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, PUBLISHED TWICE-A-WEEX Tuesday and Friday. .?T? 401. . .No. #4 "Entered as second-class matter ?Jam-.1, 19OS, at the postoffice at Or ^-fangeburg, S. C, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. * *Htas? L. Sims, Editor and Proprietor.] Pas. Izlar Sims, - Associate Editor. Subscription Rates. One Year...: ..91.50 Wx Months. .. .. .75 tlEhree Months.. .. ... .. ..40 Advertising Rates.. Transient advertisements $1.00 per inch for first insertion and 50 cents for each subsequent hwartion Business Notices 10 cents per line for first liserfeiora and 5 cents per line for subsequent ^"Sbhuaries, Tributes of Respect, Notice of ] Thanks, and all notices of a personal orpoliti oal nature are charged for as regular advertise ?.. Special Notices* entitled Wanted, Lest, Voasd, Far Bent, not exceeding twenty-five words, one time, 85 cents; two tunes 50 cents; three times, 75 cents and four times, $1.00. Liberal contract made with merchants and others' who wish to run advertisements for three no tths or longer. For rates on contract ?krwr'asiQg apply at the office, and they will fee carefully furnished. Remittances should he made by checks money orders, registered letters, or express or ders, payable to The Times and Democrat, Oranjreburer, S. C. It looks like Bryan has "done got the coon skin and gone." Illinois and Massachusetts have declared for htm. Why not make the thing ?unanimous. It was heralded abroad a short time ago that the Republicans were about' to capture Loui.-iana. but ?when the election came off on Wed nesday the Republican ticket did not poll twenty-five per cent of the total vote. Thos. F Ryan told a New York Grand jury last week that not dollar had been paid for ninety/five per cent of the stock of the railroads of this country. All but five per cent of the railroad stock was wat er, as Mr. Ryan expressed it. The Aiken Recorder says it is de voutly to be hoped that there may 1)2 a sufficient number of sober, reasonable delegates in the Conven tion to secure the defeat of Bryan.' The Recorder is evidently hankering after another safe and sane candi date of the Parker stripe. The Springfield Republican re marks: "Mr. Watterson hits the ?weak spot in the Gov. Johnson movement against Bryan. It began with and is being promoted bv the wrong people, which is to say the reactionaries in the Democratic par ty." This is the opinion of an honr ? rest Independent paper, and is true The Aiken Recorder says: "It is not surprising that the Bryanites should endeavor to have instructed delegates sent to Denver. It is only by packing the Convention in some ' such way that Bryan can be noroi "nated for defeat for the third time." If the convention is packed for Bry . an it will be packed by the people, and snrsiy the Recorder wilTn?t'de ny their right to do so if they want to. A Washington paper reports Maj or Hemphill of The News and Cour ier as saying: "I am the man who ' discovered Gov. John A, Johnson as ' ?a presidential possibility and mine was the first newspapers to raise his standard." The Major could have hardly said this as Gov. Johnson was the dark horse that Col. Henry Wat terson had hitched out for several months before his identity was dis covered by others. The Charleston Post says however it got in the band wagon it is there, and not only holding its seat, but |, spreading out a little to reserve a place for the JNews and Courier, when it leaps for the vehicle. The Post says it will even "ask Driver Bryan to slow" down a bit for the new passenger," and thinks we'll all be together at the finish, with the News and Courier "whooping the loudest of all and remem' ering not the day of its Johnson discovery." Thos. F. Ryan confided to a New York grand jury recently that he and Wm. C. Whitney loaned the Republican campaign committee in 1900 five hundred thousand dollars to help defeat Bryan. He admitted that a portion of this money was used in the effort to prevent the nomination of Bryan in the Kansas convention. Ryan is a "safe and sane" Democrat and so was Whit-1 ney. These are the kind of Demo crats that are now fighting Bryan. A dispatch from Springfield, Il linois, where the Democratic State Convention met on Thursday, says ten men from Chicago carried the Johnson boom to the convention and opened their campaign and con ducted it vigorously during the 1 morning, setting forth the merits of tr- ?ir candidate, but in the afternoon the convention unanimously edors ed W. j. Bryan and instructed the delegation to use all b jnorable means to have him nominated. If there was any one at the convention outside the delegates working for Bryan the dispatch failed to men tion it. I Better Than Their Fathers. Somebody has compiled and is publishing the poems and some se lected, prose writings of Theodore Tilton. Themost conspicuous and prominently mentioned verses are under the caption, "The Fading of the Mavflower." It is said to con trast vividly the simple life, sturdy integrity, high ideals and godliness of the Pilgrim fathers with the lux ury, the excesses, the money mad ness and the loose morals of today. The Richmond News-Leader says evidently, Mr. Tilton had not read, or had forgotten, intimate chroni cles of the Pilgrims. We get our [impressions of them, fortunately, from a few very earnest, strong and beautiful characters who were lead ers. Among the rank and file of the early settlers were some of the most audacious inveterate and heartless scoundrels who ever lived. They cheated and . betrayed other j each and robbed the unhappy Indians I around them as remorselessly as the Wall street priate s of today shear the incautious lambs and cut each other's throats as rival diaries of the early settlement in the stock jobbers, now do. The preserved diaries of the early-settlements in the vicinity of Boston show pretty steady and consistent fractures of every one of the Ten Commandments and customs and methods which to day would land those engaging in them in jail. The truth is that the standards of morality today are higher than they ever have b?en in the history of the world an d more faithfully abhered to. The newspa pers are filled with crime but when we come to consider details and ana lyze' the facts we find that the pro portion of criminals to the whole., population is smaller than it ever has been and is decreasing steadily. The descendants of the Pilgrims and first settlers are better people than their ancestors. Those who under take to contrast unfavorable the pre sent with the past ignore or over look the facts of history or compare the worst of our day, who are the most conspicuous, with the best of the old day, who have survived the passing of the years and whose memories live because thay deserve life. It is one of the fortunate at tributes of the human race that as we go on we forget our crooks and weaklings and rascals and fools and rarefuily remember our great and ?ood and clean. Bishop Capers. There was no man closer to the hearts of the people of this State nor held in riper affection than the good bishop, gallant soldier who last week passed into the light whereby he. will see his Maker face to face." says the Charleston. Post. For forty years a Priest, more than one-third of the time bishop of the diocese of South Carolina, Ellison Capers was, necessarily, in very near communion with the souls of the men and women of his church. But before he put on the cassock of the priest he had worn the uniform of the soldier, and ere he took the cro zier he had wielded the sword. "As brigadier general in the army of the Confederacy he was captain and comrade to gallant men, who, despite his long service as a minister of the Gospel, remembered him ever as the soldier of the sixties. To the sndof his days he was General Capers to his old war comrades. And still the story of his service is not told. At a citizen he wrought for the good of his Deople as bravely as he foueht in the field aid-ai devotedly as he served in the sanctuary. As educa tor and public official he inculcated and illustrated the highest ideals and set an example inspiring of emu lation. ' "And so the word that he had gone from the haunts of men to those higher realms upon which his thoughts had so long been fixed and to which his steps had surely led, was a signal of sorrow to many hearts. Grief at his passing is not alone to the members of his church whom he has shephered, but to the whole community of South Carolina, which esteemed him one of her nobles sons, for he had entered into almost every relation of life and had touch ed upon practically every phase of human association and the way he had walked was the better and the brighter for passing. "Like that other apostle and bish op of an elder day, well might it be said of the'soldier priest who sleeps so sweetly after his long toil, that when the time of his departure was at hand he was ready to be offered, for he had fought a good fight he finished his course, he had kept the faith and henceforth there is laid up for him a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge shall give him." Foraker Threatens. Senator Foraker, of Ohio, has beer; taking vigorously of late. In a speed before an assembly of eg gro Methodist bishops he used lan gua.f>? in.Diving that he stood ready to bolt the Republican party in case Taft or Roosevelt were nominated for the presidency. Speaking of i Tviit delegates from the South, he said: "They do not .belong to my party, and I will not. belong to theirs." He also spoke of the possi bility of "new parties." On the 14th instant Senator Fora ker made a speech in the Senate on the Brownsville affair, in the course of which he severely critisized Pres ident Roosevelt and defended the negro soldiers whom the President drummed out of the army in disgrace without a trial. It was a great speech, and its effect on the negro vote in the States of the North and Middle West may be to defeat the Republican national ticket. I These recent utterances of Fora ker show that the breach between himself and the Roosevelt faction is liable to be permanent, and that he may be expected to lead a movement at the polls against any man whom the Roosevelt faction may force up on the Republican party. In such a case Foraker would have among his followers, not only most of the ne groes but many of the old Union soldiers and a large class of reac tionaries. In other words, he would {have the brains and the backbone of \he old Republican party, and the fight between the old and the new Republicans would be beautiful and interesting. Why They Want Him. .1 p, ? The New York World makes a first page feature, with misleading headlines, of the fact that a promi nent Swedish newspaper, which is Republican in its politics, advocates the nomination of Gov. Johnson, of Minnesota, for President. The World states in its headline that the Swedish paper "jumps its traces, declaring in favor of the governor." The only quotation from the paper it submits is the expression of an opinion that should G ivernor John son be elected President "he will show himself both worthy and fit." The Charleston Post says "the fact that a Republican paper prefers Governor Johnson to Mr. Bryan as the Democratic nominee for presi dent is neither new nor startling in formation. Nearly every Republi can newspaper in the United States prefers Johnson's nomination to Bryan's, because they .vant to elect a Republican and are looking for the weakest opponent for their candi date they can find. The World would only need 7to look around its own neighborhood to find Republican pa per's supporting Governor Johnson for the Democratic nomination for President. "The New York Sun, the greatest "organ of the interests" in the United States, is?with the except ion of the World itself and The Charleston News and Courier-- the greatest protagonist of the Minneso ta Governor's candidacy. Why the support of the Republican press should commend Mr. Johnson to the Democrats we can not quite argue out." The Post deals a solar plexus, blow to the World's little diversion ' in favor of Gov. Johnson, There never was a time in the history of the Democratic party when the Re publican "organs" took so much in terest in it. Take Your Choice. Curtis, the Republican emissary' discovered a most wonderful political condition in this section during his recent visit. He says one promi nent Democrat asserted that in his opinion it was essential for the wel fare of the Democratic party to eliminate Bryan, and the only way j that he cou'd be eliminated was to' let nim be ux-ieaLeU a third time for the presidency. Then, he thought, Bryan would get out of the way and give some one else a chance. Another gentleman of prominence he says, ex pressed the opinion that it would be better for the South to have a Repub lican president for many years to come, because if a Democrat were elected the party that section would split on the distribution of patronage. Now Southern white men stand together on the great na tional question and run their cam paigns purely upon local issues, de voting their entire attention to mat ters affecting the welfare of the communities. Curtis winds up by saying that no man in American his tory?not even Thomas Jefferson or Andrew Jackson?was ever able to dominate the Democratic party as Bryan does today. There you are. Of the three opinions expressed you can take your choice. A Republican Dilcinnn. There is one fact made actually plain by the Republicans in their at tempt to tie the hands of the Demo cratic members of Congress; and that is, that any bill which the ma jority of the Republicans realiy want passed can be put through even without debate and with only one roll call. That fact demon strates all that the Democratic '"fili buster," as the Republicans term it, was intended to demonstrate. If, then, the Republicans do not pass the reform and remedial legislation reccommended by the President, it must be because they do not approve it. On the stump ne\'t Fall, how can the Republican members defend their course, when their national platform endorses President Rosee velt and his policies? They are in a dilemna. We .see no use in continuing the camgaign now on in Georgia. If the straw ballots being taken fur the two candidates are correct, and no one would presume to doubt them except the men who take them, both Smith and Brown have already been elected governor. So what's the use of keeping up the hurrah? It is amusing with what assurance some of the county papers announce that Bryan has no chance of being elected in the face of the repeated statements of men like Senator Till man and Col. Henry Watterson, who have been about a little, that Bryan has an excellent chance of be ing successful. Of course the pap ers know. CANDIDATE CARDS. FOR SHERIFF I hereby announce myself as a candidate in the coming primary for re-election to the office of Sheriff of Orangeburg County, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. Respectfully, JOHN H. DUKES. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for the office of Sheriff of ' Orangeburg County, subject to the irticles of the Democratic primary. ' ] Respectfully, A. M. SALLEY. FOR SUPERVISOR. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for Supervisor, subject to endorsement of the Democratic prim ary. D. M. WESTBURY. I announce myself a candidate for Supervisor. Having had much exper ience in road building and county af fairs generally, many voters realize that I am thoroughly competent. I am respectfully, T. M. HALL. At .the solicitation of my friends I hei eby announce myself a candidate in the coming primary for the office 3f Supervisor of Orangcburg County, subject to the rules and regulations 3f the Democratic primary. R. N. OWEN. I announce myself a candidate for the office of County Supervisor, sub ject to the rules governing the Dem acratic primary. F. J. D. FELDER. I hereby annouuce myself a candi date for the office of County Super visor, subject to the rules of the Democratic Primary. M. C EDWINS. Superintendent of Education. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for County Superintendent oi Education subject to ratification by the Democratic Primary this Summer. E. H. HOUSER. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for County Superintendant Df Education subject to ratification by the approaching Democratic Prim ary. D. H. MARCHANT, Jr I hereby announce myself a candi date for the office of Superintendent 3f Education of Orangeburg County, subject to the result of the Democrat ic Primary. L. W. LIVINGSTON. I hereby announce myself a can didate for the office of County Super intendent of Education of Orangeburg County, subject to the result of the Democratic Primary. _EDGAR L. CULLER. Teacher's Examination. The Regular Teacher's Examina tion will be held in Orangeburg on Friday, May loth, 1908, commencing at 9:30 A. M. The white applicants will he examined at the Courthouse and the colored at the State Colored College. Stiles R. Mellichamp, 3t. Supt. education 0. C. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR Relieves Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and healthy action of the bowels. Relieves Coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, chest and bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to the taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It For BACKACHE?WEAK KIDNEYS Trj DaWItt's Kldnej and Bladder Pills?Sure and Safe Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle & Co. EGGS FOR HATCHING. Bult Orpington. The finest ::11 pur pose foul in existence. $2.00 per sit ting of 1?. Guaranteed fcrti'e. Ap ' N. H. BULL, 140 E. Hum el St., Orangcburg, S. C. Nothing is more evident to careful mothers than the f t that the child's sweet cooth should be gratified with confections of unquestioned purity. It is second nature for the little tots to want "tanny," and it should be the first care of mothers to give them Steere's Candy exclusively. It is as pure as pure food laws and the laivs of hygiene and infant health could demand. Sold by all Druggists and Confectioners. . Manufactured by L1TTLEFIELD & STEERE CO., Knoxville, Tenn. H. E. REEVES DRUG CO., Agts. Orangeburff, S. 0. 8/ PKA5THE THOUMS OF CHILDHOOD QUARTERLY REPORT. (Continued from Page 4.) .50 1220 Ed Haigler, road work, Lyons Tp.*. J P Heape, road work, Pine Grove Tp. E S Hydrick lumber and wk, Elizabeth Tp.24.05 T M Hall, road work, Zion and Liberty Tps.2S.12 E J Hoover, ch g guard.. ..100.00 B E Hughes, ch g guard. . . . GO.00 \\ A Huffman, \road wk, etc, Good by Tp.35,55 I Moss Holman, rd wk, Lyons Tp. . . . ,.' . . . . 2.00 A G rW Hill, lumber, Branch ville Tp. 9.24 a M Hall road work, etc, Zion and Liberty Tps.5 6.25 M Hunger piller, sup ch g. .' 0.00 M Hungerpiller, sunt ch gv. 106.90 J F Hutto, road wk, Willow Tp 20.05 L C Hughes, lumber and wk, Orange Tp.19.15 John W. Inabinet, road Wk, Cow Castle Tp. S.00 H W Inabinet ch g guard. . .. 41.10 J F Jackson, road wk, Cow Castle Tp. . . >.15.50 B Lee Jeffcoat, road and bridge repg, Elizabeth Tp. 2.50 W. M. Johnson, cutting dead trees, Cow Castle Tp.. .. 4.50 Dover Jeffcoat, road wk, Eliza beth Tp. 9.00 J C Jeffcoat, lumber and wk, Willow Tp... . . '..95 15 W F Jeffcoat, road wk, Hebron Tp.28.50 B Lee Jeffcoat, repg bridge (Elizabeth.10.00 L l> Jones, lumber, Cow Castle ..Tp.51.34 D F Jones, sup ch g. 2.50 W. F. Jeffcoat, lumber and wie, Hebron Tp. 5.00 1 E Jones, road wk., Lyons Tp 22.50 M D Kelly, road tak refund, Cow Castle Tp.*. 1.00 Dr. W H Lawton, service tor ch gang, etc.17.50 Leslie Livingston, lumber and work, Elizabeth Tp.62.00 W S Lee, lumber and work, Union and Willow Tps.. . .109.50 W S Lee, road wk, Zion Tp. . 23.00 D V Livingston, lumber & wk, Elizabeth Tp. 14.40 M K Livingston, road wk, He bron Tp. . . .s.11.2." E M Livingston, sub ch gang 45.90 \V F Murphy, lumber & wk, New Hope Tp.102.15 J I Mack, sup ch gang. 3.45 Maynard & Wise, sup ch gang 27.70 J C Murphy, sup ch gang, etc 13.67 Doyle Mack,sup ch gang (check reurned). 3.50 L M?hr & Son, convict stripes 90.35 G M Norris, road wk, Vance Tp.13.75 J I) E Ott, road wk, Amelia Tp. Owen & Co, repairs ch gang. Owen & Co, sup etc, ch gang. J H Pooser,, ch gang guard. James Pooser, ch g guard Jno. F. Rickenbaker, road wk, ehe. Orange Tp.15.00 W H Rflev. vond wk. Zion Tp. . 2.62 W F P Risers, road wk. Cow Castle Tp. 2.00 R E Wannamakes, road work, Orange Tp. 5.00 J M Rickenbaker, lumber and wk, Orange Tp.2 4.52 N F Rickenbaker, ditching Orange Tp.17.00 S B Ruple, road work, Middle Tp. 4.00 J L Rast, hauling dirt, Orang Tp.14.00 J L Reeves, sup ch gang. . . . 8.25 F E Riley, road wk, Cow Cas tye Tp. 5.25 Dr J T Riley, ditching, (1907) Middle Tp. 4.00 J B Stroman, repg bridge, Coodland Tp.10.00 W F Segrest, road wk, Cow Castle Tp. 1.0 0 W F Sanford, road wk. Willow Tp.10.50 W F Sanl'ord, road wk, Willow Tp.25.00 S L Shuler.cli gang guard.. 25.00 O O Sanford, road wk, Willow Tp.23.25 J I Shuler. sup ch gang .... 21.00 S M Stevenson, road wk, Union Tp.72.75 W Q Stevenson, road wk, Wil low Tp. 8.00 Town of St. Matthews, convict hire, etc.126.84 ri P Strock, sup ch gang.. .. 10.14 W W Staley, road wk, Caw Caw Tp. 3.75 Town of St. Matthews, hire of convicts. 8.00 Ci W Shuler, lumber and work. Middle Tp.30.75 H J Salley, Jr. rd work. Rockey Grove Tp. 31.60 J P Shuler. road wk, Cow Cas tle Tp. 1.50 F W Stroman. road wk, Mid dle Tp. S.00 Shir er Bros, lumber Pine Grove Tp.11.55 D J Salley. road wk: Orange Tp. 3.00 Alexander Salley, bldg bridge 5.00 41. bfl 4.6.* 36.00 61.00 33.00 67.00 10.80 3.00 22.47 !192 1.50 3 9.25 51.75 18.23 10.50 iO i.90 S43 .0 I Total.$1 6.947.38 Also check No. 602 >was issued in favor of The Bank of Orangeburg, Zion Tp. 6.00 | fo;- the sum of $6,000 iu pa; meat o'.' andel Bros, sup ch gang, etc. .10S.01 Sidy & Frith, sup ch gang . . 23.20 E N Scoville, sup ch gang. . 92.98 J W Smoak, sup ch gang, etc 56.30 J P Shuler, cutting cypress tree out Shuler'Ford, Providence Tp. W F Sanford, road wk, Willow Tp.. Jim'Stroman, road wk. Middle Tp.". J D Shuler. road wk. Cow ''as ? e/Tp. i.r.o Sam Shuler, ch gaud guard.. 3 4.04 The Stack Co., sup ch gang.. 12.75 M F Shuler cutting trees out mad. Goodby Tp. 1.50 J D Shuler sup ch gang, etc. .109.09 J G Smith, road work, etc; Elizabeth Tp. 5.25 D V Sandal, cutting ditch, Mid dle Tp., . . 25.00 St. Matthews Sav. Bank, for thefollowing: Mose Gadsden, et al, road wk, Caw Caw and Pine Grove Tp, $24.00; Mose Gadsden et al, road work, Lyons and Amelia Tps, $32. 00; Guignard. Walker, Gadsden, et al, road work, Amelia and Caw Caw Tps, $30.50; Gadsdens, et al, road wk, Orange and Lyons Tps. S52.4'5; John E. Gaskin, rd wk, Orange Tp, $15.00; Gadsden, Mack, Taylor, et al road wk Amelia Tp, $42.60; Gadsden, Rucker, et al, road wk Caw Caw and Lyons Tps, $35.10; Gadsden Hamp ton, Walker, et al, road wk Lyons & Pine Grove Tps, $42.81; Mose Gadsden. etal, road wk Amelia Tp, $41.0i); Bonaparte, Gadsden, et al, road wk Caw Caw and Lyons Tps, $38.25; H H Houck, road wk Lyons Tp, $36.00; W. L. Waltz, road & bridge wk, Lyons Tp, $14.50; Mose Gadsden, et al, road work, Caw Caw and Lyons Tps, $48.75; Southern ' Railway freight, $2.07; J Rhett Riley road wk Amelia Tp, $14.00; Jim. Wallace, et al, road wk Lyons Tp, $59.30; Muller, Jackson, et al, road work Lyons and Amelia Tps, $53, 52; Abram Butler, damage to horse, $5.00; Gaskin & Ott. road wk Orange and Amelia Tps, $50.00; Waltz and Wannamaker, road wk, Lyons and Amelia Tps, $14. 50; E S Hydrick, road wk, Elizabeth Tp, $20.00; W. L. Waltz, lumber and work, Pine Grove Tp., $14.50; Jim Wallar.\ et al, road work etc. Pine Grove Tp, 23.75: J T Carson, repg bridge Amelia Tp, $2.50; D W Ruc ker. road and bridge wk, Caw Caw Tp, $24.70. To . tal. ? ? ? 7 W. M. Thomas, repg. bridge Caw Caw Tp. 2.00 W R Turner, lumber, Edisto Tp.9.76 W H Taylor; road wk, Lyons Tp.34.00 a n Tin i-ond and bridge wk. Oranee Tp . . .. Ulmer-Irick Co, sup ch gang. . J K Ulmer, Agt., frt on road machine. S F Ulmer, lumber, Orange Tp.12.97 A S Way, lumber, Goodby Tp 50.3 4 Wes Thomas, road wk, Edisto Tp. L B Way. road wk, Liberty Tp L B Way, road wk, Liberty Tp C B Williamson, road wk, New Hope and Orange Tps.. .. R C Williamson, road work, Rockey Grove Tp. J W Wannamaker, road wk, Caw Caw Tp.10 W L \Valtz, lumber and work, Pine Grove Tp.12.20 P M Wolfe, lumber and wk, ICUisto Tp. (i.oo L M Zeigler, road wk. Middle Tp. H L Zeigler. road work, Middle Tp. f H Zimmerman, road work, etc. Lyons Tp. RD Zimmerman, lumber and work.> ?? 16.44 L M Zeigler, road wk, Middle Tp. 323 T W Zeigler, sup ch gang.. .. 12.12 A P. Dantzler, lumber and wk, Goodby Tp. Vbe Pearlstine, Coffin, etc., for oo pauper.'?_ _ David Min.iow. sup poor hor.se 3.75 W 11 Dukes, burial D R .Loui sen. Conf Vet.r,r,-?,) John Taylor, rnad wk. Goodby Tp.'. ... 3.00 David Buckry, et al. road wk, Ameli; and Pine Grove Tps 10.7.'> The Peoples Bank, interest on loans.35.12 The Bank of Orangeburg, inter est on loans.114.33 The Edisto Savings Bank, in terest on loam;. 249.25 claim Xo. 601, and a similar amount was borrowed from said Bank again, thereby leaving the total above men tioned unchanged. ' Ol in M. Dantzler, County Supervisor. D. M. Westbury, County Commissioner. Ju\ C. ^dwins, Attest: County Commissioner. L. K. Sturkie, derk. For the Season. My Jack will be at Bolen's Oil Mill on Thursday, April 30. Then every two weeks for the balance of the season. J. S. Livingston. is the one place on earth where it is unsafe to look for "Bargains." If you are satisfied with getting the worth of your money, the best Medicine it is possible to compound from the highest grade drugs, jd the services of an experienced Pharma cist you wiU send your Doctor's Prescription to J. 6. fgocaffiaker MTg. Co. THE HOME NEST you have made for your loved ones should be protected against fire. What you have worked so hard for should uot be left to the mercy of the unmerciful flames. Have Us Insure Your House against fire today. Then if fire does come you will have the means to make another home without delay. Don't put the matter off. Many a man has put off insuring just one day too long. See ZEIGLER & DIBBLE Today, ?Tommorrow may be too late..? GUNS! GUNS!! -)|LOTS|( i\ OF THEM. FINEST EVER BROUGHT ?T O? AN Gt BURG, AMUNITiON, Etc Repairing of all kinds. L BENNETT