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MAIL ORDEBS A SPECTALTY^ SHOPPING* FROM A fe1 DISTANCE If t he-weather is too hot to go out of doors, and you need something in a hurrv Telephone Koha's Emporium, Orangekrg 4?2 Rings Efficient attendants -will take your order and fill it promptly. \ If yon are living out of town, and don't want to make the trip to the city Writeto KOHN'Si THE MAIL OR DES SERVICE is as thoroughly patisfactory in filling your commission as though you di? you shopping over the counter. Where ever you may be mS Emporium Is the Convenient Store, OBANGEBUBG, S. 0. . Fifteenth Year 220 Students! . A high grade boarding schoo 1 for boys and girls. Healthful loca tion. Comfortable buildings. Broad course of study. ? Thirteen teachers. A safe home school for your sons an<j daughters. Rates reasonable. Beautiful Catalog free. Session opens September 17th, 1008. Address ? - 1 jWglllK^f^r ''_' PRESIDEENT ?? ? S. PETERSON, ORANGEBURG, S. C OLD FOLKS Especially need "Nature"* Remedy" (NR. Tablet*): need U to take the Rheumatism out of theirjoints; need it to keep their Stomach. Liver. Kidneys and So weis la good erden need it lor the strength and vigor it fives. Let "NATURE'S REMEDY" Be Your Doctor;, Tike s tablet now and then; It will keep your system in such good condition that diseases cannot lake hold. Every boa is guaranteed to jive satisiictioo. or the purchaaa pries refunded. Better Than Pills For Liver His ' GET A 25&.BOX.? DR. A. C. DOYLE, & CO. Have]You Seen the . New Local Views JSJt SIMS' BOOK STORE. LQ TbtvEdisto Savings Bank, _ O T. ANGEBURG, S. O. Capital.1100,000.00. Surplus. ?30,000.00. o I 1 O K 1 [. I ?,4, Jill Iii I 'VI. O?v3r, Vi: 1. i. ' 17!', J Pr DIRECTORS M O. Distaler J. M. Oliver . R. j>vqu W. F. r Fa'ev B. H. Moss T.C.Doyle Sol Kohn |] J. W. Smoak , M )037 31V*1 IS Tl>137 TUl*. ill &Hs WW * ) S\V^ is (ft dO)iiD \OU money in the savings department and draw interest on the ?:3t iav? January, April, July arj^ Ootooer at the rate of four per cent db> ?"*?"? , This bank's absolute sarety is best attested by its capital tock, it surplus and by the character and standing of its officers and board of directors. Money loaned on good security. ?mm nummmmmiMnmBgniant Sewing Machines. NEW DROP-HEAD MACHINES Hold on 'asy payments. Good prices allowed for old Machines in exchai... 3. Second-hand Machines *rom $5.00 to $15.00. Also parts c?.ad attachments furnished *t>T %11 standard makes. Prompt attention to mail orders. New Bicycles So!d on Easy Payments. Also Bicycle parts and arborise furnished for all standard makes. Generd. Repair Shop for Sewing liUichiues, Bicycles, Guns, Clook? d Watches. anGive me your work. Satisfaction guaranteed. J. H. Market Street - ? SMITH. Opposite New Postoffice. Post Cards at Sims' Book Store. "TOUGH CLUB" OF MISSOURI*. An Organization Thnt Has No Coun terpart in the United States. The Methodist-Baptist Christian Tough Club of Clearmont. otherwise known as the M. B. C. T.-, is an or ganization that has no counterpart in tne United States. The club is comijoted of men who have records for not having been inside of a church lor years, some of them not since they went to church Christmas eve tn boyhood to get the sack of candy. The members take turns about i,oing to the three churches in Clearmont. No one who has at tended a church service in :.even years 13 eligible to membership. Each membei is required to put five cents in the coffers of the church every Sunday.. Failure to give proper ex cuse fo. not attending church with the club is covered by a fine of 25 cents which goes to the church the mete.ter should _ have attended.? Maryviiie (Mo.)' Republican. ' Unhappy Erin. To get enough iurf for the winter's fire, to produce degenerate potatoes from exhausted ground, to keep a lean pi^ on the scraps that can be spared-111 from the cheerless table, and to send any male children who are 'n the least fit to America or Can ada, as soon as they can hope to make a living; these are the occupa tions, that is the ambition of the list less native of the bog country.?* Electrical Review. Tea and Tobacco. Tea growing as an occupation for a woman is a business which has "caught on" with ~ome success over seas, despite the fact that the work is hard and the profits are at first small. Not to ?e outdone by their colonial sisters, many women, and women of high degree, are said to be keenly In terested In the scheme for tobacco culture in this country.?London On looker. /-.miquo Coins Cheap. Antique coins are a drug in the market At a recent sale some of the coins of the days of Darius, Pi late. Nero and Julius Caesar sold as low a^. four cents. The highest price a Darius gold-coin could bring was *17, $13 was paid for a Tiberius gold piece; a Nero copper, in Alex ander the Great and a Herod went for $3 a piece. ( The English Workman. Next to the '.'sentimentality," so as tonishing to Europe?because so irra tional?comes the invincible patience of he English workman. He will endure almost anything in?silence? until it becomes unendurable. When he is vocal it is pretty certain that things have become unendurable.? Nation. ^/T?en and Now* A hundred years ago, when rich young men made the grand tour, it was :he fashion to study painting and sculpture, to buy beautiful objects, ana to fill country mansions with the to all country mansions with the choices,, products of the chisel. Who buys statues now who cares for them. ?Graphic. Two Numbers. These two number 480,561?411, 896 repiesent French births, the first in 1*1,1 the second in 1905. The difference between the two. 68,666, gives the fall of the race in twenty four years.?Le Journal, Paris. Speed of a Fly. A 3y so minute as to be almost in visiKe, ran three inches in half a sec ond,' anr was calculated to make no less than 540 steps in the time a man could breathe once. A man with proportionate agility could run 24 miles in a minute. Japanese Make Railway Pay. When the South Manchuria Rail way was operated by the Russians it received a subsidy from St. Peters burg ot 15,000,000 rubles yearly to make ends meet. Now, in Japanese hands I* is earning 30 per cent over operating expenses. No Crowded Cars There. In Hamburg the policemen in the streets are instructed to watch cars sharply, and if they find a car that carries R single pasenger more than the number allowed by law the con ductor is fined 3 marks Strict Barber's Union. Th*> Barbers' and vVig Makers* Un ion in Vienna is very stringent in its examination before it will admit any new member to the society Only fully competent persons are allowed to practice Wouldn't Let Her Smoke. Mrs. Patrick Campbell like some other European actresses likes aer cigarette. She lit one In the tea room of the Plaza Hotel In New York City, but put it out when the management remonstrated. St. Paul's Cathedral Safe. Experts have decided that the famous St. Paul's Cathedral in Lon don is safe so long as the buildings around it are not disturbed, and thus ends a long controversy. Search for Road .Material. Pennsylvania 'State . highway offlo iab are experimenting'with .28 varie ties of limestone in search of an in expensive, yet satisfactory road ma tet.al. War Against Consumption All nations are endeavoring to check the ravages of consumption, the "white plague," that claims so many victims each year. Foley's Honey and Tar cures coughs and colds perfectly and you are in no danger of consumption. Do not risk your health by taking some unknown preparation when Foley's Honey and Tar is safe and < ort;, in in results. Dr. A. C. Dukes. Lowman Drug, Co. Soni' mcr. run in'o debt but don't every try to crawl out. FOR BABY'S SAKE. Amusing Her Baby With the As sistance of the Salesman. It was a streaming, sultry, stic?y afternoon in August, and the relent less sun beat fiercely down upon the city pavements. The whole world was in its shirt sleeves, and Hender son, of Henderson & Henderson, car pet Importers, leaned flaDbily against his goods. Two ladles entered the shop and in the arms of one there basked a crowing infant. "Can you," the lady said?"-;an you please show us some carpets?" "Madam, I can," he answered. And he did. Again and again he did. Roll af ter roll he spread oefor^ their criti cal eye.:. The perspiration rolled down his cheeks. He gasped, he tot tered, he Btaggered. At last: "Don't you think," said one, glancing at her watch, "that'3 it is time to leave?' "Not quite, dear," -:aid her friend, patting her infant fondly on the ! cheek. "We've loads of time to spare to catch the train, and baby does so love to see him roll them I out!"?World's-Wit. A Burning Question. 'Father," inquired a little chap, "what is a conflagration?" "A. conflagration is a large fire, my boy," replied the father profoundly. "It it derived from the Latin con, together and flagro to burn." f "How clever you are, father?" said Johnnie. "You voi'ldn't call a little fire a conflagration, would you?" "No, Johnnie?no!" answered his father. "Because, you see," explained Johnnie, "I was tryiig the lenc of the telescope as a burning glass, and I burned a hole right through the crown of your top bat, and-" "I see," was the grim interruption. "Do you know the meaning of flagellation, Johnnie. It com s from flagellatio. ' Now go and fetch the strap!" Dally Tragedy. Suddenly there was an explosion. "Phwat! Another war?" placidly remarked the policeman on the cor ner. But It was not the playful letting oft. a dynamite bomb in th3 rear A some gambler's place of business this time. It was far more tragi cal than than. The crowd that rushed to the scene saw a lovely young woman, pale as marble, wringing her hands. "Oh, Victor!" she said to the young man by her side. "How .re we going to get home. We've bust ed our only spare tire?"?Chicago Tribune. Going One tetter. Mrs. Bricktop (bursting with pride)?How do you like my new carpet, Mrs. Crosseye? Mrs. Crosseye (bursting with envy)?It's?er?very nict. indeed,, ^^-Brussels. By the way 1 near ly forget what I came for. I wisii you would lend me your lawn mower for a few moments. "Lawn mower?? Why, rerciin 1> But what on earth can you want with a lawn mower at this time of year?" "I desire to thin down our velvet pile carpet in the nursev a little; the children are always losing the.r marbles in it."?Philadelphia In Cuirer. "GOOD FISHING." "The manager asked Sporlelgh o leave the hotel." "What was the trouble?" "Why, Sportleigh succeeded in catching that trout in the trout brook, and the manager had to send to the city for another." Peter s Mistake. The schoolmistress was showing off her pupils to some visiting friend. She had been ever the same ground a day or two befjre, and she thought she could trust them to do ner credit. 'Who knows what useful article is furnished by the elephant!" she asked. "Ivory," was the reply of' three boys at once. "And what from the seal?" "Sealingwax," answered Peter Sand, whose inventiveness was ' bet ter than his memory. His 'loom. Mr. Diggles," said the boy with big ruffles on his shouldeis, "I wish you would let me come and see where you live. I wa-ut to lock at your room." "Why, certainly. But what made you think of that?" ' My sister said it wat better than your company, so I thought tt must be something fine." A Revelation It is a revelation to people, the severe cases of luug trouble thai have been cured by Foley's Houej and Tar. It not only stops the cough but heals and strengthen; the lungs. L. M. Rugggles, Reasnor, Iowa; writes: "The doctors said I had con I sumption, and I got no better until I took Foley's Honey and Tar. It stuped tlr hemorrhages and pain in my lung and they are now as sound as a bullet." For sale by Dr. A. C. Lukes, Lawman Drug, Co. The liest Cure For Colic in Horses. Colic is usually the result of in digestion, caused by sudden changes of feed, too iong fasting, food given when the horse is exhausted; new hay or grain, cr large quantities of green feed. Every horse owner should keep Sloan's Sure Colic Cure in his stable as an insurance against colic, for au attack of eolic is liable to come on without warning at any time, and Sloan's Sure Colic Cure is the safest and best remedy to use. It acts in stantly on the stomach and bowels and can be given a woman or a child. "I cured a horse with colic that| had heen treated by a. good veterin ary surgeon for forty-eight hours," writes Mr. R. A. Pierce, of Cohutta, Ga. "The horse was about dead and the owner said he wouldn't take five cents for him. I gave him three doses of Sloan's Sure Cure and he was up and eating hay in ten minu tes." The best religious athletics is knee exercise. DOING THEIR DUTY. [Scores of Ornngeburg Readers Are Le/rning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kidneys' I duty. When they fail to do this the kid neys are sick. -Backache and many kidney ills follow; \Urinary troubles, diabetes. Doan's Kidney Pills cure them all Oraugeburg people endorse our [claim. J. L. Phillips. Farmer, S5 Sellers Ave., Orangeburg, S. C, says: "On several occasions I have used Doan's Kidney Pills procured from Dr. J. G. Wannamaker's drug store and they have always given entire satis faction." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 [cents. Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the Unit led States. Remember the name?Doan's? land take no other. What is the oldest table in the World? The multiplication table. Heat prostrates the nerves. In the summer one needs a tonic to off-set the customary hot weather Nerve and Strength depression. You will feel better within 48 hours after beginning to take such a remedy as Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Its prompt action in restoring the weakened nerves is surprising. Of course, you won't get entirely strong in a few days, but each day you can actually feel the improvement. That tired, lifeless, spiritless, feeling will quick ly depart when using the Restorative. Dr. Shoop's Restorative will sharpen a failing appetite; it aids diggestion; it wll strengthen the weakened Kd-| ncys and Heart by simply reminding) the worn-out nerves that these or igins depend upon. Test it a fowl days and be convinced. Sold by Dr. .1. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. When you see a man advertising | I his virtues it's to keep your atten tion off his real character. This is what Hon. Jake Moore, State Warden of Georgia, says of | Kodol For Dyspepsia: "E. C. De Witt & Co., Chicago, 111.?Dear Sirs I ?I have suffered more than twenty j .-ears from indigestion. About eigh jteen months ago I had grown so much worse that I could not digest :rust of corn bread and could not retain anything on my stomach. I mind that I could not live but a short time, when a friend of mine recom mended Kodol. I consented to try it to please him and was better in one day. I now weigh more than I ever did in my life and am in bet ter health than for many years. Ko- J riol did it. I keep a bottle constant- j ly, and write this hoping that hu manity may be benefitted. Yours .?ery truly, Jake O. Moore, Atlanta, Aug. 10, 1004." Sold by l. O. Duke?, M. D., A. C. Doyle & Co. When a man plays for sympathy, he :oses if ne wins. The Judge Uses Forcible Language. Judge W. B. Simmons of Fineas tle, 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 S ears 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 & 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 16 years. Actual cost of L. c? M. about 51.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. made to churches. Sold by J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co, Orangeburg. Which is swifter heat - or cold? Meat because you can catch cold. B. G. Stewart, a merchant of Ce dar View, Miss., says: "I tell my customers when they buy a box of Dr. King's New Life Pills they get the worth of that much gold in weig ht, if afflicted with constipation, ma laria or billiousiTess.' Sold under guarantee at Dr. J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co., drug store. 2Tie. ? Cirls who ar?- worth then- weight in cold are seldome given weigh. Delay in commencing treatment for a slight irregularity that could have been cured quickly by Fol tyjs serious kidney disease. Foley's Kidney Remedy builds up the worn out tissues and strengthens these or gans. Commence taking it to-day. Dr. A. C. Dukes, Lownian Drug, Co. Don't be afraid of failure. Keep on though yoH fail a dozen times. Use DeWitt's Little Early Riser-, pleasant little pills that are easy to take. Sold by A., c. Dukes, M. D., A. C. Doyle & Co. are urged to follow the example of thousands of their sisters and take Cardui. Cardui is a non I mineral, non-intoxicating medicine for women. It is for siek, weak ladies, with sick female organs. It Will Help It is a genuine, curative medicine, that builds up the female system and relieves female pain. Mrs. M. A. St. Clair, of Eskdale, W. Va., writes: "Before taking Cardui, I had given up all hope of getting well. I had suffered for 3 years with my left side and was confined to my bed, so I took Cardui, and now Cardui has about cured my female trouble." AT ALL DRUG STORES O THE PEOPLE S BANK ORAXSEBURG, S. C. "A Bank For All The People." CAPITAL STOCK.$30,000.00 SURPLUS. 20,000.00 STOCKHOLDERS LIABI LITY. ..30.000.00 PROTECTION TO DE POSITORS .$80,000.00 D. O. Herbert.President B. F. .>iuckenfuss. . . . Vice-President . H. C. Wannamnker.Cashier W. M. Richardson.. .. Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS. W. C. Crom A. M. Sallej Ablal Lathrop W. L. Gluze G. L. Sallcy Robt. E. Copes D. O. Herbert B. F. Muckenfuss H. C. Wannamoker. Interest paid in Savings Department. 0 0 0 # 0 o 0 * 0 0 0 <?> 0 0 0 0 ? 0 0000000000000?0000000000000 HE STI I ?HEYWARD-WAKEFIELD" Go-Carts Roll So Easy And Are So Stylish $ That Babies Who Know Will Not Be Satisfied With Any Other ?Kind. ?? We Have Them From $2. Up. I {?? J Wannamaker, Smoak & Co. 4 ? 4 ? 4 # # 4 I 6? SUMMER TERM will begin soon. Great reduction in price is offered. The work in either course may be completed in three months. You will be able to pay for course out of first month's salary. Write for Particulars - Orangeburg, S. C.