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For sale by J. W.SMOAK. . E. RILEY JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER LOT OP UP-TO-DATE BUGGIES OP MY MAKES CALL AND SEE THEM BEFORE YOU BUY 1,000 Pounds FKESfl TURNIP SEED. ALL VARIETIES. Fruit Jars and Fruit Jar Rubbers. For Sale By C. W. PPvESCOTT. ay's laxative Cough Syrup CONTAINS, HONEY AND TAH Relieves Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and Wealthy action of the bowels. Relieves Coughs by cleansing tin mucous membranes of the throat, ehest and bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to the ta&te as Maple Sogar" Children. Like It For BACKACHE?WEAK KIDNEYS Try hWItt'8 Kidoaj and Bladder Pills?Surs md Safe Sold by A. C Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle & Co. Proof is inexhaustible thai Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound carries women safely through the Change of Life. Read the letter Mrs. E. Hanson, 304 E. Long St., Columbus, Ohio, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " I was passing through the Change of Life, and suffered from nervous ness, headaches, and other annoying symptoms. My doctor told me that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound was good for me, and since tak ing it I feel so much better, and I can again do my own work. I never forget to tell my f riends what Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound did for me during this trying poriod." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands 01 women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid rumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear mg-down feeling, flatulency^ indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. 24 \SHARP LEDGES, GEO S. HACKEE & SON. CHARLESTON, S. C. Manufacturers DOORS, SASH & BLINDS. BALUSTERS, COLUMNS & ETC. WINDOW AND DOOR SCREENS. SASH WEIGHTS AND CORD. IT 'SAVES AND SfiAVES A Fixed Duty IN EVERY MAN'S DAILY LIFE IS TO SHAVE. "The Gillette" reduces the time cost to four minutes and the money cost to a quarter of a cent. It has no hinges that rust, no springs that weaken, no thing to wear out. "THE GILLETTE" way is simple, sanitary and safe. 12 blades, 24 sharp edges 20 to 40 Velvet Shaves from Each Blade A million men shave with "THE GILLETTE." Sold by leading dealers. Ask to see them. Sets with iz blades from $5.00 to $50.00. SIMS' BOOK STORE, Orangebarg, S. C. no strdpping.no honing. J. STOKES SALLE Y, Attorney at Law. No. 11 Barton Building, Law 3-27-3m Range, Orangeburg. S. C. For Sale. Several fine Jersey Cows with young calves. Apply to L. E. Riley. BEAUTY AND CLEANESS are essentially the characteristics of our brass and metal beds. For sirnmer use there is none to be compared with them. Like All Our Furniture, these beds have been built right in every detail. We can rcommend them because we know their good qualities. And the price ought to recommend them to you. So inexpensive are they th^t you can furnish every bedroom in your house ..ithout feeling yourself extravagant. Also everything in the ITardware line, Stoves and Ranges &c. K Orangeburg Hardware & Furniture Co. INVISIBLE'IN SLEEP. 'Fish Have Ability to Change from Bright to Pale Hues. "That file fish Is asleep," said the attendant. "How do you know." the viritor to the aq iarinm asked. "But I can't bcc h n: hy the wa.." "That's how I know. He, Ilka many other fish, changes color on go ing off. Awake he is mottled with brown and dark olive green, a hand some, sombrely splendid object. Asleep he Is a pallid gray, with dark er wings and tall, a ghost of a file fish, practically Invisible. "Many of the weaker fish, espec ially In the tropics, have this abil ity to change from a bright to a pale, vague hue when they sleep. Thus they sleep safely. Otherwise their slumber would end between a bigger fish's jaws. "A wonderful natural dispensation Isn't it. Suppose you were r crimi nal, being pursued hotly, and when ever you grew tired you could throw yoursef under a tree and doze off, conscious that in your sleep no one could see you?"?New York Sun. No Soft Bed for Him. There is an immensely rich man In New York who never slept on a bed or eiderdown, goose feathers, felt, hair or excelsior. When a "boy. ho slept on a pallet of straw. When a young man his bed was an old-fash ioned shuck mattress in the making of which he assisted to the extent of sorting the shucks. In the army (1861-'65) he was glad to sleep on the ground. Later, as a civil engi ntar, he reposed on a puncheon; and now, rolling in wealth, goes- to bed every night on a trundle bed which he bought from his aged "nigger m?mmy." This affair is not ' over fourteen Inches high, and is corded up with half-inch hemp. There is no mattress, and of course there are no springs. A rag quilt covers the ropes, another covers his body as he sleeps. His health is superb.?New York Press. How the Scarecrow Earns Wages. As he stands in the middle of the flat Suffolk field there is little to show that he Is not the ordinary in animate scarecrow. He stands mo tionless for five minutes at a time, ana only when a bird Is tempted by the fresh corn just appearing above the ground does be show any sign of life. But then It is that the scare scrow moves; he aits an old tin can with the rusty handle of a snovel and frightens the bird3 and makes them fly quickly out of sight. So he spends his day this old bent man and at the end he is paid 18 pence. He is the village scarecrow.?London Daily Mall. Forest Fires. There is one feature which does not always enter into expert esti mates of the world's timber supplies, and that is the terrible prevalence of destructive forest fires which an nually devastate enormous tracts both in the United States and Canada More destruction Is wrought by these terrible outbreaks in a few days, par ticularly In pine and fir forests, than would be brought about by years of legitimate felling.?Timber Trades' Journal. New Ice Machine, An Icemaking machine has been Invented at Grasse, France. The Im portant feature Is a cylinder in which the chemicals are sealed (the latter not requiring renewel and lasting as long as the machine itself), and vhich revolving in water, produces the ice. It can also produce cold An Ink-Tight Joint. If the threads in the rubber con nection of a fountain pen are worn a little the joint will leak enough to soil the fingers. Dry the threads with a blotter and cover them with melted paraffin. Turn the pozzle In to the barrel while the paraffin Is still warm and you have an ink-tight joint. Pleasant Reflection. The Rev. ^William R. Huntington of New York, said recently that it was more dangerous to be a railway brakeman than to be a murderer, I and proved his assertion with sta tistics showing that one murderer in seventy-three was hanged, whereas one brakeman in thirty was killed. The Play and the Cigar. Henry J. Byron, one of the wit tiest of English playwrights of a score of years ago, remarked on one occasion: "A play Is like a cigar. If It's good, everybody wants a box. If it's bad, all the puffing in the world won't make It go.." An Epitaph. Beneath this Btone lies Mary Green, In prime of life she quit this scene; She died the victim of a cough. Too soon, too Boon, she took 'em off. ?Detroit Free Press. Another Problem. Why does the general housework er refuse to wa6h windows on a sun shiny day? Why does she Insist in putting off that job until cloudy weather? At one thousand fathoms below the level of the ocean there if a uni f.rnt temperature just above freez? Ing point. There are silver Ingots In the Bank of England which have lain tihero for more than 200 .years. "Suffered day and night the tor ment of itching piles. Nothing help ed me until I used Doan's Ointment. It ci::?'d me permanently."?Hon. John R. Garrett, Mayor, Girarl, Ala. You ca'inot always folio Avthe ad vice of all your friends, but you are foolish if you forget it. Harsh physic.?? renn, weaken the bowels, cause jhron e constipation. Doan'? Regulates operate easily, tone the stomach, cure constipation. 25c. Ask your druggist for them. WHY HE DIDN'T "TiLL HER, * Tried to Have a Chance tc Explain? But She Wouldnt Let Him. "I didn't tell you, did I, Mildred," said Mr. Cavil to his wife, "that I saw yo'ir sister Jane downtown me day iast nft'el. ?' "No, you dian't, Charles Auguj tus Cavil," replied Mrs. Cavil. "Why dian" you?" i "Well, you see?" I "Yes,, I see. You meet the only sister I have in the world and In stead of coming straight home and telling me about it the same day, as any respectable husband would lave done, you keep the matter secret a whole week and then ask carelessly if you have mentioned the fact that you saw her.' "But, my dear-?" ? "Don s but me, Charles Augustus Cavil. I have ' o doubt that she sent i me r. message bv you, and that you have not only failed to deliver it, but by this time you have iorgott<\~. what it was about. Teil me if this Isn't the case." "My dear, It was this way-" "Don't tell me it was that way, Charles Augustus Cavil. I know ex actly how it was. You simply didn't care a straw vhetber I knew that you bad seen sister Jane or not or you would not have waited a whole week to tell me you had seen her." "But I didn't say I saw her," Mr. Cavil said at length. "Then I'd like to know what you did say, Charles Augustus Cavil." "I asked you If I told you that * saw her," explained Mr. Cavil. "Well, why didn't you tell me?" "The reason I didn't tell you was because I didn't see h?r; that's all." Mrs. Cavil gasped and was speech less. The Deal Pell Through. He had been drinking. That was very evident to the woman 'ho came to the door inanswer to his ring. "Shay," he began after looking up and down the street nervously, "you put advertisement (hie) in paper Bhmornmg?" "I did," she replied. I "You shed you (hie) would give good home to cat."' "Yes; have you a cat you wish to get rid of?" "Besher yer life!" he replied t heartily. She was about to ask for farther particulars when a stockily built, angry koklng woman stopped at the gate and motioned to the man with the remark: "Jake, you drunken fool, come dow^ here to me this minute!" "Thash her?thash olu cat I want to get home for," he whispered. "Shay when" The lady who wanted a feline, however, quickly ilosed and locked the door, while her caller slunk do*n the steps and was led away by the ear. Wall Street Preference. "I don't see why bcocksrdndbonds. insists on going with Miss Goldust,. when he could just as well take up with Miss Gotrox. The '.atter comes from old American stock." "That may be rue," replied Mrs. Gunbusta, smilingly, "but hf prob ably prefers Miss Jolcus' because she tomes from water stock; her ancestors were Baptists, you know." ?Judge. The Baron?"Sometime I must BsR ay uncle to get out the family jewels to show you." She?"Doesn't he keep them In the window in the daytime?" "Jimuel.' She was the new teacher who had just come that mornin- for the first time, and was now engaged In be coming "acquainted." "What is your name little boy?" "Sam," was the reply, i "No explained the teacher, "that is only a nickname. 'Samuel' is your name." { Then she questioned a bright-eyed little chap sitting beside Samuel. '"I suppose my names 'Jimuel,' then," responded the boy, "although I'm always ^alled Jim." A Lady of Note, ahe wac musical, quite, so she made her a gown Of organdie, cleverly planned, With accordeon plaits running all up and down, And fluted to beat the tand. She looked truly sw>ll. and would frequently harp On being high toned and all that, And of course to B natural, had to B sharp Enough to abide in A flat. Pain will depart in exactly 20 minutes if one of Dr. Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets is taken. Pain any where. Remember! Pain always means congestion, blood pressure? nothing else. Headache Is blood pressure: toothache is blood pressure on the sensitive nerve. Dr. Shoop's Headache Tablets?also called Pink Tablets?q-.i'ckly and safely coax this blood pressure away from pain centers. Painful periods with wo men get instant relief. 20 Tablets 25c. Sold by Dr. J. G. Wannamaker Mfrs- Co. ATTRACTIVE TRIFLES. Decorations That Make the Living Room Pretty and Homey. j Azaleas and other favorites of the 8ensou are sent out by up to date j florists in very attractive coverings or Jardinieres. Matting of the type fa miliar in tea bouses* onl; in delicate and pastel colorings that would never I interest the tea merchant is utilized. j This pliable material is caught up : around the flowerpot in a graceful new flowerpot coveb. fashion and held in place with a big bow of matting or harmonizing ribbon. Another style Is here Illustrated and possibly is less expensive than the matting plaque. This kind is round tfnd resembles the big flats that clever , young women manipulate into big ' shade hats for the country. The straw being of the openwork mesh permits of the introduction of the ribhon as shown, and a covering such as this in cream color or white or in a tone to match the blossom caught with smart ribbon bows adds to the attractiveness j of tbe floral gift A memory aid that is decorative as I well as serviceable is here pictured. MEMUL7 TABLET. fashioned from v? :ite linen and dec orated in the Rie:. leier style of em broidery which is o much in vogue. Attached to the bot.:?m, like a calendar pad, is a collection of blank sheets upon which to record the dates and engagements. DANISH CLOTH. A Useful Material From Which to Fashion Frocks. Danish cloth in Its several weaves will add a useful gown or two to the summer outfit. In creamy white it is not to be distinguished from the ex pensive canvas and goes into the wash tub, coming out as good as new with out starch or very little shrinking. A Danish cloth walking skirt and little coat may be decorated with coarse lace and buttons and look truly dressy. No need to fear the weather nor picnic occasions, for it Is wear resisting and cleans to perfection. Another useful frock to put among the dainty fluffy things is of linen or one of tbe new heavy cottons that come In charming colors. The color may be set by soaking in salt water before making, and cut in a simple short skirt of the gored models, with a loose fitting coat and trimming of white braid and buttons, a tailored traveling suit is to be bad that is worth while. The ginghams and dimities display graceful designs and charming colors. The easily made house frocks are trimmed with bands of white linen or colored embroideries on white. Plain white embroideries make an effective finish stitched od colored ginghams, which should always be well shrunken before cutting. The gingham Is noted for its shrinking qualities, and, though one does not like to wash off the first finish, it must be done unless hidden tucks make room for shrinking. Simplo Cure For Insomnia. This to many persons is a matter of high Importance. Nervous persons, who are troubled with wakefulness and excitability, usually have a strong tendency of blood to tbe brain, with cold extremities. The pressure of blood on the brain keep3 it in a stim ulated or wakeful state, and the pulsa tions in the bead are often painful. Let such rise and chafe the body and extremities with a brush or towel or rub smartly with the bands to prom . circulation and withdraw the excess: amount of blood from tbe brain. ;? . they will fall asleep In a few mome; : A cold Ir.r.h or a sponge bath and rub bing or n good run or rapid walk hi the open air, also going up or dowi stairs " few times just bfore retirinc. will ai 'ii equalizing circulation and promoii 'g sleep. These rules are sim ple and easy of application In castle or cabin and great benefit will be real trod b\ :'-.-se giving them a fair test. Bert rtarber, of Elton, Wis., says: "I have nly taken four doses of your kidney <ind llladder Pills and they ha\" done for me more than any otbf medicine has ever done. I am still ."iking the pills as I wir r a per fee: ire." Mr. Barber refers to DeWi!' - Kidney and Bladder Pills. The le? ? money a man makes the more he It-is?if he isn't married. DeWitt , Hazel ?tlve is rood lor cuts, bur:' bruises and scratches. It is especially good for piies. Re commend- ' 'uid sold by A. C. Dukes, M. P., A. C Doyle & Co. LOW RATE MILEAGE TICKETS ?/A SALE BY J SOUTHERN RA 1L WAY, 500 Mile State Family Tickets, $11.25. Good over the Southern Railway in South Opmiina for the head or de pendent members of a family. Limited to one ye;ir from date of sale 1000 Mile Interchangeable Individual Ticket, $20.00. Good over the Southern Railway and 30 other lines in the Southeast aggregating 30,000 mi^ Limited to one year from date of sale. 2000 Mile Interchangeable Firm Ticket, 940.4k). Good over the Southern Railway and 30 other lines in the Southeast aggregating 30,000 miles. For a manager or head of firm and em ployes limitea to five, but good for only one of such persons at a time. Limited to one year from date of sale. 1000 Mile Southern Interchangeble Individual Ticket, $25.00. Good over the Southern Railway and 75 other lines in the Southeast aggregating 41,000 miles. Limited to one year from date of sale. On and after April 1st. 1908, all mileage tickets will not oe hon ored for passage on trains, nor in checking baggage, except from non-agency stations not open for the s?3e of tickets, but mti3t be presented at ticket office and there exchanged for continuous tickets. I Money saved In passage fare by purchasing tickets from Pouthern Railway agents." Fares paid on trains will be at a higher rate. ; Call on Southern Railway Ticket Agents for mileage tickets, passage tickets and detail information. R. W. HUNT, Assistant General Passenger Agent, ATLANTA, GA. J. C. LUSK, Division Passenger Agent. CHARLESTON S. O. OLOVER'S How about a nice, cool Two-Piece Suit for this hot weather? We have them in Serge, Worsted, Flannel, Cas simere and all the other deeirable fabrics. You ought to get one. It would make you twice as comfortable this summer and you'll have the satis faction of feeling, and knowing, that you're fashion ably and appropriately dressed. Latest designs; newest fabrics, colors and pat terns; Easy prices ?7 50to$20.0o. GLOVER'S Olothing, Shoes, hats and Men's Fine Furnishings. FIRE, LIFE. ALSO I ? 0 ? 2 H. C. Wannamaker, ? ? I represent companies tha Im;vt3b3 goo . $ ^ Give me some of your business, fl| t) BURGLRAY, TORNADO I INSURANCE!! \ # SURETY BONDS Written by WHICH IsTvIME URGENT? FIRE INSURANCE. Important? You fully realize* 'it. You would not allow your housei'to remain uninsured overnight. .-i Your house may nev. paratively few bull'*'? ? irn. ComJ If your hoiiM erty Is desi provide ft oil burn, your prop i. uut you can still .i- loved ones. Yd?r > I IFou will surely die. All men do. Yea'are more likely to die within m '.er do. '""week'ior a year, than your house la ? tpi'&Grn. nconn ill.' 11us unaffected, your earn-*1 iiy unimpaired. ?lod ?Ai YOU CARRY THE RISK. | ,, LIFE INSURANCE. Important? Oh yes, you intend to -insure after awhile when "a little bie?ter able to do so." i .Sdhth destroys at once and irro* vpctfWy, in whole or in part the ha cprael that provided for the daily; chants of those you love, the Incoma noV/tbhtf' was counted on to feed and cioiche and educate your chldren. Jell - !. your house is not Insured at aM.Tfcj'j'f y0nr life is not insured at all, or lor an insufficient amount. 1 sui tlr^fbr an insufficient amount, Yxmr Wife and Babies Carry the Risk. Your friend has had his home in- i your frend has bad nis llfe ,n" sured these 30 years and is now an sured these 30 years, and uas had <-old man< He is fortunate in having no fire. He has been fortunate hifrived, and he has something now to show for the money paid out. Hia that though he has nothing now to show for the money paid out. cosh value affords a comfortable sup port for his own declining years. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? JOHN GELZER 18 E. Russell St., Orangeburg, S. Agent for SOUTHEASTERN LIFE INSURANCE CO., Spurtanbur-. O. s. c. fi&r Ilfeld tu hin .11 the bank. y?i g?g A l.y kuc nNn. Writ* (or'l?ii bcnulituBj iftjrtratrd owl -U?triprivebow?. A flooU ' tori' in your home. Iiii frrc. Wri'- tcnlny. Wt (tiirantri ??aliiy und ?.t? 0V*, Our price, the lowcil. Write lor C;ltal'.tS >? free. IksJ ?rge.l .v.i ! ... tci Pod!. J>u*r in the v.rU. 4.1 >,.,, in l>ui:?ci>. Oept TD 71 iKfc rrf;?NKll -TukNirl ^.0., 6b-?l wy $:., Ai.jtr.ta, G;