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L. E. RILEY. JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER LOT OP UP-TO-DATE BUGGIES OP MY MAKES' CALL AND SEE THEM BEFORE YOU BUY 1,000 Pounds msn TURNIP SEED. ALL VARIETIES. Fruit Jars and Fruit Jar Rabbers. For Sale By C. W. PRESCOTT. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup CONTAIHS HONEY AST) TAR Relieves Colds by working them out of ?the system through a copious and Wealthy ?otion of the bowels. - Relieves Coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, cbteft *ad bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to She taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It For BACKACHE?WEAK KIDNEYS Trj StWItft Kldoar and Bladder Piiis?Surt ud Sift Sold by A. C Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle & Co._ ?eo. Slacker & Son., Charleston, S. C. How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be able to utter, these words, but because of some organic derange ment this happiness is denied them. Every "woman interested in this subject should know that prepara tion for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use of LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West Union, S. G,writes to Mrs. Pinkham : "I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother." . Mis. Josephine Hall, of Bardstow^, Ky., writes: ? "I was a very great sufferer from female troubles, and my physician failed to help me. Lydia E. Pmkham's Vege table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am now a proud mother." 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 or women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-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, f She has guided thousands .to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Rbvj 'SAVES AND MSI 12* BLADESJ 24? kSHARP, LEDGES; MANUPACTU2ESS DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS. BALUSTERS, COLUMNS AND ETC. WINDOW AND DOOR SCREENS. . SASH WEIGHTS AND CORD. 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. 12blades, 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 12 blades from $5.00 to $50.00. SIMS' BOOK STORE, Orangeburg, ?. C. NO STROPPING NO HONING. BEAUTY AND CLEANESS are essentially the characteristics of our brass and metal beds. For summer use there is none to be compared with them. Like All Our Furniture^ these beds have been built ri^bt 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 that you can furnish overy bedroom iu your house without feeling yourself extravagant. Also everything in the Hardware line, Stoves and Ranges ?Sc. Orangeburg Hardware & V. Furniture Co. Patchwork pictures are great fun for old and young. Each player draws on the upper part of a slip of paper some fancy bead and folds it back, leaving just enough in sight to guide his left hand neighbor, who takes It and adds body." 'Again the slips are handed HOW TO FOLD. on for the final addition of legs of any sort, some continuation being always indicated. Then these completed patchwork pic tures are thrown Into a central bowl, shaken up, drawn out and passed round for Inspection and merry criti cism. The folds are the dotted lines. The Human Molodeon. We have all heard of musical chairs, but have you ever heard of a human melodeon? To prepare for such a melodeon for an evening's entertain tnent, select eight boys or girls who can remember the notes assigned them. The player plays on their heads as they kneel In a row, exactly as If they were notes of a piano, ex cept that to the audience the scale appears reversed. The tunes must be in the key of C, with no sharps or flats. As each head is struck with a mallet made of a ball of soft cotton on the end of a thin stick, the human note must sing his note, using the syllable "la." If his head is struck twice, he must repeat his note. "The Last Rose of Summer," begin ning ou lower C, is a good piece to play on this odd instrument Squaring the Puzzle. ?On cardboard draw an equilateral tri angle, the larger the better. One of four inch side is a convenient lize. Then cut it out and divide it by straight cuts into pieces that when re arranged will form a square. Cow That Turned a Faucet. On the Portland (Ore.) poor farm is said to be a cow that turned the faucet of the hydrant in the back yard and gave herself a drink when she wanted it As she did not turn the water off when she had enough, it became neces sary to put on a different kind of fau cet, and when bossy came next day she was puzzled, but she did not have to go to the river for a drink, for the matron, who had watched her, had a watering trough made. Into which a small stream of cold water ran all the time. The Broken Octagon. Cut out In stiff cardboard four pieces shaped as Fig. 1. four as Fig. 2 and four as Fig. 3. taking care that they are all exactly true In shape and pro portion to one another. Now see whether you can put the twelve pieces together so as to form a perfect octagon. Concerning Bells. Bells are understood to have had their origin iu China, but at so remote a time that no precise date can be given. Their first use was to clear the air of evil spirits and to drive off the storms. Old European records tell bow Nie tolling of bells kept the devils from assaulting believers; hence their con nection with churches. Bells may be traced in Europe back to the sixth cen tury, but were not generally introduced Into the western church much before the eighth century. A Family Turtle. A Massachusetts boy, Nathan Samp sou, has found a venerable tunic which bears markings made by his grandfather, now eighty-one years old. which were put on in 1S-H>. and l>y bis great-grandfather, who marked the tnrt!e ;" !??1fi. * Three Little Mice. Thr^r; little mice went out one night To see what they could find. A house they spl< door oy--:i wide. And. oh. a bacun rind! "Let's gr> rlffht in." said Mousle TVce, "And have our supper here." Said Mousic Wise, with solemn eyes, "It is u trap. I fear." A Cutifornhurs Luck. "The luckiest day of my life was when 1 bought a box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve;** writes Charles F. Budahn, of Tracy, California. "Two 25c. lynxes cured .me of an annoying case of itching piles, which had trou bled mo for years and that yielded to no oiher treatment." Sold under guarantee a c Dr. J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co., drug st-ire. The kiss one woman bestows on an-1 other is almost as meaningless as, the handshake of a hotel clerk. PRISON oic , Jail So Attract ie * rs I ute Though! ... R. Truman Cat'iL. Je '.er at l*c ro -n ty jail at LItchf-ild. Cfi n tpHevea bo has solved the vex: < ?1 ?? 'blern of prison reform. He male's thv jail so attractive that the pr ?->ners hate the thought of leaving. 'As a result, he is able not only to dispense with a let of expensive keepers, but to op erate the jail as an employment agency and sends hia charges with out guards to labor on the highways and in garden patches. In this way he is able at the end of the year to turn over a tidy sum to the county. The food is good, the beds are comfortable, and every cell is decor ated with pictures whloh Jailer Cat lin cuts out of the magazines. The cell doors are never locked. There Is a code of hoLor among the Lltch field prisoners and they are not go ing to embarrass Jailer Catlin. All the 50 prisoners are trusties, doing odd jobs about town during the day. Nobody watohes them.?Philadel phia Record. Learning Honesty. In a little town a few years ago there was a shiftless negro boy named Ransom Blake, who, after be ing caught in a number of petty delinquencies, was at last sentenced to a short term In the penitentiary, where he was sent to learn a trade. On the day of his return home ho met a friendly white acquaintnee, who asked: "Well, what did they put you at In the prison, Ranse?" "Dey started in to make an honest boy out'n me, sah." "That's good, Ranse, and I hope they succeeded." "Dey did, sah." "And how did they teach you to be honest?" "Dey done put me In the shoe Bhop, sah, nailin' pasteboard onter Bhoes fo' soles, sah."?Youth's Com panion. First Dining Car. '".Tuut forty years ago," said T. C. Newton, a Chlcaro railroad man, "the Chicago & Alton Railroad put on the first dining car ever operated on any railway train in the world. This was on the run between Chlca g( and St. Louis. If that car could be exhibited now it would create uni versal merriment. It had oilcloth table covers, the seats were screwed to the floor, and its Illumination de pended on candles. Think of the contrast between that primitive af fair of 18C8 and the modern, dining car finished in solid mahogany, with gorgeous furniture, and a menu as elaborate and cookinr as dainty as that supplied by any of the foremost hotels of America. Verily, we have been 'going some' in the four decades that have gone by since the Alton's first crude experiment."?Baltimore American. Norwegian Wives Half Fare. Under a new Norwegian railway regulation, when husband and wife are traveling together the wife need only pay half price. The Idea may Bimply be to encourage family ljf-e, on the theory that a Norwegian who normally leaves his wife at home will be tempted take her along at re duced r;.tes. It will, of course, be necessary when taking a husband and-wife ticket to display one's mar riage certificate and make an affi davit that the lady is one's wife, in order to prevent collusion at the oooking office between perfect strang ers.?Kansas City Journal. A Knotty Question. In a close-woven rug, like a Kir man, measuring a mere five feet by, eight feet, there are four hundred knots to the square inch. As the weaver's speed is about three knots a minute four years of continuous labor would be required on such a rug. Skull of the Dinosaur. A restoration of the skull of a treat horned dinosaur has just been let up for exhibition in Peabody tluseum, Yale University. It is i.early nine feet long and about six Let broad, and is said to be the largest skull of any prehistoric land tnimal. Ancient Pearls. As long ago as the thirteenth cen tury a Chinese named Ye-jlng-yang discovered a method of inducing the formation of pearls In the Chinese River mussels. The muBselB were gently opened and small pellets .us ually of clay, inserted. The English Treadmill. The custom of using convicts In treadmills Is still practicod in some English prisons. The speed Is about thirty steps a minute, and If a man misses a step a cross bar Btrikes the calves of his legs. Photography at Sea. The latest Innovation aboard the new North German Lloyd liner Kron prinzessin Cecilie, Is a fully equipped photograph studio, which has become popular with travelers and is a prof itable business. Covering the .Mirror. Covering the mirror when there is dorah in the family originated in the superstition that goblins, sprites, elves or other uncanny creatures would crowd to the t,lass to look on. More than 13,000 persons in Switzerland are employed in the rib bon industry. 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?quickly 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 Mfgg. Co. IR. DYING YOUNGER. Oiiijr the Rabies Have a Better ("li.nce to Survive Now. In w of all *hat has been said about the fall in thi death rate it seens strange to realize, Bays Health Culture, that we are not living so long as our grandfathers and grand mother's did. More babies live to grow up nowadays than formerly, but people "in-later-life die younger. Once arrived to adult age the aver age man or woman has fewer years of survival to expect. This seems on the face of it so surprising a state-' ment that in order to be accepted it Bhould be backed up by data authen t : and indisputable. Such data are furnished by the figures of the In surance companies (which all agree on the point), but it is easier to le fer to the Government census re ports, which tell the tale in simple and convincing fashion. Even in the last fifteen years the death rate among all persons over 55 years of age of both sexes has risen very con siderably. Lion9, Tigers and Leopards. Mr. R. Lydjkker, the English nat uralist, calls attention to the obser vations of Mr. R. I. Pocock on the significance of the spots on lion cubs as indicating the close relationship of lions, tigers and leopards. On lion cubs the pattern of the markings is Intermediate In character between the stripes of the tiger and tho rosettes of the leopard, but inclines more toward the former. East Afri can lions retain more or less distinct traces of these early markings even when they reach maturity. A dis tinct tlger-IIke feature of the lion cub Is a white patch over the eye, which disappears in the adult. Puma cubs show a pattern quite unlike that of the lion, tiger, leopard and Jaguar.?Youth's Companion. ? Not All Hawk* Chicken Thieves. The hawks have aB bad a reputa tion as the crows, and all hawks are called "hen-hawks" by those who are Ignorant of what they do live on, but the majority of the hawks do not live on poultry by any means. A great many live on insects and mice form a a large item in their bill of fare. The sparrow hawk is the one that is to blame for the hard name given to his brethren, and It is he who kills the chickens and hens. When hard pressed for food other hawks rarely may carry away a hen or chicken, but this is the extreme rather than the average case.?Maine Woods. Bank of England Notes. When the Bank of England note returns to the bank it is never reis sued. It is cancelled by having the signature of the chief cashier torn off. After the signatures are torn ojf. the notes are pricked off in the register and sorted into the dates of issue. They are then placed in boxes in the vaults where they are kept for five years, after which they are burned in a furnace in the court yard. Frozen Butterflies. It Is a common experience among mountain climbe>e to find butterflies lying frozen in the snow, and so brit tle that they break unless they are very carefully handled. Such froz en butterflies on being taken to a warmer climate, recover and ?iy away. Six species of butterflies have ueen found within a few hun dred miles of the North Pole. Typhoid and Flies. "Typhoid is an autumnal disease, appearing most frequently in Octo ber; and looking back it will be found that flies were most prevalent at the time of its Inception." So declared John B. Huber In an address to the fcod Investigation committee of the Chicago Consumers' League. Value of Salt. Wissen Feur Alle had a sympos ium to discuss the value of salt in digestion. One of the physicians wrote that, while salt in moderation is good for the stomach, and often absolutely necessary, it ought to be taken apart from the meals in much the same way as medicine. Effect of Clam Diet on Hens. Nature students down this way who have been wondering what ef fect a protracted diet of clams would have on hens, received addi tional cause for thought when a Bearch of several nests revealed clam fritters In place of the expected egg. ?New /ork World. One Hnndred Gates. The city of Thebes had a hundred gates and could send out at each gate 10,000 fighting men and 200 chariots?In all, 1,000,000 men and 2,000 chariots. Prolific Rear Trees. Fifty-nine pear trees in Washing ton on less than an acre produced nearly 1,000 boxes of fruit and net ted over $2.6000. Tho trees were the Aujou variety. Long Lived Microbes. The : licrobe fiend will be con firmed in his fussiness who learns <..-.ui some hardy microbes can live over two centuries on the k.ud and longer yet In the water. How About This. While workmen were sawing !'.trough a block of Bath stone at Exeter they cut into a cavity in r/hich was found a cluster of two or ?liree dozen live bees. Use DeWitt's Little Early Risers, pleasant, little pills that are easy to take. Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., A. C. Doyle & Co. A iioy can learn some very good habits by not adopting any of his fathers. DeWitt's Hazel Salve is good for cuts, burns, bruises and scratches. It is especially good for piles. Re commended and sold by A. C. Dukes. M. D., A. C. Doyle & Co. ft LOW RATE MILEAGE TICKETS ON SALE BY j e SOUTHERN RAILWAY. 500 Mile State Family Tickets, $11.25. ? Good over the Southern Railway in South Carolina for'the head or de pendent members of a family. Limited to one year from date off I sale ' ' f. ' * . V."l :' '1000 Mile Interchangeable Individual Ticket, $20.00. Good over the Southern Railway and 3C other lines in the Southeast aggregating 30,000 miles. Limited to one year from date of sale. 2000 Mile Interchangeable Firm Tic ket, $40.00. 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 limited 'to five, but good for only one of such persons at a time. Limited to one year fro m 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 kon-"* ored for passage on trains, nor in checking baggage, except from non-agency stations not open for the sale of tickets, but must be presented at ticket office and there exchanged for continuous tickets. Money saved in passage fare by purchasing tickets from Southern 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. GLOVER'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 designa; newest fabrics, colors and pat terns; ESasy prices $7.50 to $20.00. GLOVER'S Olothing, Shoes, hats and Men's Fine Furnishings. FIRE, LIFE, BURGLRAY, TORNADO I INSURANCE!! ALSO SURETY BONDS ft ft ft ft i H. C. Wannamaker, | & I represent companies tha kaowtobe goo . Written toy 9 0 % % % ft ft ft ft ft ft Give me some of your business. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? FIRE INSURANCE. Important? You fully realize It. [You would not allow your house to remain uninsured overnight. Your house may never burn. Com paratively few buildings ever do. If your house does burn, your prop erty is destroyed, but you can still provide for your loved ones. Your ncome remains unaffected, your earn ing capacity unimpaired. If your house is not Insured at all, or for an insufficient amount. YOU CARRY THE RISK. LIFE INSURANCE. Important? Oh yes, you intend to insure after awhile when "a little better able to do so." You will surely die. All men do. You are more likely to die within a week or a year, than your house is to burn. Death dj?6troys at once and Irre vocably, In whole or in part the in come that provided for the daily wants of those you love, the income that was counted on to feed and clothe and educate your chldren. If your life is not insured at all, or for an insufficient amount, Your Wife and Babies Carry the Risk. Your friend has had his home in- Your frend has had his life in sured these oO vears and is now an sured these 30 years, and uas had ?!d mau He is [0rtUnate in having no tire. He has been fortunate in lived, and he has something now to , , , . j show for the money paid out. His that though he has nothing now to I h va,ue affords a comtortable sup. show for the money paid out. | port for his own declining years. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? JOHN GELZER 18 E. Russell St., Orantfeburg, S. O. Accnt for SOUTHEASTERN LIFE INSURANCE CO., Spartanburg, S. a