The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, June 12, 1908, Page 2, Image 2
Striped Collars and Cuffs Are
New and Smart.
_
MANNISH TURNOVER STYLE.
The Sets Are of White Linen Worked
With Mercerized Cotton In Colored
Stripes and Dots?Lining of Lawn
Preserves Shape.
i
The use of striped materials for col
lars and cuffs, .says a writer in the
Modern Priscilki. seeming at first
thought a rather striking innovation,
has upon trial proved so charmingly
becoming to a majority that its pros
tige Is assured, at least until some later
fad with equal or greater power to de
light* and beautify has received the
approval of Dame Fashion. And now
comes the unusual tonch which so of
ten gives to old ideas the stamp of
new Inventions. Oue need no longer
search wildly through store after store
for material with stripes of just the
right'width and coloring, for the latest
plan of all Is to embroider the plain
linen' or lawn to simulate the longed
for stripes, two designs of this charac
ter being given In the illustrations.
These collars are made Just as the
striped ones, on the mannish turnover
style which has been in high favor all
season. Colored cottons in blue. pink,
green or red are used for the embroid
ery, one color only entering into each
collar, as a rule, and cuffs being made
to match or not as desired. The em
broidered stripes are usually about a
straw's width, although this is of
course a matter of taste. They are
worked in solid satin stitch over a bit
of padding. The remaining features of
the design are carried out In French
laid or solid work,, and In some in
stances eyelets are utilized to good ef
fect The scallops are buttonholed in
the color appearing in the design
proper.
After working collars of this kind,
with the exception of the scallops, it is
a good plan to baste them on a lining
of la wn, which will add to their gen
eral appearance as well as aid in pre
serving their freshness and shape.
This lining needs to be basted securely
into position and must be piaced so
that the weave in both pieces runs
alike. It is best to shrink both before
making up the collar if possible. The
-?ffi
TUBKOVEB OF TULIP DESIGN.
buttonholed scallops are then worked
through both materials and cut out
neatly. 1
The collars should be made about
two and one-quarter Inches deep and
have a band with buttonholes to se
cure them to the neckband of the
,waist
The Girl Described.
? Men of all nations and all times have
recorded their Impressions of women,
but it has remained for the small boys
in a London public school to shed a
new light upon the eternal feminine.
.They were asked to write their "im
pressions" of girls, aud a little fellow
wrote the following bit: "Girls are
very abundant in London. There Is a
lady near our house that has six girls.
Wherever I go" I nearly always see a
girl." Another boy was inspired to the
following: "Girls hair is aloud to grow
long. Girls hair grows quicker than
boys hair. Girls fight different to boys.
When boys bit girls they are cowards;
when girls hit boys they are heroes.
When girls grow up they make friends
.with the boys. Some girls have red
cheeks and ginger hair; all girls are
pretty, and as soon as girls are big
enough they marry." Still another
boy argued that "girls are girls because
they can't be boys" and proved his
power of observation by setting forth
that "some girls have long hair In dif
ferent colors, most of it light, which is
called blond."
Towels For Casual Gu'.nts.
Most attractive little towels are
shown in the shops measuring only
about twelve inches wide and sixteen
inches long. They are very useful In
the ?bathroom for the use of guests,
and they are far less trouble to have
.washed than the larger aud handsomer
ones.
In using towels of this sort it is not
necessary to have the coarse affairs
commonly placed in clubrooms, but
these diminutive towels could be of
damask, as the best of the larger va
riety, and when they are emboidered
.with the initials of the owner they are
not only useful, but in the best of
taste.
' ' A New Salad.
A new variation on the now familiar
Waldorf salad has been invented,
.where the apple Is peeled, cored and
cut in cross slices. One slice is laid
upon a few lettuce leaves on each plate,
and over it Is put a layer of barleduc
and cream cheese, which has been put
through a potato masher, while around
the whole is arranged a circle of may
onnaise dressing. A prettier dish can
hardly be imagined, and, by the way,
the cheese is never so good as it is
.when used in this way or beaten up
with a little whipped cream.
Chronic Constipation Cored
One who suffers from chronic con
stipation is in danger of many se"r-'
ious ailments. Foley's Orino Laxative!
cures chronic constipation ?s it aids
digestion and stimulates the liver and
bowels, restoring the natural action
of these organs. Commence taking it
today and you will feel better at
once. Foley's Orino Laxative does
not nauseate or gripe and is pleasant
Dukes, Lowman Drug Co.
CHOCOLATE SWEETS.
Tried and True Recipes For Making
Delicious Candy.
The combined flavor of vanilla and
chocolate seems particularly pleaslug
to the American palate, and when pre
. paring sweets for home consumption
or sale tue amateur caudy-maker will
do well to bear this fact lu mind. As
church saies are uow in order, here
are some reliable recipes for chocolate
sweets that are sure to find ready sale:
Chocolate Kisses. ? For this sweet
powdered or confectioners' sugar
(XXX) is best. Pound together in a
mortar one pound of the sugar and
two ounces?or squares?of unsweeten
ed chocolate. When thoroughly mix
ed pass through a flue sieve and add
the whites of two eggs beateu to a
stiff froth. Have ready a sheet of tiu
without any sides and covered with
buttered paper. Drop the mixture on
this, a heaping teaspoonful ut a time,
and bake slowly.
Chocolate Macaroons. ? Grate four
ouuces of unsweetened chocolate and
sift with oue and oue-half pouuds of
powdered or confectioners' sugar.
31anch and grind in your*me'at chopper
twelve ounces of shelled almonds. This
meaus that the almonds must be
weighed after shelling, uot before..
Beat the whites of three eggs to a stiff
froth. Mix the above ingredients and
a teaspoonful of vanilla together in a
procelaiu bowl, drop on buttered paper
and bake in a moderate oven.
Chocolate Fudge.?Place in a porce
laiu saucepan one pouud of granulated
sugar, half a teacupful of sweet milk,
a level tablespoouful of butter and two
Btinces or squares of unsweetened choc
olate and boil for about fifteen minutes.
Remove from the fire, add one tea
spoonful of vanilla and beat with a
fork until it begins to cool. Do not
stir while cooking. Pour into buttered
square tins to the depth of half an
inch. Before It gets cold dip a knife
into ice water and mark off into
squares.
A ROYAL BUNGALOW.
Alexandra's Boasts a Boat Seat and Is
Altogether Cozy.
Within a pleasant motor drive of
Sandringbam Is the beautiful stretch
of lonely seashore to which Queen
QUEEN ALEXANDRA'S HOME ON THE BEACH.
Alesander is fond of wending her way
with a favorite friend. It is there that
her majesty is haviug erected a modest
bungalow, whence It will be possible
even on a rough and windy day to en
joy the sea air and the fine sea views.
Both the queen and her sister, the
dowager empress of Russia, have a
peculiar love of cliff and shore scenery,
and an attractive feature of their joint
holiday home in Denmark is a sandy
beach, where they often spend pleas
ant hours working and reading during
their autumn sojourn in their native
land.
One odd feature is the boat seat. A
boat has been sawed through the mid
dle and not ouly adds to the quaint
uess of the bungalow, but forms an al
luring seat in which to take a sun
bath.
Roots Get Albums as Souvenirs.
Albums filled with photographs of
travels are becomiug popular as gifts.
Secretary of State Boot, his wife and
their daughter, Mrs. Ulysses S. Graut,
will receive iu a few days a beautiful
and lasting memento of their visit to
Mexico. The gift consists of fwo large
albums containing photographs of
places seen and visited by the mem
bers of the Root party. The albums
are the highest product of the book
maker's aud jeweler's art. They are fif
teen inches wide aud twenty inches in
length and are five inches thick. One
set will go to Secretary and Mrs. Boot
and the other to Mrs. U. S. Graut.
Similar albums will be given to Presi
dent Diaz aud to Foreigu Mmister Mar
Iscal, and these will repose in the slate
department The albums have beeu
prepared by the order of the commit
tee which had charge of Secretary
Root's visit.
To Serve With Salad.
Instead of serving plain crackers and
cheese with salad, a delicious substi
tute may be used by preparing tiny
cheese and nut sandwiches.
Cut very thin and remove the crusts
of brown or whole wheat bread.
Spread lightly with butter aud lay on
each slice a thin shaving of cheese.
Cover the cheese closely with freshly
shelled black waiuuts sprinkled with
salt; then put another slice of the
cheese aud buttered bread.
Cut the saudwieb.es either round or
in small diamonds or squares and press
slightly between weights to blend
tuera well together.
Gifts For Countess Gladys.
Countess Gladys, formerly Miss Van
derbilt, got many beautiful presents,
but the "tea room" which her brother
in-law. Count Dionys, gave her is a lit
tle different from most wedding gifts.
It is for 5 o'clock tea. and every piece
of furniture Is haudmade throughout,
each chair requiring two months to
complete. The room cost $30,000. Her
husbaud's mother gave her an ebony
casket filled with luces that have been
In the family for from 200 to 300 years
and the necklaces of pearls that she
herself wore on her wedding day.
Weak women should read my
,'Book Xo. 4 For Women." It was]
written expressly for women who are|
not well. The Book Xo. 4 tells of Dr.
Shoop's "Night Cure" and just how
these soothing, healing, antiseptic
suppositories can be successfully ap
plied. The book, and strictly confiden
tial medical advice is entirely free. |
Wrte Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. The
Night Cure is sold by Dr. J. G. Wau
namaker Mfg. Co,
PESJS OF THE SUMMER.
Undesirable Tenants That Make. Life
Sad For Housekeepers.
Is there any other feeling quite akin
to that which is aroused in the breast
of every housekeeper when her vision
rests upon the first fly of the season
and ber hand, raised ;j strike, falls
upon thiu air. while that same insidi
ous visitor sails off into space?
Unless she is a very unusual house
keeper lib other feeling quite equals
this one. Just as the buds are bursting
and the smell of spring in the air fills
her with all manner of fine sentiments
about how good it is to live that first
sneaking fly goes sailing by just to re
mind her of the stern realities of life.
It's a call to armsi a signal post that
there's danger ahead.
"Flies." she says. "I will not have in
my house.
"We may huve dust on the piano,
finger marks on the chaire. cookie
crumbs on the rug. but flies buzzing
over tlie luncheon table, caught in the
butter and drowned in the cream
never."
So with the adveut of that first mis
erable fly of th? season the irate house
keeper is for ordering a ream or two of
sticky flypaper. But it's n question as
to which is worse. Hies or flypaper.
The dainty housekeeper who knows
how to conceal her housekeeping under
dainty devices says, "Don't do it. have
mignonette instead." Flies hate migno
nette aud will not stay near it. Sow
the seeds right away. Keep pots in a
warm place, and the seeds will soon
sprout and hloom early. In the rooms
where there is plenty of mignonette
there will be few flies. Of course it
goes without saying that no device will
take the place of screens.
One good way to keep the bouse free
from flies duriug the long hot summer
is to keep them from getting a start in
the house lu the spring. This naturally
means that the screens must be put up
early. The clear glass windows on a
bright spring day seem much more at
tractive without them, but the wise
housekeeper will choose the lesser evil
to the greater and bring them out early
in the season.
A Geographical Table.
Two circular tables are prettiest far a
supper to round out a frolic. Instead
of the conventional white cloth, covers
are especially made of pale blue silesia.
These covers are painted to represent
the eastern and western hemispheres.
For centerpiece have a tall flagpole
wound with ivy or stnilax, surmounted
by an American flag.
So far as is consistent with appetiz
ing qualities, the supper menu can in
clude the products and national dishes
of all the nations of the globe. A sug
gestion for such a bill of fare would
be:
English beef soup. French bread (the
yardstick sort), Hungarian steamed
chicken, rice (Japanese style), creamed
Spanish chestnuts, Russian salad,
?Swiss cheese, toasted English muffins,
Arabian coffee, Euglish plum puddings
(individual), neapolitan Ice cream,
Scotch molasses cakes, Turkish fig
paste. Brazil nuts and Malaga grapes.
After supper the national hymns and
songs of different nations should be
sung in .chorus, with piano accompani
ment, euding, of course, with "The Star
Spangled Banner" and "America."
A Coi'ple of Cleaning Hints.
Knife cleauing may be made easier
by dipping a piece of raw potato in
the scouring material, rubbing with
that instead of a cloth. The juice of
the potato is not only a good cleaner
in itself, but it keeps the scouring
paste moist
Tan leather bags may be cleaned by
rubbing on a thick layer of pure white
soap. Apply with a sponge, rub hard
and let lf.ther remain on leather for a
few minutes to soften grease. Itub
dry with a clean piece of flanuel. To
avoid staining use no more water than
is necessary to make the lather.
Graceful Little Wrap.
This graceful little wrap Is one of
the newest designs Imported from I
Paris. It is simply made, the ma
terial being fine cloth, aud the only or
naments are silk tassels on the corners
and silk cord scrolls on the front and
of obotfon broadcloth.
in the back where the surplice ends
fasten over the back part of the gar
ment Made of taffeta silk in a light
becoming shade, a wrap of this kind
is a comfort on cool summer evenings
to throw about one's shoulders.
Renewing Furniture Covers.
Let me tell the housewives who have
faded, forlorn furniture slips they feel
they must throw away what I did with
; mine, says a contributor to the Deline
' ator. A single package of dye?the sort
for cotton?made two large chair cov
j ers an exquisite shade of green with a
silky look and ornaments to the room
in place of eyesores.
There is a Pink Plain Tablet made
by Dr. Shoop, that will positively stop
any pain, anywhere, in 30 minutes.
Druggists everywhere sell them as Dr.
Snoop's Headache Tablets, but they
j stop other pains as easily as Head
ache. Dr. Shoops Pink Pain Tablets
I
simply coax blood pressure away from
I pain centers: that is all. Pain comes
from blood pressure; congestion. Stop
that pressure with Dr. Shoop's Head
ache Tablets and pain is instantly
gone. 20 Tablet 25c. Sold by Dr. J.
IG. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.
ussier
?._i
No. 174.?Hidden Town Puzzle.
The Census Man?No age? No age.
madam? Why the thing Is absurd!
Wherever were you born ?
The name of the town where the wo
man was born is hidden In the man's
remarks.
No. 175.?Beheadings.
Behead eon fusion. aud leave one of
Adam's sous.
Behead a speech delivered In public
and leave a fixed daily allowance of
provision, drink aud forage assigned to
each soldier in the army.
Behead a child and leave to merit or
deserve by labor.
Behead a month and leave a concave
or hollow structure of stone or brick
supported by its own curve.
Behead disinclination aud leave a po
etical stanza.
No. 176.?Charades.
L
My first do students everywhere;
My second Is a dwellng;
My whole's a treasure often sought,
Unhapplncss dispelling.
II.
My first's a place where all must
learn
Sometimes life's called the same;
My second, to It you will turn
When you my first shall name.
My wholo was built within this land
As soon a3 men were able,
And many days to come shall stand
The base to make states stable.
?Youth's Companion.
No. 177.?Postman's Bag.
L A part of a stove lost a letter and
became an opening.
2. A nut lost a letter and became a
grain.
8. A part of the head lost two letters
and became a receptacle.
4. A part of the year lost a letter and
became an Insect.
5. A musical instrument lost a letter
and became chance.
6. A tool for shaping metal lost two
letters and became a droop.
No. 178.?Numerical Enigma.
I am composed of eleven letters and
spell the name of a famous artist My
1, 4, 11, 9 is unusual; my 8, G, 10, 1 is a
unit of iime; my 3, 2, 10, 11 is acid; my
7, 10, 1, 3, 9 is one who takes care of
another in Illness; my 8, 9, 11, 5 Is a
medicinal plant.
No. 179.?Diagonal.
L A consonant 2. To tell. 3. Not
on time. 4. Teu hundred. 5. A sover
eign. 6. A reptile. 7. Prompt 8. To
hallow. My whole is a day.
No. 180.?Suffix Puzzle.
1. Prefix the suffix of wit to the suf
fix of wordy and get ill tempered. 2.
Prefix the suffix of belonging to man
kind to the'suffix of one who does
wrong and get method.
Classifying Him.
The pimply faced youth had thrown
a pop boltle at the umpire.
A policeman grabbed him by the col
lar, jerked him to his feet and removed
his hat
Then he took a tapeline from his
pocket and measured the fellow's head.
"Size G." be said. "That lets you off
this time, young man. But don't do it
ugnin. or back you go to the 'sylnin for
the feeble minded."
No more pop bottles were thrown
from that particular section of the
bleachers' during that particular game.
?Chicago Tribune.
As to Happiness.
"Here's a man who says that happi
ness depends on the wife."
"Oh, I don't know. It .'may depend
upon the fact that you haven't got
one."?St Paul Pioneer Press.
Wouldn't Recognize 'Em.
Patience?I was up in your town the
other day.
Patrice?See anybody you knew?
"Not much. I was in an automo
bile."? Yonkers Statesman.
Key to the Puzzler.
No. lGG.-Hidden Birds: 1. Wren. 2.
Owl. 3. Raven.
No. 1G7.?Connected Circles: Initials:
Edgar Allan Poo, Horace Greeley. A
to B, Earth, Diana, Globe. Angle. Row
el, Auger, Lydia, Latin, Anvil, Nones.
Plane, Ounce, Equal. C to D, Horse,
Ozone, Rowel, Acorn, Crown, Eland.
Grave, Rifle, Ewers, Eight, Libra,
Earth, Yokes.
No. 168.?Charade: Infatuate.
No. 1G0.?Palindromes: Hannah, An
na, Ada.
No. 170.?Arboreal Puzzle: Baseball.
L Bircb. 2. Apple. 3. Sumac. 4. Elm.
5. Butternut G. Ash. 7. Linden. 8.
Locust
No. 171.?Jumble: Fruits and Flowers.
No. 172.?Additions: L Cow-slip. 2.
Ear-nest. 3. White-bait 4. Part-rldge.
6V Via-duct
No. 173.?Pronouns: 1. Courteous, us.
2. History, his. 3. Hermet, her. 4.
Specimen, L
"Health Coffee" is really the clos
est Coffee Imitation ever yet produc
ed. This clever Coffee Substitut; was
recently purchased by Dr. Sboop of
Racine. Wis. Not a grain of real cof
fee iu it either. Dr. Shoop's Health
Coffee is made from pure toasted
grains, with malt, nuts, etc. Really it
would fool an exeprt; who might
rlriit. for coffee. No 20 or 30 min
utes tedious boiling. ".Made in a min
ute" says the doctor. Sold by A. L.
Dukes.
BABY TORTURED
FORMS
By Terrible itching Eczema?Face
and Head a Solid Sore?Spread
to His Hand and Legs?Would
Scratch Until He Bled?Tiny Suf
ferer Immediately Relieved and
ENTIRELY CURED IN 2
MONTHS BY CUTICURA
When my son Walter was three weeks
old, eczema appeared on his face. We did
not know what
it was so went
to a doctor who
treated him for
three months.
Then he was so
bad that his face
and head were
nothing but one
sore and his ears
looked as if they
were going to fall
off, so we tried
another doctor.
He said he could
cure him and we
doctored there four months, the baby
never getting any better. His hand
and legs then had big sores on them
and a-; for his sleeping, we could not J
think of it, the poor little fellow suf
fered so terribly. First I tied his hands
to the crib to keep him from scratching,
but when it got so bad I tied him in a
shawl or he would scratch himself all
bloody. When he was seven months old
we tried a set of the Cuticura Remedies.
The first application of Cuticura let
him sleep and rest well, in one week
the sores were gone but it stayed red
and sometimes it would itch so we
used Cuticura for two months, then he
had a clear and white face. Now he is
two years and seven months old and
has never had eczema again. I hope
this letter will help some who are suffer
ing from skin disease. Every mother
who has a baby suffering with skin
disease should just try Cuticura; there
is nothing better. Mrs. Louis Beck, R.
F.D.3,San Antonio, Tex., Apr. 15, '07."
A single sot of Cuticura. Remedies is
Often sufficient to cure torturing, dis
figuring, itching, burning, and scaly
humors, eczemas, rashes, and irritations,
from infancy to age, when all other
remedies fail.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for
Every XJumor consists of Cuticura Soap, <25e.) to
Cleanse the Skin, Cuticura Ointment (50c.) to Heal
the Skin, and Cutlcurn Resolvent (50c.), (or In the
form of Chocolate Coated 1'llls 25c. per vtal of CO)
to Purify the Blood. Sold throughout the world.
Potter Drus <fc Chcm. Corp.. Sole Props., Boston,
Mass
Car Mailed Free. Cuticura Boot; on Skin DjgcMCj,
STERLING
SILVERWARE
Did yon know t ' .cor-?
can place before yo-' n ?v?;* o'
dependable goods in *?rlinw
Silverware?
We do not toucn frything
that we are not glad fe -?p-o?
tce?and handle f**h'n***
the output of the ? *?l *'*u??ms
makers.
Now, it ought to e th a
good deal to yon f . this.
You need never b ^''i about
the probable quality c* ???^tiling
in this line if yon o'mc ~e for
it?because we at30M< '1 re
sponsibility, an'' j?'?ivelp
guarantee our Steru.i? "V Y?r?
ware.
There may be su" i ij, ai.
Silverware imcertiir?J*?? br*
you couldn't get tl e?> . ?, at.
matter how badly yuc. wanted
them.
H. Spahr & Son.
46 W. RusseU, Street.
ORANGEBURG, S. C.
Rheumatism
I have found a tried and tested cure for Rhen,
fnatism I Not a remedy that will straighten the
distorted limbs of chronic cripples, nor tum bony
growths back to flesh again. That is Impossible.
But I can now surely kill the pains and pongs of
this deplorable disease
In Germany?with a Chemist In the City cf
Darmstadt?I found the last ingredient with
Which Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remody was made
% perfected, dependable prescription. Without
that last ingredient, I successfully treated many,
many cases of Rheumatism; but now, at last, ltuni
formly cures all curable cases of this heretofore
much dreaded disease. Those sand-like granular
wastes, found In Rheumatic Blood, seem to dissolve
and pass away under the action of this remedy at
freely as doe3 sugar when added to pure water.
And then, when dissolved, these polsonoiw waste*
freely pass from the system, and the cause of
Rheumatism Is gone forever. There Is now no
real need?no actual excuse to suffor longer with
out help. We sell, and in confidence recommend
Dr. Shoop's
Rheumatic Remedy
DR. J. G. WANNAMAKER.
"What would you do, dear, if I
were to die?" asked Mrs. Darley.
fondly.
"I don't know," replied Darley,
thoughtfully. "Which isyour choice
burial or cremation?"
The Judge Uses Forcible Language.
Judge W. B. Simmons of Fincas
tie, Va., 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 3
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. j
& 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. i
made to churches. Sold by J. G. I
Wannamaker Mfg. Co, Orangeburg.
Plain Talks on Fertilizers
How to Get the Greatest Possible Yield per Acre
It is a well-known
scientific fact that in
order to produce the
very greatest possible
yield from any soil it
must contain an actual
excess over and above
all demands that can
possibly be made on it
by the plants.
Many farmers will feed their
stock as much nourishing food
as they can possibly assimi
late, yet will starve their crops
on the mistaken notion that
they are "economizing" on fer
tilizer. The experiences of
farmers, government experts,
and agricultur
alists every
where confirm
the fact that
plants, like ani
mals, need the
fullest possible
amount of nour
ishment l h a t
they can obtain
if they are to be
developed to the utmost.
The economy in fertilizers
is not in the amount used but
in the ratio of quality to cost.
Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers
are the best in the
world for the least
money. More than
one million tons were
sold to Southern farm
ers last year; and every
year the demand be
comes greater.
The best results in
producing corn, the
good old stand-by crop
of the South, follow the
application of 200 to
300 pounds of the right
fertilizer. Virginia-Carolina
Fertilizers will greatly "in
crease your yields per acre"
of corn or any other crop, even
on poor land?and the most
wonderful results are produced
through its use on good land.
Write today to the nearest
office of the Vir
ginia-Carolina'
Chemical Com
pany for a copy
of their latest
Year Book or
Almanac,alarge
130-page book
f the most valu
able and unpre
judiced informa
tion for planters and farmers.
VIRGINIA-CAROLINA
CHEMICAL CO.
Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C.
Norfolk, Va. Charleston, S. C.
Columbia, S. C. Baltimore Md.,
Atlanta. Ga.
Columbus, Ga.
Savamv*h. Ga.
Shreveport, La. i
I !?! I IUI M
J. C. PIKE
21 RUSSELL ST.
Next Door to Geo. Zeigier.
WE ARE SHOWING A BEAUTIFUL AND WELL SELECTED LINE OP
SUMMER AND WASH GOODS. All our patents are the newest made.
Compare our prices before buying, and you will buy from us.
OUR PRICES:
12 1-2 cents Batiste, dots, stripes
and checkt*.8 1-3 c.
10 and 12 1-2 cents Percals, 100
patterns.8 1-3 i\
8c and 10c Eeautiful Figured
Lawns.r?c.
10 cents ?Cham brays.0 l-4c.
All our Calicos, Light and Dark. .5c.
Apron Gingh'ams.3c.
20c Dotted Swiss. . .. .. ..12 1-2c
See cut 10 and 15c Laces Choice.Sc.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED.
J. C. PIKE, JR. & CO
You may at first 1m> puzzled to deride what vehicle to buy when seeing
so many different makes represented by as many diffrcnt prices and con
sider this a hard proposition. You will however be surprised how easy
it is to make a selection when examining all the qualities together, as
we have them on display, and decide that the real "Hard Proposition"
lay in selecting makes with more behind them fo be proud of than these
rix: "COURTLAND," "ROCK HILL/1 "HENDERSON," ,'COLUMBIA,"
"WHITE HIC KORY" and "LION" BUGGIES AND HARNESS in all styles
und prices, sold on terms to suit everybody.
See us before buying and save time and money.
SIFLY AND FRITH.
Post Cards at Sims' Book Store.
Will cure any case of Kidney or Bladder Disease not
beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more.
Cures Backache
Corrects
Irregularities
Do not risk having
Bri^ht's Disease
or Diabetes
LOVVMAN Dil UC CO.
Dr. >?.. C. DIKES.