTMM wjat^jgrron/ %r xr ^qpevarx?*> H mmn, ei. j ??a war.: i i I "I An War I writes Mrs. L R. Barker, B fl of Bud, Ky., "and can do fl B all my housework. For B fl years I suffered with such fl fl pains, I could scarcely 19 fl stand on my feet After fl fl three different doctors had II fl failed to help me, I gave 18 fl Cardui a trial. Now, I feel fl jj? like a new woman." H The Woman's Tonic 19 A woman's health de- ?5 i pends so much upon her || 1 delicate organs, that the M | least trouble there affects m i her whole system. It is |g fl the little things that count, t I in a woman's life and || h health. If you suffer from || If any of the aches and || 1 pains, due to womanly f| |J weakness, take Cardui at M 1 once, and avoid more seriH ous troubles. We urge % |? you to try it Begin today. ?j Public entertainments of London given on Sundays are attended by two hundred thousand persons. They Make You Feel Good. I Tbe pleasant purgative effect produced by Chamberlain's Tablets and tbe healthy condition of body and mind which they create make one feel joyful. For sale by All Dealers. I The Drug Clerk?Face powder? Yes, ma'ma. Flesh coloi? The Fair Customer?Not so vivid as fle9h color. Give me skin color. For Sale No. 35. One Five room dwelling, neatly painted, barn, stables, good well of water and four acre* of land. Situated in the town, of Woodford. S. C.; This is a beautiful home and an ideal location for a poultry farm. This is your opportunity. I have been instructed to make a quick sale, as the owner wants to convert the same into cash. I will make a special price of $1600.00 for the next 30 days only; No. 36. Fifty acres of land in one and one half miles of Woodford, S. (J. Five room dwelling just completed and | necessary outbuildings. Land is very | fertile and comparatively level. This I will mate soldc one an lueai uumt and farm. Trie * $2500.00. No. 37. Eighty acres of land in Lexington county, two miles of Woodford, S. C. Two go id tenant houses. Large barn. Fifty acres in a high state of cultivation. Price $3250.00, 1-3 cash balance in one, two years at 7 per cent, interest No. 3S. One hundred and twenty five acres of mud in Lexington county, two miles of Woodford, S. C. 3 good tenant house* large barn and stables, good well of water. Branch running through one edge of this land. Plenty of wood and straw. Price ?3000.00. 1-3 cish balance in one. two years ai 7 per cent, interest. No. 31). Ninety five acres of land in Lexington counry, one mile ot Woodford, S. C. situated in the forks of 3 public roads, 4 good tenant houses aud all neoet?saiy oui buildings. Good \wil of water, lot of nice fruit trr>e?, soil \v i 1 ii clay foundation. 9" acre* in cultivation. Price $3000.00. This is an opportunity to own a farm within one mile of railroad, with an ideal location. Offered for 30 days only. A, 2, ST ROMAN Real Estate and Insurance Woodford, S. C. ISfnmach pah?) ifi 11 r I * ? ? 9 '* *" ' K ? i H ? ^ i Fp iy >} ?? v^y i a ii 3> fe fj lis* i *> ii -?* u jjj-. .bv..oiUT? A. ' mm ^ ! /<?r t \.? . n;-i l i.iny ... - l..f ji ^ H .u i' .<" t rill' T . i ^ j 9 kJ ii'* - 11 d > ? ;4j m j p ^n r* *< *0 ? ;;c ? '* ^ KV* ?'* % : - t, ; . , p ! kwty V t ir-s ; . " it i ,--J| THIRD TERMER'S JOKE ON LABOR Brandeis Shows Right to Organize is Not Recognized. THE PLATFORM IS SILENT | Noted Lawyer Exposes the Fllmsiness | of Promises Made to Workingmen by 9 Perkins and His Candidate, Who g Stands for Private Monopoly. |j "Tne new party pieuges useu iu au- ? cial and industrial justice and specific ally to 'work unceasingly for effective |l legislation looking to the prevention of j| occupational diseases, overwork, invol- ra untary unemployment and other in- gl jurious effects incident to modern in- Jgj dustry,' * * but nowhere in that g long and comprehensive platform 8 * * * can there be found one word ?9 approving the fundamental right of || labor to organize cr even recognizing S this right without which all other E grants and concessions for improve- $j ment of the condition of the workingmen are futile. The platform promises pj social and industrial justice, but does H not promise industrial democracy. The a justice which it offers is that which kg the benevolent and wise corporation p is prone to administer through its wel- 3 fare department. There is no promise 1 of that justice which free American I workingmen are striving to secure for fc themselves through organization. In- 2 deed, the industrial policy advocated 8 by the new party would result in the h denial of labor's right to organize. J "The new party stands for the per- U petuation and extension of private g monopoly from which the few have B ever profited at the expense of the n many and for the dethronement of gj which the people have, in the past, | fought so many valiant battles. That cursed product of despotism, the new party, proposes to domesticate in our republic, proclaiming, 'We do not fear commercial power.' Certainly organ- I ized labor has had experience with the g great trusts which should teach all I men that commercial power may be so I great that it is the part of wisdom to B fear it." I The above declaration was made by ? Louis D. Brandeis before the conven- 1 tion of the American Federation of I Labor, Massachusetts state branch, at I Fitchbura. Sent 18. i Of 8upremo Importance. He urges & careful study of the new = party platform, particularly Its effect upon labor, noting not only WHAT IT CONTAINS, but WHAT IT OMITS, adding, "When yoa make that examination you will find that there is a significant omission and that this skillfully devised platform TAKES FROM LABOR MORE THAN IT GIVES." Labor Reoord of Trusts. Mr. Brandeis then lays bare the labor record of the trastB, declaring that "great trusts?the steel trust, the sugar trust, the beef trust, the tobacco trust, the smelter trust and a whole troop of lesser trusts?have made the extermination of organized labor from their factories the very foundation stone of their labor policy. The ability to defeat labor's right to combine seems to have been regarded by the trust magnates as a proper test of the efficiency of their capitalistic combina-r tion." Mr. Brandeis shows that in 1899, during the Colorado smelters' strike, the American Smelting and Refining company clc?^d its mills where the strikers had b?en employed and transferred the work to other mills, thus breaking the strike. The United States Steel corporation had similar success in 1901 with the Amalgamated Association of lion and Steel Workers. Had the association been dealing with competing employers the result would j have been d I .'-Trent. The United States j Steel trust was prompt in introducing . this plan. June 17, l^CL, six weeks j after it beysu its operations, its exrcu- i five committee passed this vote, which was offered by Chcrles Steele, a partner of George V.'. Perkins in the firm of J. P. Morgan <?. Co.: "That we are unalterably opposed to any extern"'-a cf union labor and acl- I vise subsidiary companies to take firm : position when these questions come up and say that they are not going to recognize it?that is, any extension of tin- i ion in mill3 where they do not now exist." , m Union Men Not Wanted. The result was that the bulk of ?j American union laboring men in the I iron and steel industry were made to ? understand that they were not wanted i at tne wonts or the united States Steel I corporation. Places once filled by i American laborers loyal to their union | were given to others, and, as the StanI ley committee found, "Hordes of laborers from southern Europe poured into the United States." * Hence about SO per cent, of the un- j skilled laborers In the iron and steel j business are foreigners of these class- j * i es. the profits going to the steel corpor- : ation. Mr. lJraadois declared that "the j ? immediate and continuing result of the steel trust's triumph over organ- i ^ l?.ed labor lies been an extensive sys- ! k* tem of espionage and repression." I l There has been no disturbance of business interest:; during this presider- I tial campaign. Why? Confidence in I the integrity of the Ivinoeratic nomi- j uees aud right purposes of the party. * ^ THE ?AT? I j BATESBIIRG, S. C. j ( Lexington, Saluda, Edge-1 8 /?? a a r a G 3 ' Ob. r a Ui REDUCED RAIL ROAD RATES ON ALL TRAINS Splendid Features?Liberal Premiums J Gome and Bring The Whole Family 1 For Full Information and Premium List, write in b j. ffluuflnmfl, ogu. i BATESBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA Ij 4* White Bronze Monuments j I Are more durable than Marble or Granite, 1 m neither heat nor coid affects them. They do I 1 | not chip nor crack, nor breed moss, nor change ? ] I their color e/er, for like designs they are 9 j | cheaper than Marble or Granite. The lettering, | fe much or little, in bold r.used type, is put on jf | without extra charre. Call and see sampies of B ' 3 White Bronze and over .!J ) designs. fj | J. Mo j | 1 1802 Main Si. - - COLUMBIA, S. C. II Pari?? Restaurant, J BEN DAVID, Manager, I 218 MAIN ST. Opp. Columbia Opsra House, CCLUHBfA, S. C. J est cooking and finest Restaurant in Columbia. 1 Tor Ladies and Gentiemen fl pecial Rates by tbe Week. ^ liTonls nt all Hours?Nie*bt or Dav 1 . ^ "'l' S2U3T2 ~ "" ~ A What about your Job Work? V Look ark sea if you don't 1 need to give us an order 'J