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"Brush" Shells For Bird Shooting These shells make a big open pattern at ranges most birds are shot. With them you can use your duck or trap gun for field shooting with out mutilating the game. They are loaded in "Leader" and "Repeater" grades. Your dealer can get them for you. GET WINCHESTER SHELLS ; ACCEPT NO OTHERS iWm. V. Izlar. J. Stokes Sallej. Fire Insurance. IZLAR & SALLEY ^We represent the The Home Insurance Co. Liverpool and London and Globe Yeoman American Continental Northern Assurance Phoenix and Georgia Home. She Strongest Combination in the State. .Take No Other. The Expectation of Life. Notwithstanding improved medical knowledge and the benefits of modern sanitation, we are dying earlier than our grandparents did. Ine United States census shows a considerably Increased dsath rate for an ages over sixty years. At the same time, it still holds good that the average ex pectation of life has been lengthened during the past decades but it is only the younger individuals who profit by this practical result of the advances in medical knowledge. Bill Moves Slow. There is pending in the French Parliament a bill providing for old. age pensions to railroad work people. This bill was introduced 10 years ago, and five years ago was submit ted to the President of the Senate. In order to hurry him up a little on June 8 last 400,000 postcards were ad dressed to him by as many railroad men in all parts of France asking his early attention to the matter. To Improve Japan's Railways. The Japanese Government has de cided to carry out, in connection with the nationalized railroads, a thorough improvement on a large scale of all State lines. The work, of which the estimated cost is about ?1,300,000, is to be completed in five years, in time for the opening of the exhibition in 1912.?Engineer. Women Sharpshooters. Women who have recently joined the Wandsworth (England) Rifle Club have proved so expert, in the use of the rifle that scores of 35 out of a "highest possible" of 40 have fre quently been recorded. The club committee is desirous of securing oth er women shy:;>shooters in order to arrange a match between the women and men. Morgan Belongs to 50 Clubs. J. Pierpont Morgan belongs to four times as many clubs as does the King His Royal Highness is a member of 12 while Mr. Morgan has his name on the lists of at least 50. Occasionally he visits some of them, while in the case of most of them he never has been inside their doors. Once a member of a club he never resigns. Rocks of the Lizard. The dangerous rocks of the Lizard, on the coast of Cornwall, one of the oldest landmarks of the marine world are the scene of many terrible dis asters. It was here that the Span ish Armeda was' wrecked1 when the Spaniards tried to invade England. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which lias been in us? for over SO years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per* sonal supervision since its infancy, ^ ADowno one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children?Experience against Experiment. Whafls CASTORIA . , ? ? Iii mit Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare* gorier Drops and Soothing1 Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic? It relieves Teething Troubles, cores Constipation ?nd Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep* The Children's Panacea?The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You toe Always Bought Use For Over 30 Years. ^ ItOfCklmUROOMMMV. TT HURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Truth is stranger than fiction!!! We have about 40 good second hand Pianos and Organs, that we are going to sell at about one third of their real value, Come quick and get a bargain. The Marchant Music Go, No. 53 East Russell Street, Orangeburg, S. C. 11 If III Legend of Romulus and Remus Supported by His Capture. THE ONLY ONECAr)T?RZD He Knows Animal Language, But Cannot Talk to Human Beings.? Once, After Meeting a Baboon He Was Able to Warn the Men of Approach of a Tiger. A real Mowgli has been captured In India?a man wolf, who speaks no lan guage, but grunts, snarls, growls and howls, who walks on hands and fe^t, and who was nurtured as a child lj a wolf. There are wolf reared children In India. Much valuable and trustworthy evidence has been collected to estab lish the fact, so long denied as un worthy of credence, that human babies have been carried off and nurtured by wolves. The jungle folks of India live in forest villages in lower Bengal. They belong to the Dhavidians, Kronds. Kashmeres, Parsls and Khasis tribes. Many of the people of the Dravid'an tribes and castes acquire a knowledge of wild animals which is astounding. No wonder that Kipling made Kowgli talk with the elephant, the tiger and the wolf. The man wolf of India is usually supposed to have been dragged by a she wolf from his home while a baby and carried into the jungle. The strange, wild foster mother moved by pity, would nurture the helpless child. When the child grew older it knew no other home than the jungle. The boy learned to find his own food. He knew no language except that, of the jungle. He learned to live with the animals. He knew the ways of the tiger and the elephants, as well as of the fox and of the serpent. As he grew to manhood he was a wild, naked creature fearing man as an animal. Officers of the Indi-i geographical survey have evidence of the discov ery and capture of r real man wolf. He was found in the jungle of lower Bengal and sent in to the military post, at first wild am' untamed, after wards becoming docile but suspicion: This man wolf apparently wa twenty years old. He walked or ran on the ball of the foci.", with the heel raised and the knee bent His hands were bent back at the wrist, showing that he was accustou cd to walking and running about on h-nds and feet. This man wolf?so f*r as known the only one ever capture '?could see In the dark. His ear could detect sounds unnoticed by white men. Often, while sitting in a group aroiird a campflre the man wolf would rai ??> its head, its nostrils, dilating and sniffing the air. Then it would stealthilv ^reep into the jungle. Officers and soldiers following would always find a tiger or a buffalo And yet up to the time the man wolf hai scented the intruder and heard the rusting in the grass of its foot steps its presence was unsuspected. Again, the man wolf in walking through the forests with the British officers, seemed to be able to converse with the monkeys that swung and chattered by hundreds in the tre^s. At one time a large baboon swun? from a branch of a huge tree, and, as the man wolf turned, and, poin' ng toward the jungle, made the Eng h officers understand that a tiger was following close upon them, waiting i'or an opportunity to attack. The offi cer" sprang into the jungle and found and shot a large striped beast, one of the largest they had ever seen. And the only warning they had had of its presence was what the baboon had told the man wolf. When first captured the man wolf would not eat foon given him by the English officers. When offered food he would smell of it, run it over and ov>r in his hands, and reject it. The English never know how he got hi? meals, for he sought them in the for est alone. In time, however, he 'earn ed to eat the white man's food, but even then he would not eat at a table. Living in a corner of a room given up to him, his bedding of rags and str-'w. for he would have no other, he would carry his food to this pile and hide it. sometimes for days. Then he would drag it oul and eat it, as a dog rv a wolf might. Of course, this man wolf could not talk. He understood whatever was said to him just as a dog might under stand its master. He always slept in his straw bed, ?mied up as nearly like a dog or a wolf as possible. His knees always were drawn up to his chin and his head bent as he slept. He wore clothes when given them, but soon re duced them to rags. Natives of the village told the Emr Iish officers that the parents of the man wolf lost him when he was a baby and that he was carried off by a wolf. They said he always lived in the jungle with the animals and that he would come Into the village oeca sionally. and then only for a short stay. The natives persisted In their belief that the man wolf could talk with all the animals. But the ways of civilization proved his death. He lost the vigor of out door life and soon fell a victim to con sumption, his case attracting wide at mention in scientific circles in India.? Chicago Tribune. Koreans Screen Their Houses. Every Korean hides his house from the public gaze by a number of screens. The poor man employe hedges and fences; the rich mar many high walls. Between the wall are grown gorgeous flowers; lotus ponds are also to be found there. Everything taken into the stomach should be digested fully within a cer tain time. When you feel that your stomach Is not In good order, that the food you have eaten is not being di gested, take a good, natural digest ant, that will do the work the diges tive juices are not doing. The best remedy known today for all stomach troubles is Kodol, which Is guaran teed to give prompt relief. It is a natural digestant; it digests what you eat, if is pleasant to take and is sold here by A. C. Dukes; A. C. Doyle & MAKE THIS UP, Says Many Persons Here Can Be Made rtappy Again. Tells How Any One Can Prepare Sim ple Mbme-Mndc Mixture, Said to Overcome Rheumatism. There is so much Rheumatism here in our neighborhood now that the fol lowing advice by an eniment author ity, who writes for readers of a large Eastern daily paper, will be highly appreciated by those who suffer: Get from any good pharmacy ono half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounces of Compound Syrup Sarsapa rilla. Shake these well in a bottle and take in teaspoohful doses after each meal and at bedtime; also drink plenty of good water. It is claimed that there are few victims of this dread and torturous disease who will fail to find ready re lief in this simple home-made mix ture, and in most cases a permanent cure is the result. This simple recipe is said to strengthen and cleanse the elimina tive tissues of the Kdneys so that they can filter and strain from the blood and system the poisons, acids and waste matter, which cause not only Rheumatism, but numerous oth er diseases. Every man or woman here who feels that their kidneys are not healthy and active, or who suffers from any urinary trouble whatever, should not hesitate to make up this mixture, as it is certain to do much good, and may save you from much misery and suffering after while. Our home druggists say they will either supply the ingredients or mix the prescription ready to take if our readers ask them. Teacher in Infant School?I want ev ery pupil wbo has never told a Ho to hold up his hand. There was a doubtful pause. Two or three hands were raised. Then a little voice piped out: "Teacher, is it a He if nobody finds It out?' Rank Foolishness. "When attacked by a c ough or cold, or when your throat is sore it is rank foolishness to take any other medcine than Dr. King's New Discov ery," says C. O. Eldridge of Empire, Ga. "I have used New Discovery for seven years and I know it is the best remedy on earth for coughs and colds, croup, and all throat and lung troubles. My children are subject to croup, but New Discovery quickly cures every attack." Known the world over as the King of throat and lung remedies. Sold under guaran tee at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co., drug store 50 c. and $1.00. Trial bot tle free. During about 700 years the Latin lan guage was the language of court, camp and polite society from the river Tweed, In Scotland, to the Euphrates, In Asia, and from the Crimea, in the Black sea, to the pillars of Hercules, at the west ern extremity of the Mediterranean sea. The Judge Uses Forcible Language. Judge W. B. Simmons of Fincas tle, Vf., told the reporter that L. & M. Paint was usuea on his residence in 1882, and held its color well for 21 years; he furthermore said that S years ago he was induced to use another paint and is sorry he did, because the other paint didn't make good. The Judge will now always use L. & M. because he knows if any de fect exists in L. & M. Paint, the house will be repainted for nothing. The L. &. M. Zinc hardens the L. & M. White Lead and makes L. & M. Paint wear like iron for 10 to 15 years. Actual cost of L. & M. about ?1.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. made to churches. Sold by j. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co, Orangeburg, j By the Wing of a Swallow. "The late' Francis Thompson, the English poet." said a magazlue editor, "had a great love of birds. He once told me a pretty story about a swal low. "Catching one day In the early au tumn a swallow that nested In his garden, he fastened to Its wieg a piece of oiled paper inscribed with the words: " 'Swallow, little swallow, I wonder where you passed the winter!' "The next spring the swallow return ed to its nest at the usual time. At tached to its foot was another piece of oiled paper with the inscription: " 'Florence, at the house of Castel larL Cordial greetings to the friend In the north.' "?Washington Star. Bert Barber, of Elton, Wis., says: "I have only taken four doses of your Kidney and Bladder Pills and they have done for me more than any other medicine has ever done. I am still taking the pills as I want a per fect cure." Mr. Barber refers to De Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. They are sold by A. C. Dukes. M. D.; A. C. Doyle & Co In Italy landladies wbo have rooms to 1st adopt a novel method of adver tising the fact. Instead of placing a card in their window, tbsy hang out a vfclts handkerchief on a pol?. am It flatters In tbs wind It attracts tt? at tention of an p&sesrs try.?Locdm Tets A Card. This is to certify that all druggists are authorized to refund your money if Foley^s Honey and Tar fails to cure your cough or cold. It stops the cough, heals the lungs and prevents bad results from a cold. Cures grippe coughs and prevents pneumonia and consumption. Contains no opiates. The genuine is in a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. A. C. Dukes. BENEATH GROUND. In a British Columbia Gold Mine. When the manager ot a gold mine at Rossland offered to take us down we accepted readily, and it was only wh'-n we wore iutiled to "step in" tmit we thought ot iliu li^at stiuiiuci suits which most of us were wearing. We had left the boat at .wObson and come on to nossland to learu some thing of that vast mineral wealth up on which, with lumber and fisheries and fruit growing, the commercial and Industrial future of British Columbia is to be built. At the Centre Siur the slant of the shaft is one of about GU degrees and the body of the skip slopes back to the rails upon which it falls into the depths. Which means that when the eight of us are paciced tight ly in the innocents who have catered first find themselves tilted on their heels, their backs upon the cold, wet, rusty Iron, and held fast uy the ov erlying strata of human avoirdupois which fills the skip It was at the third floor window that the man stood who heard the Op timist, hurrying by on his long fall from the roof of the twenty story skyscraper, murmur to himself that It was "All riguL so far," It is at about - that stage of his downward journey, probably, that the man who descends a mine for the first time begans to take the cheerful view. His earlier mind Is complex, elusive and difficult of analysis, but at any rate it. is not cheerful. Sudden blackest darkness; the feeling of falling out of one's hair; the whirling cable that may snap; the engine man who may lose control; an upward glancing of the soul to all Defending Powers; and then oblivion ?an oblivion cloven as it were, in past the openings, one below the oth er, of the dimly lit galleries at deep er and deeper levels. The skip slack ens 6peed, hovers hesitatingly for a moment and then comes to a stand and we step out. "You'll want candles." says the manager, and on the threshold of this new world we light them propitiaior | ily, as upon an altar. It is a world ot gray. The walls before us and the roof above, upheld by huge timbering, are gray, relieved only at a nearer view by the shimmer of the imprison ed metals. The galleries that extend to right and left, the cars wnich pass us laden and the men who bend be hind them are gray as the ore which they dump' between the rails Into a chamber below. The electric lamps which line the roofs of the galleries burn gray, as it seems, and the very air is gray. On the mountain above the sun is shining, and thank Gou for the green world that one can look upon thence. "Ollabo'd!*' cries our guide. Obedi ently we clamber Into the little sqtare trucks which have been brought up ! in a row to carry us through thr mine. Each man has his truck, rMes alone upon his own plank and lights himself with his own particular can dle. In a moment we are in the gallery. As we meet the sharp current of air the hot wax gutters over onto our fin gers and we slant the candlea back to the horizontal. At the end of a long gallery, where a second shaft descends, we cumo out, penetrate a gloomy, narrow passage in which heaps of ore lie waiting to be trucked away, and croucmng enter from below a little chamber, some 8 by 8 feet, blasted in the rock. Here, where I he air is still full of tho odor of gelignite, is a driller at work with his machine. We squeeze ourselves flat and bend low against ' the sloping walls and watch. The heavy iron arm ehoots out and In, striking the face of the roek full square perhaps fifty times a minute, every blow falling with the weight of 1.000 pounds, twisting as it strikes as if to bore through what it cannot break away. The man behind the drill turns on us an impassive face. No one speaks or would be heard 'or the echoes of the thrust and thud and the vibration of the machine. We wonder that beneath such blows and amid such din the sleeping masters of gray underworld should not awke and bring the foundations down up on us. At the bottom of the shait we wait while the men of the nieht shift flash by us. skip after skip, to ifleJr work In the lnr"f?r rlenth*. nnd then we ate drawn out of the void as we came. ?London Dally News. Bread in Sixty Minutes. Reaping began on a field of wheat at Blockley, in Worcestershire, at 9 o'clock in the morning and was serv ed as bread just CO minutes after. The 'coon hunters of Three Springs Huntington county this state, recent ly treed a 'coon, shot it, anu then had a dog fight under the tree, and all the fun and excitement belonging to a genuine 'coon hunt, only to find later that it was somebody's tabby cat. There are now in Germany 116 cities with special schools, for back ward children. The total number of these schools is 203, and tue number of pupils is 13,100. Berlin has 31 of these accessory schools. If you are prosperous you will be eavled and if poor despised; get in the middle of the road and turn on steam. ?Cuero Record. "How fast does your automobile go?" "I can't say," replied the motorist. "It all depends on how many sher iffs we meet on tho route." Many a girl surrenders at the piano lorta. A Narrow Escape. Many people have a narrow escape from pneumonia and consumption as a result of a cold that hangs on. and prevents pneumonia and con sumption. Refuse ?.substitutes. A. C. Dukes. Never say die! fry L. L. L. Buy Lowman'a Liver Lifters. Take Lowman's Liver Lifters. Use Lowman'a Liver Lifters. Try Lowman's Liver Liftera. Harris Lithla Water. For sale by The Edisto Savings Bank, OUANGEBURG, 9. O. Capital.*ioo no on. Surplus. ?30.000.0C. . { [.,,, IV . i J i a Vic. M O. Dantzler B. H. Moss 'J Money saved Is mot money in tbe saving: January, April. July Tbis bank's absclc surplus and by the cl directors. Money lo;. I' , M [)'.i*tr. Vij' Pr j irV :>idc<?c to. u. i-Jlover, Oi?uie DIRECTORS f. M.Oliver . R bvrnn W. F rFi'ev l\ C Uoyle Sol Kohn J. W. Smoak !ey -!ade, and thewiyc) nve U to doislfc j ou department and draw interest on the first iav* aiK1 ( ctooer at the rate of four per cent oe> ?fr ee safety is best attested by its capital tock, it aracrer and standing of its officers ana board of neel L.'i good -.ecurity. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? FIRE INSURANCE. i LIFE INSURANCE. Important? You fully realize it. You would not allow your house to remain uninsured overnight. Your house may never burn. Com paratively few buildings ever do. If your house does burn, your prop erty is destroyed, but you can still provide for your loved ones. Your income remains unaffected, your earn ing capacity unimpaired. If your house is not insured at all, or for an insufficient amount. YOU CARRY THE I'.ISK. Important? Oh yes, you intend to insure after awhile when "a little better able to do so." You will surely die. All men do. You are more likely to die within a week or a year, than your house is to burn. Death destroys at once and irre vocably, in whole or in part the in come that provided for the daily wants of those you love, the income that was counted on to feed and clothe and educate your chldren. If your life is not insured at all, or for an insuuicient amount, Your Wife and Rabies Carry the Risk. Your friend has lud his home in- Your frend has had his life in sured these 3 0 years and is now an sured these 30 years, and has had o]d man He |g fortunate in having no fire. He has been fortunate in li/eu, and he has something now to . . , , .. show for the money paid out. His that though he has nothing now to yaIue affords a comfortal)le sup. show for the money pail out. (port for his own declining years. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? JOHN GELZER 18 E. Russell St., Orangeburg, S. C. Agent for SOUTHEASTER" LIFE INSURANCE CO., Spartanburg, S. C. "The Buggy House," Samuel G. Parier, Manager. BUGGIES: We sell tbe celebrated Hackney buggies and the old established Columbus, besides we offer the foUowing well known makes: Corbet, Barbour, Parker, White Star, Oettinger and Taylor-Cannaday. OUR LEADER: JUS V LISTEN: We will sell you a Hackney buC gy for the sum of $65.00. Remember this ia cheaper than a Hackney has <n'er been sold on this market before. The Hackney is the buggy that wears, it cost twenty dollars more to make it than the cheaper grades that are offered in competition at this price, buy one and you will not have to buy a new one or trade for a new one next year. BUT DON'T FORGET: The old reliable Columbus?Be sure it is a Columbus. WAGONS: We sell only the Hackney wagon?The "Tough" Wagon that lasts on our rough roads. SUNDRIES: Harness, Saddles, Whips, Laprobes, Etc.. Etc. Onti Bom Com, Orangeburg S. C. Wm. C. Wolfe. R. E. Wannamaker, ThoB. F. Brantley, DIRECTORS. ll-7-3m. ft * THE FURNITURE STORE ft " _ ft ft ft ft [0) The NEW YEAR finds us bt' *<? prepared than ever to supply your wants in the line of FUEN1TURE and HOUSE GOODS. # ? 9 v ft ft ounce with pleasure that Mr. "Bob" Brunson is now with us and will be glad to have his fiiends come to see him. # ft ft Wannamaker, Smoak & Co.