The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, September 25, 1908, Image 7
hiss
4t?i
"SATISFACTION -OR YOUR MONEY BACK."
' 232 and 234 King St., Charleston, S. C.
THE LARGEST WHOLESALE *N0 RETAIL MAIL ORDER HOUSE
^s?? IN THE SOUTH.
_.?s)e?ye cut fine piece Goods fsfferctats in Ad?
Loifl at Wholesale Prices.?-a^
<S> Write for Samples and Prices. Try Us On An Order. <3>
Vour Nearest Mail Box Places Our Store Right Next Door to You.
JH1D-S?MMER CLEARANCE SALE,
WHICH SAVES YOU MONEY.
ladies Walk! \ f ? Ladies Waists.
Of black and navy blue Panama,* Grouped in three special lots.
ii i />l -jv - m Lot. 1 ? Ladies White Lawn
fancy mixtures and black Chiffon^.^ $J ^ $150 and$l>75
Taffeta silk reduced ? off form'era^jties; clearance price $1.00.
price. ^ Lot 2 j?Ladies White Lawn
eWWaists, trimmed with laces and
We carry a large assortment of Jembroideries,$4.00and*4 oOquali
Ladies Lace Waists in white, black'ties, clearance price S2.?s.
and ecru. % Lot 3?Ladies White Lawn and
^Lingerie Waists, lace and em
broidery trimmed, some hand em
broidered, $0.00 to $10.00qualities,
Tailor-Made Suits at Half Price.^clearance price $5.00 each.
.Every one this seasons best?
cream a
Ecru $2.98 to $25.00.
Black $6.50 to $25.00
RZosquit? PSets.
styles und most wanted fabrics, inV Fu? ^ mosquito nets and
Prince Chap and Madame Butter-ftelti[U>pie8 complete, ready f??r use.
fly effects.
$12.00 suits reduced to $6.00.
$l?.CK) suits reduce-! to ?7.50.
$20.00 suits reduced to $1000
$25.00 suits reduced to $12.50
$30.00 suits reduced to $15 00.
$40.00 suits reduced to $20.00.
Princess Dresses and
Jumper ?uits 1-3 Off.
Value $1.25, clearance price J>3c.
5 Extra large size mosquito net*,
Sand canopies complete; specia
^- Dixie frames and nets complete,
t?for wood or iron? beds, special
**M5. tmw
J Full line of American and En
jrlishyBobbiuet, 75c. to $10.00-per
piece.
F?rch Blinds.
Balance of our Ladies white andj Keep y0lir piaj5^ g|mdv
colored Lawn and Lingerie Prin-Jeool.
and
cess Dresses and Jumper Suits ou
sale at the fallowing reductions:
$4.00 Dresses reduced to $2.67.
$5.00 Dresses reduced to $3.37.
Size 6 feet by 8 feet, Si.00.
Size 8 feet bv 8 feet, $1.25.
Size 10 feet by 8 feet, SI.50.
Swing in one of our Hammocks.
We haye a full line, in pret-lv
$7.50 Dresses reduced to $5.O0: feol^rs, pillow and full valance.
$10.00 Dresses reduced to $6.(57.fel.OO to $10 00 euch.
$15.00 Dresses reduced to $10.00. J 'Spbcial?rLadies Chiffon, Taf
$18.00 Dresses reduced to $ 12.00.afeta, Silk Jumper Suits, solid ool
$20.00 Dresses reduced to $13 o/.Jors and strips. Values $13.50,
$30.00 Dresses reduced to $20.00.$$ 10.00 per suit. ,
\ rrUL|NTHv'ciW'
TRIPS
TO THE
THAT
is yyuAT
^PROVES
THE
^I5S@0N@1LARS
I Few Speci
At a 8
2 cases of 36 inch Bieaching, one at 8 1 4 per yard and one at 8 1-3
cents per vard. These are values you have not seen sence the days of 5
cents cotton.
52 inch Black. Brown and Blue Mohair or Brilliantine at 45 cents
per yard. These goods are bought from a Big Skirt House, just the goods
for an everlasting skirt.
*Many other good values in the Big Dress Good Department and 1
fee! confident that my Dress Goods Man, Mr. J. Felder Hunter, will take
pleasure in showing you the many new things we have in
Silks, Notions, Shoes and Clothing.
In my 21 years of business I have never shown such a great line of
novelties in Men, Young Men, Boys and Children's Clothing. I am pre
pared to satisfy the most fas edious Young Man, or Mother for her young
hopeful.
Come and take a look at my $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 and
$4.00 Hats, these are beauts.
Now just a word about my large shoe stock, every pair guaranteed
solid leather and warrented to wear satisfactory. My stock composed of
leading lines: W. L. Doug!a?s. Broit Moss, Zeigler Brothers of Phila
delphia, The Walkin Shoe. The Walton Shoe. We can fit the family from
the infant to the old gentleman. The school days are on us, come and
get a pair of "Walton" for your Boy or Girl.
Yours for quility and satisfaction,
Geo. V. Zeigler,
Phone 1402
19 West Russell.
Sewing; Machines.
NEW DROP-HEAD MACHINES
sold ou ?asy payments. Gcod priers allowed for old ?achi'ie*- :.r
exehan. * Second-hand Machines ^rom $5.00 to $15.00. Also
parte attachments furnished 1 ? iU standard makes. Prompt
attention to mail orders.
New Bicycles ^???d ? n Easy Payments.
A'^o hiicyclo parts and si xuirie- furnished for all standard make*.
General Repair Shop for fce.vmg Machines, Bicycles, Gunu, tsloeki
d Wacches.
aaG-ive me your work. Satisfaction guaranteed.
I
j.
Market Street
SMITH.
Opposite New Postoffice.
School Supplies At Sims' Book Store.
CONCERNING ADDITION.
Quaint Way in Whim Charles BattcH
Loom is Tells All About It.
"Every little bit added to what
you've got makes just a little bit
more."
I wish T rould print the music to
that popular refrain as its felicitous
rag-time adds to the catchiness of
the dictum.
"Every little bit added to what
you've sot makes just a little bit
mure."
It's an amusing sqnd and the sug
gested advice is good. Strange how
many people there are who do dot
act on it.
Let my sermonette this month be
the record of the experiences of two
men, one of whom lived up to the
advice, while the other did noticed
There were two brothers born
within a year or two of each other,
and of '.he same parents?that's why
they were brothers?but they were
as different as Roosevelt and?Harri
man.
One of them was always bent on
accumulating experiences of one kind
or another; he was fond of music,
fond of books, fona of pictures. He
possessed a gooa deal of curiosity re
garding the habits of men, and
neglected his business?so they aay
?in order to increase his stock of
knowlouga concerning mankind.
"TWO BROTHERS BORN A YEAR
APART."
Rut. arter all, that was his own brs
iness. He was fond of going to the
theatre, and while he always picked
out good plays, still, in the opinion
of his brother, he might have been
employed staying late at his office,
heaping up aollars.
The brother was heaping them up
all right. Why, that man was the
Jirst one to reach his office and the
last one to leave it. The office boy
always got tired of wailing for him
and went home before him. You
may be sure that his business pros
pered and at thirty he was
worth a hundred times as much as
his unbusinesslike brother. He may
have had an ear for music when'he
was a ooy, but at thirty he had lost
it, and regarded time spent at con
certs as money thrown away.
Time and money were converti
ble terms with him, and he sought
by every means in his power to build
up a huge fortune.
Reading was not for him. P.ooks
were apt to be idle thoughts, only fit
for idle fellows, and he had no time
to waste on nonsense. Pictures might
nu.ke good Investments if a man hap
pened to buy the right kind, but he
didn't pretend to know a good one
from a bad one, so he never bought
any. The companionship of bis fel
lows was not congenial to him and he
belonged to no clubs, a dub, in
his opinion, was a place where a man
wasted time that might have been
employed in making money and
where idle fellows swapped idler
stories. No, the office for him and
his whole mind to the making of
money.
His brother went to Europe, to
South America, to Asia, to Africa;
"THE OFFICE FOR HIM AND HIS
WHOLE MIND TO THE MAH
OF MONEY,
now he did it was a mystery, for he
made very little money. He seemed
to know how to get a good deal of
[ s rvice for a small expenditure of
sliver and he acted as if lift- were an
enjoyable thing.
Neither brother married and after
a while old age came upon each of
them.
Then the moneyed man retired
from business, broken in health and
with nothing to do but regret that he
had not made more money while he
was at it.
But the lazy brother who had
worked his mind ''inl his sensibilities
Want to I
If vor hay
BOOKS YOU US
WHICH YOU W
EXCHANGE BI
SIMS' BOOK ST(
for all they were worth his whole
lite Jong, was able to sit by himself,
j If need be, and have the full cornpan
i Ionship of the many bright minds
that he had known in? life, and in
books, and on the stasre: to bring be
fore his mind's eye the many lovely
pictures he had seen on canvas and
In the landscape, to call up to recol
lection's ear the delightful harmon
ies that he had heard from the
world's great orchestras, the beauti
ful melodies that came from sweet
throated singers; and if he had had
none . of these solaces, great re
ward would have been his in his abil
ity to reach up to his bookshelves
and pick therefrom the fruit of a
lifetime's gathering.
The one, rich, old, and unhappy;
tbf) other rich in assoc iations.
friends, and all those things that go
to the making of a cultivated mm?
and the heart of a boy In him still.
"Every little'bit added to what
you've got makes just a little bit
more." and the wise brother has add.
ed a little bit of nformatlon to a lit
tle bit of amusement and a little bit
of good will and a little bit of help
fulness, and so when he was seventy
he had an accumulation that suf
ficed him for the long twilight of a
healthy old age. while his brother the
money getter
It has just occurred to me that he.
too, followed the advice, but it does
not seem to have done bim much
good. Every little bit (of mouey)
added to what (money) you've got
makes just a little bit more (money),
but all the money in the world won't
buy good fellowship, real, sincere
good-fellowship?I mean, If you
haven't planted the seeds of friendli
ness in your youth; and when you
are seventy and have neglected buks
all your life you are not going to sit
down and suddenly enjoy them. Nor
will a rich man find that his bulging
pocketbooks can buy him apprecia.
tion of the beautiful in pictures or of
the gorgeous tone-coloring in sym
phonies, if he has neglected to be
gin his addition of one kind of cul
tivation to another kind in his boy
hood and young manhood.
Don't regard the money spent on
a good play or a good concert as
money thrown away. Don't, regard
the hour spent on a captivating rom
ance or a well-developed novel or a
cleverly written essay as time mis
spent. Don't regard the time spent
In outdoor sports as wasted.
I'm not advocating the idleness or
the neglect ot duty. If a man is In
business let him give his mind to his
business. If I had given my mind to
the business I was in when I was a
young man I might to-day control
I ONE RICH AND UNHAPPY BUT
? THE OTHER POOR BUT CON
TENTED,
the dry goods market: but the trou
ble w;>s I wouldn't read the good ad
vice like this I am handing out. and
I 1 hadn't horse sense enough to know
I that I cor.Id never hope to advance
j without industry; and every little bit
j of idleness added to what I had,
I made just a little bit more; and when
i the pile was big enough my employ
er noticed it and asked me if I would
kindly make place for a friend of his,
I and I obligingly stepped down and
out and lost my chance of being a
dry goods king that very day.
Don't do as I did, but do as I ad
vise. If I spent my time in picture
I galleries that should have been
given to separating the moreens
from the mohairs, or attended
afternoon concerts when I should
have been extricating the bunt
l lngs from among the worsteds, I
was adding a little bit of time that
I didn't own to some more that I had
already got (dishonestly), and while
It made a little bit more it didn't bel
ter my character at all, and if I
stayed in the dry goods business I
fear to say what I might have be
> come.
I
He sure that your time is your
I own and then sperr?! it so as to ac
j cumulate treasure for your old age;
I and if you die before you are old
I you will have already realized a good
j deal on your investment.
Now let us sing together: "Every
j little bit added to what, you've got
I makes just a little bit more."
Fngin's Kitchen.
j Another piece of Dickens' London
Is being demolished In Fill wood'3
! Rens, llolborn. the shallow basement
of which is said to have been the
original of Fagln's thieves' kitchen,
it al.-u :i resort of .lack Shop
par <i. and ai an earlier dato Francis
Bacon lived in tue building.
According to a Berlin paper a Hun
garian has invented an electrical de
vice by mean of which one man can
operate accurately all the guns of a
warship.
Exchange?
EANY SCHOOL
ED LAST Y EAR
DULL) LIKE TO
UNO THEM TO
)RE.
While Kennedy's Laxative Cough
Syrup is especially recommended for
children, It is, of course, just as
good for adults. Children like to
take it because it tastes nearly as
good as maple sugar. Its laxative
principle drives the cold from the
system by a gentle, natural, yet copi
ous action of the bowels. Sold by
A. C. Dukes! M. D.. A. C. Doyle & Co.
It takes more than financial abil
it to lay up a fortune in Heaven.
Millions of bottles of Foley's Honey
and Tar have been sold without any
person ever having experienced any
other than beneficial results from
its use for coughs, colds and lung
trouble. This is because the genuine
Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow
package contains no opiates or other
harmful drugs. Guard your health
by refusing any but the genuine.
Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes.
Evey doctrine should be a door
to religion, not a substitute for it.
Never Ray die! rry L. L. L.
Buy Lowman s Liver Lifters.
f Take Lowman'8 TJver Lifters,
tlpe TKjwman'a Liver Lifters.
Try Lowman's Liver Lifters.
Ha:"Is, Llthia Water. For b*1? h}
Snwman & Lowman
FOR SALE?One 5 horse power
Blakeslee Gasoline Engine. Cost
over $400. Will take $100 for it.
$50 repairs will get it in good con
dition. Apply to Jas. L. Sims, Or
angeburg, S. C.
Now Is.The Time
to get a HAY RAKE at COST.
I am not going to handle hay
rakes any longer and will sell
stoek on hand at cost.
A fine lot of one and two horse
wagons at greatly reduced* prices.
CALL AT?
L. E. RILEY'S
Prices $!()<). 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
DIL ?. J. HYDRICK
STERLING
i SILVERWARE
Did you know f .to?"?
can place before yo ? n ?T" o*
dependable goods 'n ""i-lin?
Silverware?
We do not toner ???vthing
that we are not glad *o ""'vs""
tee?and handle '?*" >>"'
the output of the " *?* '"U'V's
makers.
Now. it ought to e th a
good deal to you lhi.-?.
You i.eed never h about
the probable quality r* .1I11117
in this line if you ' vie ~e fur
it-1? because we a> 11 ?i? ",1 re"
sponsibility, an*" ?
guarantee o u r Steri.' ifi "Vv.Tr?
ware.
There may be su 1 1^. m
Silverware uneerfiir*3,"B br"
you couldn't m-t 11 <?' ?. tu.
matter how badly )i>c minted
them.
H. Spahr & Son.
?Hi W. Itussell, Street.
ORAXGEBURG. S. C.
?Will cure any cas
beyond the reach of
lNi:vMs /Children.
Proinote3 Digestion?heerful
nessandRest.Contains neither
Opium^iorphine *or Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
Jbapc afOld IhSAMUELPITCBER
Puatpicm Sani"
Mx. Senna *
fUAtlUSJti
Jnut Seid *
xCariane?Stla*
fKrmSttd -
( Jut/mr ?
Apetfecf Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour StoiMch.Diairhoea,
Worms .Convulsions Jeverish
O?ss and LOSS OF SLEEP,
lac Simile Signature of
NEW "YORK.
For Infants and Children.
[The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature.
of
'.. Affo rridivths old- .?
J5 Doses-33 CeSts
EXACT COPY*OF WHAPFESi
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
TUB 05NTAUR COBHNT. NCW 'ORK "ITT.
GLOVERS
How about s nice, ceo] Two-Piece Suit for ibis
hot weatuei?
We have them in ferge. Worst?.1, Flannel, Ca6
mar e and all the oll er dteiiable iabrics.
Yen ought ?o get one. It would make vou twire
re comfortable this summer and you'll iiave the satis
faction of feeling, and knowing, that you're fashion
ably and appropriately dressed. ?
Latest designs; newest, fahrirR, colors and pat
terns; Easy pric<?^$7 50toS20.0o.
GLOVER
in
J
Olothing^ Shoes, hats and
Men's Fine Furnishings.
i
4
FIRE, LIFE, $
BURGLRAY, TORNADO ?
I INSURANCE!! *
ALSO
j SURETY BONDS *
h. Written bv uJ
a i
i H. C. Wannamaker, $
rQj I represent companies tbatVknow to be gocd. ^
^ Give me some of your business. A
APPLES FOR SALE
By the barrel. In large or small lots
Address,
J. E. HALL,
Box 247 Waynesville, N. C.
i !.
Cvres Backache
Corrects
Irregularities
Do not risk having
e of Kidney or Bladder Disease not Bright's Disease
medicine. No medicine can do more. or Diabetes
Dr. C. DUKES.
LOW.MAN DRUG CO.