University of South Carolina Libraries
? CARE OF THE TEETH. Now to Bmth Them Properly ?od Save Dentists' Bills. To have pretty, strong tee?t is, tr should be, an important matter to ail women, and if through neglect as a child discolorations and Alling are in evidence the proUleai is a dt^cuit ob?. Of all the rules and regula?ou3 laid down by experts and all the powde? and washes on the market or to be Biade at home none is so important as regular care. If a child has bees brought up to brash her teeth regular ly aud often and continues to do so. che would need nothing but clear wa ter to have! "pearls" of which novelists discant. But acids more or less harm less and blanches are expected in lat er years to maks up for lack of at tention in the past and often in the present Astonishingly few persons know how to brush their teeth. This may seem a remarkable statement but one may demonstrate it the next time a brush Is used. It Is rubbed across the teeth Instead of up and down, and a mo ment's tht-oght will show that rubbing across will clear the middle or flat sur face, but the edges or curves are left absolutely untouched, runs an article in the New York Telegram. The mo tion should always, be from the gum* down to the tips on the upper jaw and from the gums up on the lower. Ia this way, and this way only, are parti cles removed from between the teeth and the whole surface gone over. Add ed to this dental floss should be used soft coarse silk that is drawn back and forth between the teeth at the base, bringing out obstructions too small or too far In for any brush to reach. Floss should be used after each meal and al ways at night. Many a dentist's bill would be saved In this way. How to Buy Good Bananas. When yon are buying bananas never purcha?* the loDg thin ones unless you want fruit which will pucker your mouth. No matter bow well ripened these thin bananas are. they will al ways be found both sour and acrid. This is because the bunch containing them was packed too soon. The ba nana grows faster at first in length. When It has reached its fullest devel opment In that direction it suddenly begins to swell and in a few days wfll double Its girth. It is at the end of this time that the banana is ripened naturally, and the effort of the banana importer Is to have the fruit picked at the last moment and yet before the last ripening has progressed even enough to tinge the bright green of the fruit with yellow. A difference of twenty-four hours on the trees at this time will make a difference in the weight of the fruit perhaps 25 per cent, and all the difference hi Its Anal flavor between a puckery sour and the sweetness and smoothness which are characterise of the ripe fruit How to Care For Evening Slippers. Cloth top slippers should be well whisked each time after wearing, and an occasional cleansing with naphtha or gasoline will keep them clean, says the Washington Star. Evening slip pers in pastel shadee of kid or in silk or satin may be readily cleaned with an erasure known as art gum that is used by illustrators. Of course, either naphtha or gasoline will clean these Boiled slippers. Those made of bronse leather, gbt cr gold cloth must be care fully handled to prevent tarn La hin and should be painted r'th a liquid bronze or gold as soon as they begin to look dun. When touched with this brightener it Is best to have the slip pers fitted over trees; then the doth or kid vrill not only keep free from wrinkles, but the correct shape will be retained. How to Renew Smoiiing Salts. Smelling salts can be made to last for years If fresh spirits are poured over the balls of salt from time to time, so as tc^ keep up the original strength of the mixture. Many peo ple use spirit, of ammonia in this connection, but a still more powerful specific may be found In a combination of this spirit with oil of lavender. In the proportion of two parts of the for mer to one of the latter, says Woman's Life. In procuring tbe ammonia, how ever, care must be taken to avolu choosing aromatic spirits of ammonia in error, the water which it contains preventing It from amalgamating with the oil. How t? Weigh Without Scales. To weigh without scales remember that ten eggs weight one pound; soft butter tbe size of an egg weighs one ounce; one pint A sugar weighs twelve ounces; one quart flour weighs one pound; one pint brown swgur weighs thirteen ounces; two teacups (level) granulateu sugar weigh one pouud; two teacups (well heaped) A sugar weigh one pound; two teacups soft but ter weigh one pound; one pint liquid weigh on-.* pound; one pint chopped meat weighs one pound. How to Mr.ke Icing. Wheu making boiled icing for cake, after beating the whites of the eggs and boiling the sugar and water to what you think is the proper consist ency, or until it forms a hair when dropped from a spoon, pour the sirup, little by iittle, into the beaten whites, b^atirg thoroughly. Then place the stewpau back ou the stove, repeatiug ihls process until all of the sirup has been used. How to Make Strawberry Meringee. Cook one quart of strawberries In a cupful of water, wash well and strain through coarse cheesecloth; add a cup ful of sugat- and boil again until it Is almost, ready to turu to jelly; then put a layer of bread iu a bowl, pour on the hot sirup and serve ice cold with sw???med whipped cream. When the Stomach, Heart or Kid ney nerves get weak, then these or gans always fail. Don't drug the Stomach, nor stimulate the Heart or Kidneys. That is simply a makeshift. Get ;i prescription known to drug gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Re storative is prepared expressly for these inside nerves, build them up with Dr. Shoop's Restorative?tal> lets or liquid?and see how qiuckly help will come. Free sample test sent on request by Dr. Shoop. Racine, Wis. Your health is surely worth this .ample test. J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. RAGE SUIOIDE IN LO.wJN Due to Love of Ease and Luxury Among Upper Clati-e. The continued foil in tue oirth and marriage rate in London, couiuined with the terribly high rate 01 uuant mortality, is viewed with the greatest otttioofa ia reL^ouu aai ?ci<??i?ac cir cles. The Aer. W. Oaritie, ?u^a of the Church Army said that a declin ing birth rate was one of the surest signs of national decay. "Love of eaae aad luxury among the upper classes," he continued, "are mainly responsible for this terrible state of affairs. The refusal of moth ers to accept the responsibility of motherhood is, in my opinion, nothing less than child murder. The moral standard in this respect is much higher among tue tower than among the upper classes. For in stance, while the birth rate was 37.6 per 1,000 in Stepney, 35.7 in Bethnai Green and 34.5 in Poplar, all poor districts, in rich Kensington it was only 20, in wealthy Hampstead 17.L' and in Westminster lowest of all, 16.9. "I weep to think of it. London is becoming another ? Herculaneum, an other Pompeii. If we do not mend our ways our fate will be none the less terible. "History has proved over and over again that when the birth-rate fall? the whole prosperity of the country suffers. Take France, for instance. Her stagnant population has brought defeat in war, increased criminality, and a lessening of virtue and strength. In Italy, on me other hand, where the population is steadily increasing, tbe country is progressing by leaps and bounds." Sir James Crichton Browne also blames the mothers of Britain for the declining birth-rate and the heavy in fant mortality. He has declared these tacts to be due to an increased disin clination on the part of mothers to nurse their own offspring. "The extent to which mothers shirk their responsibilities is lamentable," he said. "Seduced by the siren calls of fashion and frivolity, these women evade their duty?to the loss of their offspring." The Bishop of Ripon declares that much more terrible than those irreg ular alliances which the church had not sanctioned were "those terrible fashionable marriages where the du ties of life are shirked, and where marriage is made a mockery. This is a question affecting society as a whole, for the biyth-rate of almost every European nation is declining." The Bishop of London expressed his firm bpliof that married life properly lived is the happiest form of exist ence. The Man Who Rules Japan. The emperor of Japan is the sun of all authority. Everything in Dai Nip pon shines by his light. In the Jap anese conception of history he is the living representative of the gods who made Everlasting Great Japan. Whether it were court nobles of im memorial lineage, heads of military claus, mediaeval governors who gov erned in tbe Mikado's name, or the all-powerful Shogun at Kamakura or Yedo, they did but shine by borrowed light. Even the constitution of 1889, which made government representa tive and progressive, was a whole the ory of administration is that the son of heaven Is the source of all auth ority, and that prosperity to the na tion comes from his divine ancestors through him. The most serious ques tion which Japanese patriots have to answer, and the most weighty prob lems they have to solve, center in this?how to reconcile this ancient theory with the claims of civilization and of Christianity.?Harper's Week ly. Cotton in England. American cotton thinkers, with memories still busy with the recent uproar in our cotton mart, will prob ably read with interest of the discus sion in the house of commons recent ly on cotton-growing in the British empire, in which both sides showed a commendable zeal. Mr. Emmott, speaking on behalf of the British Cot ton Growing association, thanked the government for the assistance they had given, and pointed out that the only barrier to makiDg British Central African territories a great cotton producing region lay in the labor ...L^Lou. :..r. .... :._I.jn. in an inter esting speech, summarized the steps which have been taken in this work throughout the empire. Egypt, thanks to Lord Cromer, sends a good supply, and there i3 every reason to believe that, cotton growing may be established in the Souuan. Experi ments are being made in Rhodesia and other parts of South Africa, but the west coast of Africa is the chief cen ter of promise. It has been arranged that the Cotton Crowing association ?hall contribute ?30,000 a year for the work, and that Southern Nigeria, Sier ra Leone, and Lagos shall provide ?G.f>00 for three years. No bettor work in the cause of imperialism could be undertaken, for on its suc cess depends the future of some of Britain's chief tropical possessions.? Boston Transcript. An American Buddha? The Buddhists of Tibet and ether outlandish places think that their god's second coming will be from Europe to America, says a Buddhist student. "They think this because, in all their old images of Buddha reincar nated, he sits, not on the floor, but in our modem occidental way upon -i chair. When they found that. Euro peans sat. on straight chairs they came to believe firmly that from America or Europe their reincarnated Buddha would come." When women borrow trouble they usually pay back double. Millions of bottles of Foley's Hon ey and Tar have been sold without any person ever having experienced any other than beneficial results from its use for coughs, colds and lung troubles. This Is because the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow packag<\ contains no op iates or other harmful drugs. Guard vour health by refusing any but the genuine. Dr. A. C. Dukes. BAB t it volu?^K ?AK.V1&NT3 Uil/lUDl? w,t ?.fc, Ik VU~>tU>X.9 iwt - ?.? i. ?t o ~. -o. .o >* - 7 - -<**t j? -^jitv, ?_ .mi htt.O i?? w>1 !??.?>-., mm ulx* tlaO^i Ul ?lOlVU**. lul; M/a?o?*?M j/UH-U -'Oeil u?o u. ...< i'. t&huU lud Ol uisi Uiu a.;.v w o_, Wu.uu. kaj a ol\-dtu |?. .a u-?? hil t 0-"-* ly ? luuliu ut? Cu.la uu .ui t_o -k), Qlatl/ ijuUJH ulU UU'X/uiJ.ui umiii, -J ere, Uitiiu^re, to us i. .ji new i)u.iui a.re uiaue co o.-Uii u~ e Buudluur bUaiuo >UJ it v.l. l be - . ?fcl tuttl tut/ CuU Ut ULKtill ?.i WlUlOui uU diooiing tuo ba /. i^e .rout ui pe^.icuaC lb a Su'dig.ii pice, ?i.0 ..y gured ai tue boi .oiu, ami tue tu^ ..-.s tLO neck und (.roiuuitis cut hiui .u Tue bu.cK is cut wita a siuall a^uo^nt oi funneas. Royalty's Love of Pcarle. Queen Alexandra, as most peop'e know, bas a love of pearls and si.e is very fond of wearing an exquisite dog col ar necklet of these precious gems, which are also the favorite jewe.s of the queen-dowager of Italy, herself known as the "Pearl of Savoy." Since her widowhood the queen dowser ->aa no longer taken pleasure in her jewels as formerly, and her famous ropes of pearls, to which her devoted husband always added another on each of her birthdays, have now passed Into the possession of her beautitul daugtuer in-iaw. Queen Elena. On Waterloo's Battlefield. Mme. Veuve Dupuis, nearly 104 | years old, who was a guest of honor at the unveiling of Gerome's monument, "the Wounded Eagle," on the scene of me struggle of giants, had her wish to travel to tiie Waterloo battlefield in a motor ear gratified. Slie did not, I ho've\er. rema';^ long awav from her j residence at Chi' ?elle-les-Herlaincourt, as she did not i:ow how her "bovs" aged SO and TS, would get on without her. Book and Music Cabinet. The disposition of sheet music so that it will be accessible and yet be preserved from dust is something of a puzzle in the home where space is at a premium. Mttf'c cabinets of vary ing sizes and designs have been brought out in recent years and a sat isfactory one fcr ordinary service is here pictured. It is of mahogany tall enough to Ferve as a pedestal on which to display a specimen of pottery or bric-a-brac, while the compartments for sheet music are sufficient to ac commodate a goodly supply. Under neath the drawers, music books can b6 stewed away conveniently and. if desired be screened from view and from dust by curtains of silk. The Art of Drinking. Every child should be taught that thirst quenching does not depend so greatly on the quantity of fluid swal lowed as on the length of time during which liquid is kept in contact with the tissues of the mouth and throat. A small quantity of water used as a mouth and throat wash will relieve thirst more than a pint swallowed has tily. A child should never be allowed to drink iced water, or fcr that mat ter any kind of Iced drinks. Questions for Engaged Girls. Do you really know the man whose wife you have promised to be? Are " u acquainted with his ideas ttiid idt--is of lite? Do you find that his tastes and yours are congenial? Have you heard what his men ac quaintances say about hira? Have you ever seen him in any but conventional surroundings? Do you know how he sponds his time when he is not with you? A Cure for Warts. Vinegar and cooking soda in solu tion are said to make a capital cure for warts. If the wart is kept moist with it for fen minutes several times a day it will disappear in the course of a week or so in ordinary cases. An other cure is to touch frequently with acetic or nitric acid, but one must be careful not to irritate the surrounding skin by dropping either acid. Saving the Hair. Many women lose quantities every summer, and as soon as the cold wither comes the shedding ceases. It might be avoided entirely i:-' they, were careful and as a woman grows older it is mure than ever important to save what she has. for new hair does not grow quickly or often on an old scalp. An invalid's desire for oranges, flgs or grapes may usually he heeded. White china silk washes like a handkerchief. 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 I 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 examination for life insurance." Foley's Kidney Cure cures backache and all forms of kid ney and bladder trouble. Dr. A. C. Dukes. IN A MARR9AGE HARKET. I Odd Custom In a Prominent Russian j Mart for Wives. Perhaps the best known of these I Russians marriage markets ia the one that takes place annually at Klui, near i Moscow, and which has just been he.d with th* usual success. It occurs dur Jrr the ?wee': of Eol^banr (Russ'm ?tylej, Si-ad ?II the young women tha\8 wish to,get married in the courso of the year are mustered in a long row in the principal streets of that large and straggling country town. In order to m?ke themselvea attractive to the young men who come to see and ad mire them they wear nearly all their belongings on their backs. Their fin erv does not consist only of their best clothes, but It includes a lot of old family trinkets, sometimes valuable -carfs, cloaks and furs, heavy silver Jevolry and necklaces.jackets showing rows of prettily clselated or filigree silver buttons, and many of the girls bring even their linen and other do mestic property along with them in gaudily painted chests and trunks, sit ting on them like dragons watching a treasure. After exposing themselves for hours to the close scrutiny of th wr>"ld-be benedicts the girls march of! In p procession to church, there to per form at the shrine of some saint par ticularly potent in procuring connubia bliss, such as St. Chrysostom and Si Nzitanzen, worshipful pravers. Or the way to church It is not onlypermu: able but good form for the young me: to follow and accost one or the othci of the girls In the way of conversat'on If any two of the young people think they suit one another a forma, visit is paid by the intended grocm tc the parents. But before the actua man-iage is arranged a number of in terviews takes place between the rc ?perlivo parents, every item of th. trousseau being exacted beforehand and noted down as part of the bride'i. dowry.?i iarper's Weekly. A Rcoin and a Rat. Tho other day, while a genUcrrar. of Porthollow. St. Kcvc-rne. was walk? ing past a farm in the neighborhood, he was attracted by a robin, which flow about him, flapped its wings in his faco some two or throe times and appeared greatly excited and dis tressed. The gentleman's curiosity being arroused, he watched the robin for some time. It flew towards him and then back into the hedge a short distance away, uttering apparertly cries of distress all the time. The gen'leman walked toward the hedge where the bird seemed to wish him to come, and creeping up close he dis covered a medium sized rat, which had got into the robin's nest and was devouring one of the little youn? birds. At the sight of the gentleman the rat jumped out and was knocked senselers on the road. When the robir saw the rar lying on the road she rW at it and pecked it viciously. The rai was killed and thrown over the hedge into the field, and as the gentleman walked aw?y the robin seemed tc chirp him her thanks. There were /our young birds in the nest. Oae was killed, but the other three were free from injury.?London Globe. The Marxian "Canals." After experimenting on the crack? ind fissures that sppear in cylindor. nd spheres subjected to pressure M V. Baumana, aa eaglneer of Zurich Switzerland, has proposed the follow ng explanation of the markings on the planet Mars, ordinarily known at 'canals." Says tho Revuo Scientlflnup n a notice of M. Baumann's hypotli esie: Mars may have a brittle, solid crust, with a more drastic nucleus this difference of rigidity, depending simply on differences of temperature In the varies strata. When the planet cools contraction takes place, and thi outer layers yields little by little tc tho pressure. In places where the pressure is greatest, cracks?always louble, as shown by M. Baumanu in his experiments?appear. It is pos sible that afterwards, by the internen tion of living beings, the edges or ttiese cracks may have been removed 30 as to form canals. But the same result may follow from the prog^es sive enlargement of small fi.:surf?s The rectilinear canals indicate y homogenous constitution of soil. Fin ally, the outer crust, now solid, may have remained long in a plastic state which would have prevented the form ation of motintans.?Literary Digest. Ae t* Pronunciation. As a general thing, says the Moh'U Register, the English tongue is mor.. correctly used in the South than i: *nv other n?.rt of the nountrv, fnr I .sun il*ai thcr?5 is a predo.nineu of English stock in the South, an. not the admixture of continental bb'Oi. such as corrupts the language of th inl:abitants of the Eastern, Middb i.nJ Western States. Even tha: fo. which we are most rivaled in Englan ?the soft, almost ina dible r Una. The Southerner says "Sir" as if i were written S'r, and that is the Eng lish way. The Yankee says "Sirur-r," with a bold twist, of the final r, unlikt the pronunciation of English by iht cultured in any part of the world. The King Sets Fashions. It was noted with mingled awe an: delight by attentive English reporter: that King Edward, on his recenl , :si; to Ireland wore his hat slightly "tilted to the right." All loyal hats will uov. lie worn slightly tilted to the right. The Chinaman and Telephone. Wall Lee. an Americanized China man from San Francisco visiting in | Hertford, Conn., expressed surprise when he learned that not one of hi? countrymen in Hartford has a tele phone. Pasteboard From Peat. Pasteboard made of 40 percent p<vtt fiber and 60 percent wood shavings is a standard product both in German) and Sweden, being stronger, hghtci and cheaper than pasteboard made ir. tho ordinary way. The finest Coffee Substitute ever Dr. Snoop of Racine, Wis. You don't have to boil it twenty or thirty min utes. "Mado in a minute" says the doctor. "Health Coffee" is really the closest Coffee Imitation ever yet pro duced. Not 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. Circuit Co art 8j?>. ? ? oJ South Carolina, Couaty ?igeburg. In Common Pleas. W. C. Pairey, Plaintiff,''a?aiast George Summers, et al., Defen dants. By virtue of the Judgment in the above stated case. I wQI sell 4t lie auction, at OTAMgflburij ^Jodj* House, during the legal hours f?r sales, on the first Monday in Febru ary, 1908, being the third day -yi said month, the following describe* real estate: all THAT CERTAIN TRACT or PARCEL OF LAND situate, lyiac and being In Cow Castle Townshla, [in the County of Orangeburg, and State of South Carolina, containing fifty (50) acres, more or lesn, bound ed by lands of Grant Bowman, by landB of Samuel Dibble; by lands now or formerly of the estate of John J. Jackson, deceased, and is fully shown on partition plat made by F. W. Frederick, Surveyor, in the case of Dantzler vs. Summers, and being the same land of which the late Simon Summers died seized and possessed. TERMS: Cash, the purchaser or purchasers to pay for all pfc.per3 and all taxes falling due after the day of sale; and in case the purchaser or purchasers fall to comply with the terms of sale, said premises wilt be resold on the same, or some sun sequent salesday, on the same terms, and at the risk of the former pur chaser or purchasers. Robt. E. Copes, Judge of Probate, as Specia' Referee. January 14. 1908.?1-17-3. Circuit Court Sale. State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. In Common Pleas. James Coulter, et al., Plaintiffs, against Benjamin Coulter, et al., Defendants. By virtue of the judgment in the above stated case, 1 will sell at pub lic auction, at Orangeburg Court House, during the legal hours for sales, on the first Monday in Febru ary, 1900, being the third day of said month, the following described 1*6ill GS tel te * ALL THAT CERTAIN PIECE. PARCEL OR TRACT OF LAND sit uate, lying and being in Caw Caw Township, said County and State, containing thirty-nine (39) acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of Wm. Glover, Polly Boyd, Lovick Glover, and Irvin Miller, and lands of Isaac Coulter, Zelia Guignard and David Coulter, being composed of six shares of the estate lands of Isaac Coulter, deceased. TERMS: Cash, the nurch-^ purchasers to pay for all papers and all taxes falling clue after the day of sale; and in case the purhaser or purchasers fail to comply with the terms of sale, said premises will be resold on the same or some subse quent salesday, on the same term? and at the risk of the former pur l chaser or purchasers. Robt. E. CopeB, Judge of Probate as Speclsil Refere* January 14, 1908.?1-17-3. Circuit Court Sale. State of South Carolina, County of I Orangeburg. In Common Pleas. lEdne T. Mack, PlaintifJ, against Sylvia Williams, et al., Defend ants. By virtue of the judgment in the above stated case, I will sell at pub lic auction, at Orangeburg Court House, during the legal hours for sales, on the first Monday in Febru ary, 1908, being the third day of said month, the following described real estate: ALL THAT CERTAIN TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND situate, lying J and being in Edisto Tow nship, Or iangeburg County, and State of South [Carolina, containing forty-three (43) acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of Joseph Zeigler, estate lands of Ned Williams, and lands of Juli-. Dantzler and Laura Donaldson; be ing the same tract of land conveyed to the late Jack Williams by the late Daniel Smoak, by Deed, dated the 7th day of March, 1899, and pur chased by the said Simon Williams and Sylvia Williams at public sale, and conveyed to them by H. H. Brun j son. Judge of Probate as Special Referee, in settlement of the estate of the said Jack Williams. TERMS: Cash, the purchaser ot purchasers to pay for all papers and all taxes falling due after the day of ??'!o- und In case the purchaser or purchasers fail to comply with the terms of sale, said premises will he resold on the same or some subse quent salesday, on the same terms and at the risk of the former pur chaser or purchasers. Robt. E. Copes, Judge of Probate as Special Referee. January 14, 1908.?1-17-3. Circuit Court Snlc. State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. In Common Pleas. Dr. Augustas S. Hydrick, etc., Plain tiff, against Clara Belle Jones, De fondant. By virtue of the judgment in the above stated case, I will sell at pub lic auction, at Orangeburg Court House, during the legal hours for sales, on the first Monday in Febru ary, 1908, being the third day of said month, the following described real estate: ALL THAT CERTAIN LOT OR PARCEL OF LAND, with the build ings thereon, situate, lying and being in the City of Orangeburg, in the County of Orangeburg, in the State aforesaid, fronting on Meeting Street and measuring thereon two hundred feet, more or less, and measuring in depth one hundred and twenty feet, more or less, and bounded on the North by lots ol H. Von Ohsen; on the East by Meeting Street: on the South by Calhoun Street, and on the West by other lots of the said Clara Belle Jones. This lot will be sold in two parcels by a plat to be exhib ited at the sale. TERMS: Cash, the purchaser or purchasers to pay for all papers and all taxes falling due after the day of sale; and in case the /nirchaser or purchasers fall to comily with the terms of sale, said premises will be resold on the same or some subse quent salesday, on the same terms and at the risk of the former pur chaser or purchasers. Robt. E. Copes, riuir-o of Probate as Special Referee. January 14. 1908.?1-17-3. WHAT? 10 yds yard wide "Frnit" Bleach $1.00. COMPARE! 10-4 Brown Sheeting ? 23c. "LACES." 8,001) yds Torshon Lace to be put on sale New Years Day as long as they last 3, 5 and 7c. 500 yda Val Laces just received, a chance tc save money, 3, 5 and 8c. 90 inch Linen Sheeting 90c, value $1.25. 20 per cent off on all our shoes. Everything at "SALE" prices. Many Bargains shown at our* store. FOREMAN RICKENBAKER CO. X>000000000003l>OPOOOOOOOOO<2g GLOVER'S A Kapyy New Year. We wish tn extend to all of our u ri< n^s and Patrons our sincere thanks for all favors shown us during the paRt year and trust, our relations may continue as pleasantly as heretofore. Wishing you, one and all a happy and Prosperous New Year We are GLOVER'S Clothing, Shoes, ts -1 Men's Furnishings, TO OUR CUSTOMERS: The public at large. We take the opportunity the season of fers to extend greetings and thank you cordially for all fa vors received at your hands in the past. We trust the old year has been good to you and that the new year just upon us may bring you and-yqurs a full measure of happiness. Think:? A new page added to life's book, and may the coming year 1908 have in store for you a good ly portion of health, happiness and success; and the spectre of 1907 be but a faint recollec tion disappearing beyond the horizon of time with its fail ures, trials and disappoint ments. AGAIN A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL. GEO. V. ZEIGLER, I The Edisto Savings Bank, | $ ORANGEBURG. S. C. % ? Capital.8100,000.00. Surplus. 830,000.00. ? Ii. U. Mj?, Preside. M. Oliver, Vlco Pro f. S. Duble, Vi(W President, m. It. Clover, Caiiiio X DIRECTORS ? M O. Dantzler J.M.Oliver . K '/)vnil '.V ? rFVey % B. H. Moss T. C. Doyle Sol Kohn .r. W. Smoak J Money saved is money made, and tlw vv/ u > v, I .mi 5 ou i; money in the savings department and draw interest on the ti-sr. iavj J i \ January, April, July atK1 ?ct?oer at the rate of four per cent dc? t?" ? This bank's absolute sarety Is best attested by Its capita' took, it J surplus and by thv character and standing of its oillcars ana board of directori. Money loaned on good security.