University of South Carolina Libraries
ASSESSMENT NOTCE. 1908. Nwtice is hereby given that I, or my **?*uty, will be at the following nara ?ei places on the days specified for the purpose of taking returns of property for. taxation la Orangeburg -Ceuaty for the fiscal year 1908. All-taxpayers must- give E the num ber of School District In which prop erty- iB located. Especial care should be taken in locating property in or near special school districts. School trustees, in the different townships are requested to meet the Auditor at these appointments and assist in the Broper location of special school and poll taxes. All personal property owned on the Srsfc day of January, 1908, must be -returned and all transfers of real es tate noted. Bowman. Wednesday. Jan. 8. Branchville, Thursday, Jan. 9. Rowesville, Friday, Jan. 10. Canaan Church, Saturday, Jan. 11. Feldervllle, Monday, Jan. 13. Dantzler P. O., Tuesday, Jan. 14. Vances, Wednesday, Jan. 15. Parlers, Thursday, Jan. 16. Elloree, Friday, Jan. 17. <Jameron, Saturday, Jan. 18. Livingston, Monday. Jan. 20. Dru Sawyers. Tuesday, Jan. 21. Springfield. Wednesday, Jan. 22. Gleaton, Thursday, Jan. 23. Norway, Friday, Jan. 24. Cope, Saturday, Jan. 25. Lone Star, Monday, Jan. 27. Fort Motte, Tuesday, Jan. 28. St. Matthews, Wednesday, Jan. 29. J. T. Gressett's, Thursday. Jan. 30 . North Friday, Jan. 31. Phillips, Saturday, Feb. 1. Orangeburg Court House from Jan. 1st to Feb. 20th, inclusive. Office nours from 9 A. M. to 2 P. M T. M. MeMICHAEL, ^2-12-t2-20. County Auditor O. C. Notice to Trespassers. All persons are hereby forbidden "to allow stock to run at large or trespass in any way on my lands in Willow Township 12-5-3mo* W. G. Sanford. Guardian's Notice of Discharge. On January 10, 1908, I will file -with the Judge of Probate for Or angeburg County, S. C, my final ac count as guardian of the estates of T. E. Fairey, M. E. Fairey, and Lula Fairey; and will thereupon ask for my discharge as such guardian. 12-5-4* F. F. Fairey. j> Land For Sate. 163^ acres of Lrad Worth of Or angeburg and within thirty minutes drive of the Court House, 100 acres upon clay sub-soil, remainder wood land. 'Will sell as a whole or in tracts. Apply to Robt.E. Copes. Notice to Creditors. All persons holding claims against the estate of James E. Hutto, deceas ed, will present the same properly proven and alt persons indebted to said estate will make payment to the undersigned, or to Raysotr & Summers, Attorneys, on or before the twenty-first day of January, 1908. George W. Hutto, Administrator of the estate of James E. Hutto, deceased. Dec. 16, 1907. Summons for Relief. The State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. Court of Common Pleas. A. W. Summers, Mary S. Pemberton, S. J. Summers and Carrie S. Ten het, Plaintiffs, against Annie Sum mers, George Summers, Junius Parier, Elliott Bookhart, Holley Rast. Caroline Smith, Luther Fair ey, Lavinia Wimberly, J. J. Fair er, Eugene Fersner, Charles Fers ner. Lizzie Fersner, M. M. Metts, Lawrence Davis, I John Crook and James Oliver, Defendants. (Cony Summons for Relief. Complaint Served.) To the Defendants, above named. You r *e hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action of which a copy is here with served upon you. and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office Orangeburg S. C, within twen- j ty days after the service hereof; ex clusive of the day of such service;, and if you fail to answer the com plaint within the time aforesaid, the plantiffs in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. To Lawrence Davis, non-resident de fendant: Please take notice thr.t the com plaint in this action together with the summons of which the forego ing is a copy was filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Orangeburg County, state of South Carolina, on the ninth day of November, 1907. Dated November 9th. 1907. (Official Seal) G. L. Salley. C. C. Pj T. M. Raysor. 12-26-6L Plaintiff's Attorney. I i The Edfsto Savings Bank, j !IORANGEB?RG, 5. O. ( Capital.$100,000.00. Surplus. 130,000.00. jj B. H. Moss, President. M. Oliver, Vice Pre < F. S. Dibble, Vice President, m. L. Glover, Ca9hie ( DIRECTORS j ? MO. Dantzler J. M. Oliver . R. bwnia W. F. r Fa'ev - f B. H. Moss T. C Doyle Sol Kohn J. W. Smoak j 9 Honey saved Is money made, and thewi/G> sYveU'to ?loo^L vou Z money in the savings der.arCro.eat and draw interest on^the first iav? 1 fi January, April, July and Octooer at the rate of four per cent oe> ???*?? i 9 This bank's absolute safety Is best attested by its capital took, It f ? surplus and by the character and standing of its officers ana board of 2 Erdizectori. Money loaned on good security. 3 . ???"????n..>nna?irmanaiiMinaaa>l Land .^r Sale. 346 acres of land fronting on Col umbia and stage roads, 2% miles north of city, for sale. For further information apply to Sifly and Frith. Orangeburg, S. C. 9-26-tf. A Card. If, on close and prolonged appli cation of the eyes of children or adults, as in reading or sewing, the letters or stiches blur and appear to run into one another ,the eyes tire, hurt and run water, the lids burn and the head aches, it Indicates the need of Spectacles prescribed and proper ly fitted by an Optician. Apply to M. J. D. Dantzler, M. D., Op. G., El loree. S. C. 10-31-6m. Notice of Discharge. On the 9th day of January, 1908, we will file with the Judge of Pro bate for Orangeburg county, S. C, our final account as executors of the last will and testament of Frank W. Williams, deceased, and ask for discharge as such executors. John Williams, Frank Williams, Executors will of Frank W. Williams deceased. Dated, Dec. 14, 1907. Notice to Creditors. State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. In Common Pleas. C. H. Harrison, Plaintiff, against Sylvester Johnson, et al., Defend ants. All persons having claims against Laura R. Johnson, deceased, whose estate is being setled in the above stated action, are hereby required to prove their respective demands be fore the undersigned, on or before January 8, 1908, or payment will be debarred. December 17, 1907. Robt. E. Copes. Judge of Probate, as Special Referee. Summons for Relief. The State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. Court of Common Pleas. V. G. Bryant and T. B. Bryant, Plaintiffs, against James McCord and T. H. Murray, Defendants. Summons for Relief. Complaint Served.) To the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in this action of which a copy is here with served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office Orangeburg, S. C, within twenty days after the service here of; exclusive of the day of such ser vice; and if you fail to answer the complains within the time aforesaid, the plaintiffs in this action will ap ply to the Court for the relief de manded in the complaint. Dated December 10th, 1907. To James McCord, non resident de fendant. Please take notice that the sum mons in this action, a copy where of is hereto annexed, was filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Orangeburg County, in said State on the 10th day of December, 1907. Raysor & Summers, 12-19-6. Plaintiff's Attorneys. Are Blondes Becoming Rare? In one respect the women of to-day are approaching the angelic standard ?namely, in stature. Angels, as shown in pictures, are always tall. The aureole and wings, it is to he feared, are beyond reach. Another peculiarity of the heavenly mes sengers, which earthly young ladies are not Mfcely to Imitate, is that they never wear shoes?not even sandals. So Car as their fair hair is concerned, it may be counterfeited with the help of peroxide, but, if Prof. Mason's theory be correct, the time is not far distant when a real blonde will be snch a rarity that artists who paint anfcels will have trouble to oimun a satisfactory model. The Women of Korea. We can hardly realize the servil ity of the oriental women. In Korea, so deeply sunk in superstition are the people, that women are actually held responsible for the crimes of their husbands, fathers and sons, and they have no rights before the law. A woman, for instance cannot ob tain a divorce from her husband, how ever cruel he may be. but for the most trivial reason he can secure a separation. Only women of the low er classes are allowed on the public streets and even they must cover their faces. Women are allowed to take no part in anything but d'.ud gery. How Baby Slept in the Middle Ages. Baby nowadays has things so much his own way that he would doubtless feel very indignant if he were put to sleep like the baby of the middle ages. The picture shows a style of cradle in use some eight centuries ago, when the custom prevailed of swarth ing the limbs of the poor little mites of humanity in the tightest of swad dling bands. They were strapped down in their cradles so that thej could r.;>r fall nut, or even move.. limb. In the ninth and tenth cen turies cradles were made of a section of the trunk of a tree scooped out. Small holes were bored at the sides and through these straps were passed to fasten the baby In. Later on rock ers were used. Sometimes the cradle was hung by cords or, as in the picture, slung between two wooden supports. In the sixteenth century cradles were often very elaborate and beautiful. Sometimes they were made of silver and again they were of wood, richly carved and ornamented with gilt mo said work. Best Women Sailors. A ship's doctor who has made one hundred voyages declares that the American girl does not become seasick so readily as her European sisters. The English girl is next in order of resistance, while the French girl suc cumbs most easily. Women's troubles very often occur regularly at a certain time every month. Be cause this may have been so all your life, is no reason why it should continue. Many thousands of women, who had previously suffered from troubles similar to yours, due to disorder of the womanly organs, have found welcome relief cr cure in that wonderfully successful medicine for women, Wine of Cardui Mrs. Leota Forte, of Toledo, I1L, writes: "I am well pleased with the results of using Cardui. I have taken three bottles and am now perfectly well, free from pain and havo gained 25, pounds in weight" flfftlTC IIC A I CITED Wr,t* today for a free copy of valuable 6*-paa-e nlaitrated Book for Women. If you need Medical Ad MfKI I 1^ I I V A I II I B BC vice, describe your symptoms, statine age, and reply will be sent In plain sealed envelope. Address I If Mil 11* \J*B n kLi ? I ~'* Udles Advisory Dept.. The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooea. Tenn. -a. joy in the Kitckeiv They please because they have nearly onejiundred advantages not [found in ordinaryjstoves, they please because they save fuel, time and trouble. ^ Call today, and allow me to show you my line of Buck's Stoves and Ranges. CT. "W. FSTVTO A TcT ORANGEBURG, S. C. Hot-House Where State Social isms Bloom and Bud. CRY "WHITE AUSTRALIA" Government Protects the CorPmunlty Against Strike* and Lockout* Exclusive of Aliens and Nis^roea Strictly Enforced?Plural V?V-[ng Abolished. V I Sunny Australia is best described j as a political hot-house, writes Bur-t, i riss Gahan in Booklover's Magazine. ! Beneath the glass of extreme democ racy twenty varieties of state socialism are budding, and a dozen more have reached their full bloom here a gen eration or two before their due tirp? in other par^of the world. Yo? in I the I'nitejT ?^s woulc ..mk tl?: pol iticai n?!' ????-?not far distant if youif' reformed by leayf ^tfofte 10 commis sio nd independent as! court j'Jdges. To, t of legislators a?u* f church irom siat Blutionary. But dctii inich farther. hi- Ahey have abol ?sl?- find have freely g ? go all women. T [ft graduated in ct ye land taxes. Ti iilty being met b; ;as the campul sg rge estates for c! by state loans 01 hhe referendum h de the greatest q arisen in Aus have beea pass vage, the eight % of shops, day contracts, and ies, shops, and ma have been 'he colonies, mrliarnent is .-. The exclu ?sirable immi ;idly that even ome under con the South Sea en working for nd sugar fields nd the govern l .enew muil con tr steamers which cs f>s or stokers. So st\ .?rfonal cry for a "Wim?1 Australia." Some of these advanced measures have been hastened; yet socialism here is not merely an after-growth of democracy. From the beginning the Australian governments have owned and operated their railways, tele/ graphs, and telephones. Ia some cases, also, they have kept in their own hands the street railways and electric lighting. All the colonies have government savings banks. In New Zealand there is government in surance against both fire and death. And now the government has under taken to protect the community against strikes and lockouts, much as you protect yourselves against mvder and highway robbery. When volun tary conciliation failed, as it has fail ed in Massachusetts and everywhere else, the practical reformers of New Zealand and Australia did riot fear to enforce compulsory arbitration. Asphalt Laid in Slabs;. A new system of laying asphalt roads is being adopted in London. In stead of paving the road with one homogeneous mass of the material, which means the closing of the thor oughfare for a prolonged period, the asphalt is laid in slabs, in the same mauncr as paving stones, says the Scientific American. The asphalt slabs are previously hardened, so that all it is necessary to do is to lay them down on the prepared foundation and cement them into position with tar. By this system a road can be reopen ed for traffic as rapidly as It is pav ed, while a further distinct advantage Is obtained as, owing to the use of tar at the joints, the surface of the road way is less slippery than in the ease of large, unbroken stretches of as phalt paving. The Tools of Genius. S'une of the greatest discoveries in ohyslcs and chemistry have been Bade with the simplest forms of ap paratus and under the most, modest conditions of laboratory equipment On> need only reeall the achievements of the famous .lehn Dalton, and in later time of Sir Gabriel Stokes, to il lustrate the point. As regards the latter, a comment of Lord Rayleigh is oi interest Stokes's experimental work, he says, was executed with the mcsl ntodcsl appliances. .Many of Iiis discoveries were made In a narrow passage heh.nd the pantry of his house, into the window of which he had ;i shutter fixed with a slit in it und a bracket <m which to place crystals and prisms.?London Tele graph. Gentlewomen Economical. American wives of British peers are usually considered to lie as extrava gant as they are rich. This is lai from being the case. Lady Clinton cannoi tolerate needless waste. The young Duchess of Marlborougli is an other careful housekeeper, and every morning goes through the state's ac counts and checks them. She is said lo have ;i thorough knowledge of bookkeeping. Czar's Relatives. The twenty-three nearest male rel atives of the czar each receive a sal ary of $-l(((i hihi a year from the gov ernment. They own together about 5,000 square miles of land and 325 palaces. They employ about 20,000 servants. Passed Examination Successfully. James Donahue. New Britain, Conn., writes: "I tried several kid ney remedies, and was treated by our best physicians for diabetes, but did not improve untl 1 took Foley's Kidney Cure. After the second bottle I showed improvement, and five bot tles cured me completely. I have since passed a rigid exam.nation for life insurance." Foley's Kidney Cure cures backache and all forms of kid ney and bladder trouble. Dr. A. C. Gems In Terse OLD FAVORITES. I ENVOY. WALKED with poets In my youth. Because the world they drew Was beautiful and glorious Boyond the world I knew. ifho poets are my comrades still, But doarer than in youth, Tar dow I know that they aloaa Pfotur* the world of truth. ?William Rose*? Thayer. BEN BOLT. ?N'T you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown, j-jj J Who wept with delight when: youj gave her a smile. ' / >\nd trembled with fear at your frawtf? In ^the old churchyard in the valley Ben Bolt. / In tu corner obscure and alone. ' The>\ have fitted a slab of the granite so ?\ray, And ?Alice lies under the stone. Under tl Ve hickory tree, Ben Bolt, Which bStoorl at the foot of the hill Together wiVvc lain In the noonday shade And listene\ to Appleton's mill. The mill whet. Uhas fallen to nieces, Ben Bolt. V ?,. . The ratters have v^uimble^ffif And a quiet whicli tVawJs. round the walls as yon gaze *.>;>V'*' ?' Has followed the oldeVi dih.' Do you mind of the cab.Cp <->f 'offs, Ben Bolt, \ At the edge of the pathle.*9 wood And the button ball tree. w,\h it3 motley limbs, \ Which nigh by the doorstep Jfctood? The cabin to ruin has gone. B"-Vj Bolt, The tree you would sock for 1^ vain. And where once the lords of tye forest waved I Are grass and the golden grain! And don't you remember the sch Ben Bolt. With the master so cruel and grin's. And the shaded nook in the running brook \ Where the children went to swim? Grass grows on tho master's grave, I'en Bolt. I The spring of the brook is dry, V And of all the boys who were schoolmates , then There are only you and L There is chango in the things I loved, Ben Bolt? They have changed from the old to tho new? But I feel in the deeps of my spirit the truth There never was change in you. Twelve months twenty have past, Ben Bolt, Since first we were friends, yet I hall Your presence a blessing, your friendship a truth. Ben Bolt of the salt sea gale. ?Thomas Dunn English. GREATNESS. THERE'S a glory in being right and a splendor In being true. That is greater than anything else life can possibly bring to you! Fora man can fight when lie's right and knows that he knows that he is In a way that will make every blow that he strikes a blow to make victory his! The greatest greatness thero is that the world can bring to you Is the glory of being right and the splen dor of being true! ?Selected. STAR OF THE EAST.' RIGHT EST and bent of tho sons of the morning, Dawn on our darkness and lend us thine aid; Star of the east, the horizon adorn ing. Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid. Cold on his cradle the dewdrops are shin ing; Low lies hi3 head with the beasts of the stall; Angels adore him, in slumber reclining. Maker and Monarch and Saviour of all! Say shall we yield him, In costly devotion. Odors of Edom and offerings divine? Gems of the mountain rnd pearls of the ocean. Myrrh from the forest or gold from the mine? Vainly wo offer each ample oblation, Vainly with gold would his favors se cure; Richer by far is the heart's adoration; Dearer to God are the prayers of the poor. Brightest and best of the sons of the morning, Dawn on our darkness and lend us thine aid: Star of the east, the horizon adorning. Guide where our Infant Redeemer Is laid. ?Bishop Reginald Heber. TIME. THE bell strikes one. We fake no note of time But from its loss. To give It then a tongue. Is wise In man. A3 If an angel spoke, I feel the solemn sound. Tf heard aright, It is the knell of my departed hours. Where are they'.' With the years beyond the Hood. I Jl is the signal that demands dispatch. How much is to be done! My hopes and fears Start up alarmed and o'er life's narrow verge Look down?on what? A fathomless abyss. A dread eternity?how surely mine! And can eternity belong to me, Poor pensioner on the bounties of an hour'.' *?**?*? Time the supreme! Time is eternity. Pregnant with all eternity can give, Pregnant with all that makes archangels smile. Who murders time, he crushes In?the birth A power ethereal, only not adored. Ah, how unjust lo nature and himself Is thoughtless, thankless, Inconsistent man! Like children babbling nonsense In their sports, We censure nature for a span too short. That span too sliort. we lax as tedious, too. Torture invention, all expedients tire. To lash the lingering moments into speed And whirl ua (happy riddance!; from our ael\ us. ?Edward l'oung. LIFE'S OPERA. T IKE an opera house is the world I wem. Where tho passioimte lover of music is seen In the balcony near the roof. While the very best seat in the first stage box Is filled by the person who laughs and talks Through the harmony's warp and woof. ?Kl!a Wheeler Wllcox. The finest Coffee Substitute ever made. has recently been produced by Dr. Shoop of Racine, Wis. You don't have to boil it twenty or thirty min utes. ".M?de in a minute" says the doctor. "Health Coffee" js really the closes! Coffee Imitation ever yet pro duced. Xot a grain of real Coffee in it either. Health Coffee Imitation is made from pure toasted cereals or grains, with malt, nuts. etc. Really it. would fool an expert--were he to unknowingly drink it for Coffee. A. L. Dukes. Wire Entanglements, Man in Armor and the Star Shell. RUSS AND INGENIOUS JAPS Japan?se Were Not Accustomed to the Searchlights and Were Confused and Blinded by Them?Realized Their Safety Lay in Getting Back to Camp. Among the many contrivances which contributed to make Port Ar thur what it was, nothing exceeded in importance the Russian use of wire entanglements, writes B. W. Norre gaard, war correspondent of the Lon don Daily Mail. The single or double rows of these entanglements were the strongest passive defenses of the for^s. and the .lapaoOse tried many devices to cut tJieir . way-through. At first they Uiougnt to 'au-^^wS^imply with shears, of brought Soi1'" was tr**"^ y SO' .... more success, up during the i the tops of sc then wriggle bau. of the ropes to lift, whore his comrades an "ichi, ni, san," ?? rangement came d Che Russians soon was happening, am tho Japanese tried they found that the wire-braced and wit ?itorts. Of course, the shi much of the wire fe; mese had another v hem by powder. [ bamboo poles and . ?<dack. strong, srno' T \hen a man crept umder the entan; mM so blasted pat Sometimes the me lespJ?rate resort, wa daylight?I have seen an attiick?protected i if their big shieiNis. and quietl1 fork to cut the \ "ire rieht, in the de fenders. The shields .. if two ono-quarte; inch iron ph ed to gether, and weigh about i. /unds. One slit at \he top is fu the eyes and the bottom slit it where the man works his shears The shield reaches) to his knees ami is slung from his shoulders. He cofo only walk very slowly, and I do no* think he would have much of a chanc^ in a race with a tortoise. The first man who was .sent out was met by a number of rifle shots, which hit him right in the chest ;\the bul lets din not penetrate the shield, but the impact, which possessed the force of a sledgehammer blow, knocked vu'm clean over. He was not hurt .but ^"ot On ais feet again, and the impact o'2 the bullets made him stop and stag ger, before he reached the entangle ments. Of the active means of defense the Russian searchlights and machine guns came in the fr.rat rank. They ut terly blinded and confused the Jap anese. At one moment the powerful light was glaring lull in their faces, at the next it was suddenly turned off, leaving them in complete and baffling darkness. Then suddenly another light, of which the Russians had nine, threw the ,1apane: e into the fullest relief. Instantly a tremendous Are waa opened up on them from rifles, and especially, from machine guns, which, at this range, played havoc with them on the coverless plain. They could see nothing, t'iey could do nothing; death was amo ig them, and they knew not. how to evade it: they were blind and helpless, and did not know where they were or where the enemy was. Everything got mixed up for them. Even the bra> ^st among them recog nized that there was only one thing to do--get away, away from the slaughter, awa from the cruel light, back to their own camps, back to the night and the darkness. A Japanese machine gun attempted to recover th^ retreat. A star shell instantly dct'jcled it. whereupon a searchlight was turned upon it and the Russian quickfirers went up and commenced their "pom-pom-pom" against it and pill it out of action at once. It was no use: the attack was hopelessly broken. The Japanese be fore the siege were not accustomed to the searchlights. As one of their of flcers said to me, gloomily, after the reverse: "They arc the most deadly weapons we have to face." At Ihnes we could i.. a faint swish in the air when a starshell was fired. A thin, scarcely perceptible curved line of sparks mounting sky ward, a rain of while phosphorus stars sinking slowly, slowly through the dark, a glory of light, a dream of beauty, and an excellent means of illuminating, for a few moments, tho underlying country, In a way that no ten searchlights can do it. because the light, of an immense Intensity, conies from right above, so that there are no deep shadows; everything is laid ' are. not a man can move or live under the circle of lijiht without be ing discovered. The ink plant of New Granada is a curiosity. The juice of it can be used as Ink without an> preparation At first the writing is red. but after a few hours it chtuiges to black. Russia haa a per capita investment in industrial enterprises of $4, while the United States have $125. Lands for Sale Near Bowman. The Richardson lands, (566 acres) have been divided into ten tracts, varying in size from 41 acres to ft 5 acres, and are offered for sale o desirable actual settlers, on reason able terms of cash and credit. For particulars apply to I. V~ Bowman, Orangeburg, S. C. or to Samuel. Dibble. Bowman, S. C. / Agents for Owners. w. Hampton D?kes. (TS DE R'pAKER AND PRACTICAL EMB AIMER. Three Pine Hearses for Both Citjr, and County Service. j t was craw! pes to ?-s, and ;he ends -enches, g. with ...ole ar jy. But it what