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a I $8.00 Set of Aluminum Ware, or Granite and Copper Ware FREE With Every MAJESTIC RANGE SOLD. SPECIAL DEMONSTRATION AND $8.00 Set of Granite and Copper Ware '"SSS? Or Aluminum Ware FREE With Every MAJESTIC RANGE SOLD. ONE WEEK ONLY MAJESTIC RANGES Monday Morning, Nov. 16th, to Saturday Night, Nov. 21st. on^NYYEK We Will Allow 8 Cents Per Pound for Cotton on the Purchase Price of a Majestic Range Save $8.oo. As a special inducement, darin/; our dem onstration week only, with every M A.I li STIC KAN til"] sold (prices always the same) we will give FREE one handsome set oi ware as illustrated here or a special set ot' ALUMI NUM W A RE. Every piece of this ware is the best of its kind. Not a piece that is not needed in every kitchen, lt cannot possibly be bought for less I han $S. This ware is on exhibition at our store. DON'T KAIL TO SEE IT! Which Shall It Be? Do you intend to continue laboring, burn ing valuable fuel and destroying high-priced food with that old worn-out cook stove? You KNOW thal Hit! old stove eats up a lot of fuel < ach year. You KNOW you have trouble In getting it to bake just right, in fact, spoil a batch of bread every once In a while you know it costs considerable for yearly repairs. Stop and think and Uguie! Wouldn't it pay you to buy a good range-a range with a reputa' fen Mall?able and Charcoal Iron You make no mistake in buying tlie Great Majestic lt's the range with the REPUTA TION-ask your neghbors. Then, too, it's made inst right and of the right kind of ma terial MALLEABLE AND CHARCOAL IKON-riveted together practically air tight - lined with pure asbestos parts being mal l?able can't break-has a movable reservoir and an oven that doesn't warp-- that's why the M A.I IOS TIC uses so little fuel, hakes just right every day in the year (browns bread just right all over without turning), heats If) gal lons of water while breakfast is cooking properly handled lasts a lifetime, and costa nothing for repairs, ny the range you expect to last a nsight unseen"; you'll be sure to nted. . Come to our store during ion week, see the GREAT MAJES i IL its many exclusive features ex plained bud out why the MAJESTIC is .'loo per cent stronger than other ranges where most ranges' are weakest. CHILDREN OR A SPECIAL SET OF ALUMINUM WARE FREE ! Don't Overlook the juate. ?st lins is a Special invitation to You and Your Friends and Neighbors. SOUVENIR DAY TANGO HOOPS Tuesday, IJotweon ii and S p. ni. FREE The lirst HM) boys and girls who present to THE MAJESTIC RANGE SALESMAN at our store, between :'. and ."> p m. TUESDAY, written answers to the following questions, will receive a "Tango Hoop Souvenir" FREE. 1 What range is your mother now using'.' 2 Do you know any one needing a new range? Who? Why should the GREAT MAJESTIC RANGE be In every kitchen? $1.00 Article Free. The one giving neatest and best answer to the last question may select any $1 article from our stock, in addition to tho Souvenir. Don't be discouraged if you are not one of the 100 to gel a Tango Hoop Souvenir. You will get a MAJESTIC PUZZLE CARD. Some thing for all the boys and girls. Don't fail to get ono of these Tango Hoops. lt's a new and wonderful toy-amuses the old as well as the young. The Hoop dances for ward, hesitates and returns to the operator. Children, ifs great, and will be the talk of the town. He sure to have your answers ready to hand in at our store TUESDAY AFTERNOON, between !i and ."> o'clock. They must he writ ten answers otherwise you will not get a Souvenir. All during this week a special demonstrator, direct from the MAJESTIC FACTORY will be glad to show you "ALL A KOUT show you why the MAJESTIC is the best range on earth at any price. COMM, IF YOU INTEND TO RUY OR NOT, EDUCATION liea in KNOWING THINGS -KNOW why tho oven of a range is heated KNOW how the water is boated-HOW the top is heated-WHY the MAJESTIC uses so little fuel-KNOW how a range is made In side and outside. This education may serve you In tho future. DON'T OVERLOOK a ( hance to KNOW THINGS shown by one who knows. COME ! KA NCES" Majestic Dealers : MOSS & ANSEL Walhalla, So? Car. ? The European ^ Mine Sunk German Cruiser. Herlin, Nov. tr. Only tho .scantiest authentic details of the sinking of the dorman cruiser Yorck are avail able here. The admiralty has re ceived from Wilhelmshafe little be yond the announcement ot' the time ?xu? piace of the accident and the number ot* men saved. A fuller report, it is expected, will probably he available soon, li is defi nitely announced, however, that the sinking was due to a (?orman mine and not to hostile attack. The ship, which was under way, presumably swung outside of the channel through a mine Held and touched one of tho powerful German mines, which made short work of the big cruiser. The conduct of the crew, in the moment of disaster, is described as exemplary and there is much > ;t over the destruction of the cruiser the heaviest individual loss as yet sustained by the German navy. The. loss of the Yorck is counter balanced, in the German opinion, by the news of the daring raid of a tier man squadron into British home wa ters to indulge in what ls described here as ' a hit of rat hunting on its own account." Jap.-llrltish Victory. Tokio, Japan, Nov. S. Japan is still celebrating the fall of Tslng Tau with extraordinary enthusiasm. In every city there are lantern pro cessions and merriment nightly. On every house there is a flag. In Tokio cheering crowds serenade high ofli cers of the army and navy and diplo matic representatives of the allies. Everywhere there is recognition of Great Britain's share In the victory. Imperial edicts congratulate the British as well as Japanese. Surrender of Tslng-Tau. The surrender of Tsing-Tau Is offl cially described as follows: "The German and Japanese pleni potentiaries on the evening of No vember 7 concluded the pourporlers for the surrender of Tsing-Tau. Our terms were accepted in their entirety. Another meeting will be held at 10 o'clock to-morrow morning. On No vember 10 the forts and equipment will he turned over to us. "Our casualties on the night of November 6 and on the following morning (wh?n Tslng-Tau surrender /ar Day by Day. ed) were l l officers wounded and 12(5 soldiers killed or wounded. We took loo prisoners in the battle. German Women Safe. Peking, China, Nov. 8.-The Ger man legation has received a tele grain from Tslng-Tau stating that all German soldiers whose wives found refuge In Peking are unharm ed. As there are about 100 women and children here, the legation ac cepts the message as indicating that Hie German casualties were few. "Woe to Von, Nippon!" Amsterdam, Nov. S.-The Herlin Lokal Anzeiger, commenting on the fall of Tsing-Tau, says: "Germans will never forget the he roic fighting at Kiao-Chow and those who defended the colony. Never shall we forget the brutal violence of the yellow robbers, nor longland, who in stigated them. We know we cannot settle our account with Japan at present. Our mills will grind slow ly, but even if years should pass be fore the right moment comes, a shout of joy will resound through Ger many. 'Woe to yon, Nippon.' " German Casualty List. Herlin, Nov. S. A Greman casu alty list just issued brings the total of numbers in last week's report up lo about 57,800. Hospital records show a very large proportion of the wounded have returned to duty. The last casualty Hst records the killing of three German aviators and the wounding of six others by hostile a i l inen. 9 Many Cases of Cholera. Vienna, Nov. 8.- It ls officially an nounced there were 250 cases of chol era in Galicia last Thursday. Of these 120 cases were in Przemysl. Austrians Claim Victory. Vienna, Nov. 8.-The following official statement was Issued to-day: "In the southwestern war theatre the battle on the wholo front yester day continued with undiminished force. In spite of the obstinate re sistance of the enemy, entrenchments after entrenchments near Kroupanl were taken until 5 o'clock this morn ing, one of the strongest points, Kos tainjk, which the Servians believed unconquerable, was stormed by our troops. The number of prisoners and captured guns ls not known." 21 Killed by Bombs from Air. Pel lograd, Nov. S. The Bourse Gazette's war correspondent says that 2 1 persons have died in hos pitals there during the last few days from wounds received from German bombs dropped by aeroplanes. Small German Cruiser Interned. Washington, Nov. S.-The little German cruiser Geier, which has been repairing at Honolulu, while a Japanese squadron wailed outside the harbor for her, interned for the war at Honolulu last midnight, the time set by the American govern ment for ber to interne or leave port. Entering Crucial .Stage ? Hond?n, Nov. 9.-Three points stand out in the news of the great war: In Flanders the (lennans, undaunt ed by past faillir ;s to strike through to the Strait of i over, have launched their expected new attack, regarded by the allies as their supremo effort. In Russian Poland the immense ar mies of the Russian Emperor are pushing forward with surprising speed, threatening the Germans on home soil. From Tokio comes tho report that a Japanese army may be sent to the west to take its part with the Brit ish, French and Belgians in the J struggles Oil the battlefields of Ku re pe. Military observers agree that the war bas entered upon a crucial stage, and that the next week may mark a definite turn in the course of events. In French opinion, the Germans must win their way to the English Chan nel or fall back. On (.crinan Soil at Three Points. London, Nov. 9.-At three pointe in Hie area of hostilities-in Silesia in East Prussia and in Alsace forces of the allies wore on German soil to-day, and for the first time since the outbreak of hostilities con ditions seemed to presage, in tlu opinion of British military observers a reversal of the roles of the con tending armies. Up to the present time Gorman) bas been fighting, generally speak lng, In tho territory of her enemies but now she would appear to be mor< or less seriously menaced from th< east by the victorious armies ol Grand Duke Nicholas, the Russiai commander-in-chief tn the field, th? advance guards of which are less thai 200 miles from Berlin. Cossack raids across tho Germai bordar continue and Berlin now ad mits that the Russians are well be yond the River Warthe. The Rus sian advance has been made over bad roads at the amazing rate of M milos daily, and the German retreat has now passed Czernstochowa without stopping. The Russian line is well hack of the Warthe between Czern stochowa and Kalis/.. Another Petrograd report states that Czernstochowa is still held as the last German position in Russia, hut that this is regarded as untena ble. Russians Report Defeat of Turks. retrograd, Nov. 9.-Army head quarters in the Caucasus, under date of November 7, sends the following official communication from Tiflis re garding the Russian operations: "Two Turkish divisions, with 48 pieces of field and several pieces of heavy artii.ery and with a numerous hand of Kurd cavalry, moved in the direction of the hills of Hassan Ka lali, 20 miles -?ast of Erzerum, to wards the posl ion at Koprtiketu, which we occupied Friday night. "They pursued a vigorous offensive turning movement, striving to sur round the right wing of Russians, j Our artillery opened a murderous fire ! and tho Turks, though they attacked ' again and again, were finally com pelled to take io Hight. First their left wing retired and then the whole front followed. They are seeking refuge in the obscurity of the broken and uneven country to the west of the scene of their attack." Hermans Reported Retreating. London, Nov. Itt A dispatch from Amsterdam says: "Train load after train load of German artillery is leaving ibe Lys valley in the direction of Ghent, and the Gorman army headquarters has been transferred to Alost." (Alost is 16 miles west of Br?ssels and 40 m'.ies east of tho fighting area around Dixmudo. ) A dispatch from Rotterdam also assorts that the Germans are retreat ing towards Ghent. The dispatch says the roads in the direction of Ghent ire blocked wjth German troops. Desperate dorman Assault?: Repulsed London, Nov. 10.-On the Euro pean battlefields the fighting is fiercest along the small strip of Bel gian torrltory in possession of the allies from the sea to Armentieres, near the French border. Of the series of desperate assaults made by the Germans, the present is proba bly the most severe since the allies have declined to cede the offensive ' entirely to the enemy and are meet- j ing attack with attack. To-day French ofllcial statement , reports that the lighting is especially violent; that the German advance south of Ypres, a few miles north of ? the French border, bas been checked, and that further to the ecuth the French have made some progress. I Ail accounts agree that it is slow | work. Thc troops are fighting in dense fog, from one sand dune to an other, sometimes creeping slowly through the thick grass to win a few j additional yards. German Scourger Out of Business. London, Nov. 10.-The British navy got into the war picture to-day with two successes-the destruction of the German cruiser Erndon, in the eastern waters of the Indian Ocean and the bottling up of the K?nigs berg, considered ber sister ship, in the western extremity of the same sea. These two raidors, especially the Finden, have many successes u> their credit and their skill in evading the j net thrown out for them has been a matter oj' chagrin to British naval j men. The Emden's end came in battle as befitted ber record throughout re cent history, for, according to all ac counts, even those of ber victims, she played a clean game, strictly in ac cordance with the recognized rule of naval warfare. After a sharp action off COCOB Is land with tho Australian cruiser Syd ney, the German ship, with heavy casualties, was beached, ablaze. The German cruiser K?nigsberg met a less glorious fate, as she was bottled I up in such a position that she must i either be captured or surrendered, though in either case she probably will be nothing but a useless hulk. The cruiser Chatham, which ran down the K?nigsberg in the river op posite the Island Mafia, German East Africa, is a sister ship of the Sydney, which closed the (jareer of the Em den. Both the Emden and the Konigs 1 berg have the destruction of warships ' to their credit, as well a^ the sinking j of many merchant ships. Turkish territory in Europe has I 0 square milos. ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? .J. WALHALLA HIGH SCHOOL 4. ?J? ?|? ?J? ?J? ?|? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? 4? ?J? Edward Brigham, of New York, will appear at the school auditorium on Friday, November 13, at 8.15 p. m. Porty per cent of the receipt? will be given to the Walhalla High, School. Every one who attends is assured of a pleasant evening and a comfort able seat. The auditorium will bo sufficiently heated, it' necessary. Mr. Brigham will render the following p rog ra ni: Songs. My Memories-Tosti. Last Night-Kjerulf. Bohemian Folk Song-Arranged by Carl B?hm. Recitation. The Haven-Edgar Allan Poe. Songs. Shadows--Jacobs-Bond. The Rosary-Nevin. The Krik lng-Schubert. Recitation With Music. An Old Sweetheart of Mine-Rlley Harris. ( Poem by James Whitcomb Riley and music by. Leslie Harris,) Recitation. Makin' Relieve--Jos. C. Lincoln, j The Elf and the Dormouse-Oliver 1 Herford. ! Mia Carlotta--T. R. Daly, j The Lovers-Phoebe Cary. Songs. When You and 1 Were Young, Maggie Butterfield. Asleep In the Deep-Petrie. Recitation With Music. The Selfish Giant-Wilde Leh mann. (Story by Oscar Wilde, mu sic by Madame Liza Lehmann.) Song. O Holy Night-Adam. Admission, 15 and 25 cents. Card of Thanks. Editor Keowee Courier: We de sire through your pni>er to express our sincere thanks, to our dear neigh bors, who during the Illness and death of our beloved wife and mo- / ?ber gave such invaluable aosistance. Their kind deeds will .always be in our remembrance. Jen* P. Smith and Children. Walhalla, it. F. D. No. 2.