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Now Is The Time to get a HAY RAKE at COST. I am not going to handle hay rakes any longer and will sell steck on hand at cost. A fine lot of one and two horse wakgoxs at greatly reduced prices. CALL AT? L. E. RI LEY'S 1,000 Pounds FivESH TURNIP SEED ALL VARIETIES. Prait Jars and Fruit Jar Rubbers. f I . For Sale By C. W. -PRESCOTT. Prices $10O. and upwards. Invest ment opportunity. 18 'valuable Building Lots on Fairview (the su burb "beautiful) for sale, located and having such measurements as shown above. First buyers get best bar gains. For terms see \ DR. D. J. HYDR1CK Land For Sale. I have for sale sixty-five (65) acres of improved farming land near the town of Neeces, S. C, with dwell ing and outbuildings thereon. L. P. -Zeigler, 7-31-tf. Xeeces. S. C. We who are poor can get some satisfaction from the knowledge that our heirs will not quarrel over what we leave. NATURE UND A WOMAN'S WORK Nature and a woman's work com bined have produced the grandest remedy for woman's ills that the world lias ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs cz the lield to cure disease and mitigate suffering. -The Indians on our "Western Plains to-day can produce roots alid herbs for every ailment, an'd cure diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who halve spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkliam more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman's ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St., LouLsiaua, Mo., writes: , " Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. ' "For twelve years I had been suffer ing' with the worst forms of ferrale ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help: Iso tongue can tell what I suffered, and nt times 1 could hardly walk. About'two years ago I wrote Mrs. Ptukha'm for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice re stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women." . - What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound did fqrS^Irs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women.' Rheumatism 1 I bare found & tried and tested euro for Rhen, autism! Not a remedy that will straighten the distorted limbs of chronic cripples, nor tum bonr rrowths back to flesh again. That is impossible But I can now surely kill the pains and pangs of this daplorable disease. In Germany? with a Ch?mlst In the City of Darmstadt?I found the last Ingredient with which Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Romedy was made a perfected, dependable prescription. Without that last ingredient, I successfuUy treated many. V many cases of Rheumatism: butnow, at last, Hunt, formly cures all curable cases of this heretofore much dreaded disease. Those sand-like granular wastes, found In Rheumatic Blood, seem to dlssohrt and pass away under the action of this remedy at freely as does sugar when added to pore water. And then, when dissolTcd, those poisonous wastes freeiy pass from the system, and the causa of Rheumatism is gone forever. There is now no real need?no actual excuse to suffer longer with out holp. Wo sell and in confidence rtcommtnd Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy DR. J. G. WANNAMAKER. J. STOKES SALLEY, Attorney at Law. Xo. 11 Barton Building, Law 8-27-3ra Range, Orangeburg. S. 0. The New Vertical Lift Deering The lightest running and most durable mower made. |?| -** Made inj4| and 5 feet cut. ^ When]jyou buy a Deeringl'you will not have to wait on repairs carry full stock. Come in and look at this machine and find! out the difference.' _J* JOHN NcNAMARA. PRACTICATi MEAT HOLDER. Contrivance Which Renders Carving an Easy Matter. A practical and very useful de vice Is a meat holder, the- Invention of a Texas man. Almost everybody Is more or less familiar with tha difficulties attending the carving of a ham or other large piece of meat. The object of the meat holder shown in the illustration is to overcome, these difficulties and render (he car* vlng an easy ma?ter. The base con sists of a wooden platter, which can 1 HOLDS MEAT FIRMLY. be readily washed. It is made large enough to accomodate au ordinary ham. Along two opposite sides are shafts on whlcb are secured a num ber of pointed clamps. The latter are operated by means of a lever at the end of one of the shafts. After the piece of meat has been placed on the platter the holders are tightly clamped.in position. The carver is thus able to use both hands freely and cut the meat to best advantage. Kassian Students. Nowhere Is the university and no-* where the students held in such high esteem as in Russin. For the aver age educated Russian a university professor is not merely a scholar who teaches chemistry or mathematics or law to a number of young men. This is all very well for a teacher in a lyceum, but much more Is expected of a professor. The latter, if he keeps true to the good old traditions, must be an en thusiast and a philosopher In his subject. He must possess a spark of, the dlviue lire, so as to be able to inspire his students with the wor ship of science and truth: and, above all, he must be a man of ad vanced thought?one of those who make history, and not one of those who let themselves be dragged along by historical events. As to the student, he too must not. merely be a young man who studies certain matters In order to become In due time a doctor or a lawyer, so as to ge: ea: nings *jo much higher than those of an arti sau. This might do for the meu whose one aim is to make a success ful "career," and of whom of course, there are o number in each univer sity, but the true student must be a worshipper of science and art?a seeker of truth, one of those whom the great philosophical questions of human understanding interest and perplex more than the miserable, petty questions concerning personal welfare, and one who has come to the university to And there a reply to these questions?Windsor Maga zine. An Extinct Trade. The leeches' like hairless black caterpillars, clung to slim reeds that protruded above the water in tha aquarium. They were torpid, as though hyp noticed, but when the dealer put one on his finger it fell to work as busily as a Barataria mosquito, it could be aeeu swelling and flushing. "That'll do, you little rascal." And the dealer removed the leech hurriedly, then sighed. ' Mine is an extinct trade," he said "like that of the armorer or the sundial maker, and I can't make a living out of It any more. But in the past?why, groat Scott, In the past, leeches were so much used by doctors that a doctor used no b? called a leech. "I used to sell to onn hospital Id this town 50,000 leeches a year. That hospital now takes fifty or'sixty yearly. I had or. my books 200 do'c tors, each of whom I supplied reg ularly every morning with a dov-eu leeches. They can-led them about, in little pocket cases, as fhey now carry hypodermic syringes. "My father had a leech farm tor years. Ho raised the Hungarian sjjeckled leech - that's the best -io. a New Jersey pond out Mattawan way. He did fair. He got an annual crop of 25,000. "Le?chea ?fo no longer used be cause bleeding Is no longer believed In. India'Riibtor Trees in Italy. The India-Rubber tree grows freely *n gardens In South Italy as an or namental shrub, and we hear thai steps arn being taken to make an In il it;rial business of growing it. Tit: Idea is due to Professor Boxxl. ol the Palermo Botanical Garden, whe ex hi hi tod specimens hi Milan, 'o*: talnius as much as Sii per ren?. ol robber. It Is a plant which will dc with dry weather, but fiourisbe.' more with Irrigation; and as mosl of the cultivated land of Italy u irrigated It should do well If tin climate Is warm enough. The little attacks of stomach trouble and stomach' disorders will undoubtedly lead to chronic dyspep sia unless you ' .in something for a sufficient time to strengthen the stomach and give it a chnace to get well. If you take Kodol in the be ginning the bad attacks of Dyspep sia will be avoided but if you allow these little attacks to go unheeded it will take Kodol a longer time to put your stomach in good condition again. Get a bottle of Kodol today. Sold by A. C. Pukes, M. D., A. C. Doyle & Co. AN ODDITY AMONG NAILS. Its Use Turned Out to Be Different From What Expected. A man who had often seen on th? side of a building that he passes lq his rounds down town a sign reading "Cement Coatel Nails," and who had wondered what cement coated nails could be used for and made 'up his mind that they must be for use in wharf building or something liko that, under water, where the cement on them would protect them against rust, learnel upon inquiry that the cement on the nails did indeed have a protective purpose; -but this pur pose turned out to be one quite diff erent from that which he had Im agined, says the New York Sun. Eor the coating on cement coated nails Is designed not to protect tho nails themselves, but the goods In the boxes In which the nails may bn driven; and this in a manner that to the man of inquiring mind seemed quite novel and remarkable. The cement coated nail is a wire nail. In these days there are more wire nails used than cut nails, be cause wire nail3 are cheaper; they cost about the same by weight, but there are more wire nails to* the pound, and so wire nails have come into wide-apreal common use for many purposes, one of them being found in the nailing together o* many sorts of boxes. A wire nail can be drawu more easily than a cut nail and bo with less likelihood of injury to the box, and this might seem only another recommendation of tho wire nail lu such use, as it reasonably might be if on); of the chief considerations were the preservation of the box; but the primary consideration is, of course, the' protection of the box's contents, and .here is where the ce ment coated nail comes In, and in the manner that seemed novel and remarkable. With time and the opportunity tho cover of a light box wire nailed could be lifted and replaced and the nails redriven without showing any marks on the box, and 'thus there was the possibility of the abstraction of goods from such boxes in tran slt. For Instance, a pair of shoes might be taken out of a shoe case, and the coyer put back without showing any .signs of tampering. And with this requirement for it along comes the Inventor of the ce ment coated nail, which Is simply a wire nail covered with a very thin coating of material ihat makes the nail, once driven, stick so tightly that not only does it hold more securely but it can't be drawn with out marring or breaking the box. .Meat Tenderer and Cleaver. With the aid of an implement de vised by a New .Jersey man iL now becomes possible for the butcher to chop the meat and at the same lime add to its tehdernens by pounding with a combined cleaver and meat tenderer. 'The cleaver, as shown In the illustration below, is similar to those commonly used. On one cor ner, opposite to the blade, a series of teeth are arranged at an angle. These toeth are used in tendering MEAT TENDERER AND ('LEAVER the meat. The advantage of placing the teeth at au angl? will b? obvious. If they wer?? placed parallel with the upper edg? of the cleaver lr would he impossible to man ulpu late the teudercd without knocking the hand on thH table. By placing the teeth at an angle the handle is re moved from the table when either the blade or teeth are being used, preventing injury to the hand. Rivals in TelogravwY. We have scarcely recovered from the surprise1 of one invention for trans-mining portraits and writing by telegraph before then* 1* a rival lu ihe fluid. The Inventor Is a Bel gian of Antwerp, named De Grout*?, who Claim? for hi* Instrumenta that It works much more rapidly than that invented by Professor Kunen, The characteristic feature of the new apparatus Ik that it produce* ?t the receiver an ordinary metallic "block" which cau bn aent direct to the PresH. A drawing eight Inches square, can be "telegraphed" on to this block In one minute. 'Hie Origin of Livery. Thv wearing of livery by male Verven-'? Is a survival of the tinrx win n great lords kept huge bauds of met servants, called retainers, who were hound to fight in all the quar rels of tbelr masters as well as per form service of one sort or another, and on special occasions of show, dressed In the ltrery of their lord, became in reality a minature army. Passed Examination Successfully .lames Donahue. New Britain, Conn., writes: "1 tried several kid ney remedies, and was treated by our best physicians for diabetes, bill did not improve until I took Foley's Kid ney Remedy. Alter the second bot tle I showed improvement, and live bottles cured me completely. I have since passed a rigid examination for life insurance." Foley's Kidney Remedy cures backache and all forms of kidney and bladder troubl es. Lowrr.au Drug Co.. A. C. Dukes. PLIES ELECTROCUTED. Novel Way to Get Kid of These Troublesome Insect*. If you can't kill bugs with stick? flypaper or poisonous powders, try electricity. This electrocution of in sects la the recommendation of a New York man, and has been offi cially approved by societies to pre vent cruelty to animals. He has in ELECTROCUTES FLIES, vented a contrivance entirely effi cient for Ulla purpose, which is sim ple and durable, with no complicated mechanism to get out of order. As shown in the accompanying illuntra tion, the invention embodies a grid or screen of parallel wires alternate ly postive and negative and charged with electricity. A fly alighting on th z'oi or attempting to walk upon and touching the adjacent wires will be. electrocued as It were, and fall dead from the trap. The device Is composed of two bars of wood, be tween which extend strips of brass. Live wires connect with a source of elect rlcley of sufficient power to effect the electrocution of insects. Th common house fly Is readily at tracted to anything bright or shiny, avoiding dark and dull objects. Hence it may be found advisable to place the traps near a window. Old-Time Smokers. All hough the present universal habit of smoking Is of comparatively recent date, t?h* use of tobacco was carried ou to a great excess when ii was first Introduced. The old time citizens smoked even In church. All such offenders were solemnly ex j communicated "by Urban VIII. in j ] i '4 an again by InnocentXII. in .1690, when the practice seems to I have extended to Rome Itself. There was William Breedonft too, vicar of Thornton. England, "a profound divine and absolutely the most po lite person for nativities in that age," of whom the astrologer Lilly says that 'when he had no tobacco he would cut the bell ropes and smoke them.'.' Prohibitions of the custom were frequent. "Item, you shall not utter," enjoins an alehouse licence of the time of James I., "nor willingly suffer to be uttered, drunke or taken, any tobacco within your house, cellar or other place there unto belonging." The mien of Chigwell school (1 629) provided that lb* master must be "no puffer of tobacco" and Charles II. sent a letter to the Uni versity of Cambridge forbidding the members to wear periwigs, smoke tobacco or read their sermons. A writer has recorded a visit to an Essex church about 1830, on which he saw not only pipes stowed away In various nookt ready lor use on the following Sunday, but also spit toons in many of the pews. j Carrying Out Death rienteneea. A correspondent is desirous to know which Is the most common j form employed in the carrying out of the death aentouoo. The prob ability Is 'that most" people, if asked, would ai once say the gallows; yet this Is far from being the case, says j the London Chronicle, j The favorite mode appears to be { the guillotine, which is employed , publicly In Fiance, Belgium, Den j mark,, Hanover and two cantons of I Switzerland; and privately In Bava j rla. and Saxony. The cheery gallows comes next In ? the running and Is favored publicly in Austria. Portugal and Russia, and ' privately In Great Britain and the ! I lilted Slates of America. Death' by the sword obtains la fifteen cantons In Switzerland, In China, and Russia publicly: and lu Prussia privately. Ecudor, Olden j burg and Russia have adopted the : musket, all publicly; while In China ? they have strangulation by the cord, ? and in Spain the garrote both pub j li.-: and in Brunswick death hy the axe, and by the electric chair In I New York. In Italy ther* Is no capital punish ment. Fertile England. Save grapes, tobacco, olives, and some other fruit* we can grow Iii j England all that can be grown io I Fram e with as good certninty, an<| often In better quality. From oul counties (tome beets that all rh^ caitle breeders in the world clawoi j for. Incomparable sblre horsea uri >M'I bred In the Camorldgeshlr* centers >.ei up by Henry V'lll. Scot land and all over the north are far iners whose peculiar knowledge, ex iendiiic; from tubers to trees. Is, aj . one may say. a gift of the soil. Ye| j England, which Is over civilized, li [ not yet half colonized. NaflonaJ Review. It Can't He Heat. The best of all teachers is experi ence". C. M. Harden, of Silver City, North Carolina, says: "I find Elec tric Bitters does all that's claimed for it. For Stomach, Liver and Kid ney troubles it can't be beat. I have tried it and lind it a most excellent medicie." Mr. Harden is right; it's the best of all medicines also for weakness, lame back, and all run dow conditions. Best too for chills and malaria. Sold under guarantee at J. Cr. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.. drug GLOVER'S How about a nice, cool Two-Piece Suit for this hct weather? "We have theui in Serge, Worsted, Flannel, Cas mere and all the other deeirable fabrics. You ought to get. one. It would make you mice ns comfortable this summer and you'll have the satis faction of feelin/7, and knowing, that you're fashion ably and appropriately dressed. Late6t designs; newest fabrics, colors and pat terns; ICa^^r px*iceS S7.oOto S30.00. GLOVE Olothing, Shoes, hats and Men's Fine Furnishings. ? FIRE, LIFE5% I ? BURGLRAY, TORNADO k \ INSURANCE!! 1 9 ALSO SURETY BONDS Written by J H. C. Wannamaker, ? Q I represent conjpanies thatfslknow to be good. ^ fpl. Give me some of your business. Q WHICH IS MORE URGENT? FIRE INSURANCE. Important? You fully realize It. You would not allow your house to remain uninsured overnight. Your hpuse 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 * week or a year, than your house la to burn. Death destroys 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, Yonr Wife and Babies Cany the Risk. Your friend has had his home In-' Yolir frend Iias had his 1Ife ta sured these 30 years and is now an sured these 30 years, and cas had ,d man< He ,s fortunate ln QaTina no fire. He has been fortunate in that though he has nothing now to show for the money paid out. lived, and he has something now to show for the money paid out. Hie cosh value affords a comfortable sup port for his own declining years. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? JOHN GELZER 18 E. Russell St., Orangeburg, S. C. Agent for SOUTHEASTERN LIFE INSURANCE CO., Spartanburg, S. C. Sewing Machines. NEW DROP-HEAD MACHINES Bold on jasy payments. Good prices allowed for old Machines in exehati; e. Second-hand ?tachmea rTom $5.00 to $15.00. Alse parts and attachments furnished '*# standard makes. Prompt attention to mail orders. New Bicycles Sold va Easy Payments. Also Bicycle parts and sr.ndries furnished for all standard makes. General Repair Shop for Sewing Machines, Bicycles, Guns, Clock* d Watches. anGive me your work. Satisfaction guaranteed. J. H. SMITH. Market Street ? ? Opposite New Postoffice. APPLES FOR SALE By the barrel. In large or small lots Address. J. E. HALL, Box 247 Waynesville, N. C.