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IT! It is your! interest to study the reason why you always find busy trade going on at o?r store. We do not say we will sell this article at cost, or that one below Manufacturers. Cost of Production. But we do say we are entitled to our share of your trade, because we at all times show the very newest of the seasons productions and make" prices just a bit cheaper than found elsewhere in the city when quality is considered. This fact established beyond a doubt we now ask your to act. come to day don't delay-, we have the goods and defy any one to name a lower price. No Big Red Fronts just every day a busy day ? * *. Fall Suits This Is a good time for your Fall Suits. We are showing a very fine line of Linonetts 36 inches wide, all colors, tan, brown, grays, Alico blue, in stripes and plain; yard 12*?o WORSTED SUITS?The best imi tation of dollar goods, in herring bone stripes and plaids, navy blue, brown and garnet, 27 inches wide at,.;.i5c GALATEA CLOTH .? "Hyde Grade" quality, worth 20c,' fast col ors; we are selling this line at only 15c Every color, stripe and solid. 36-INCr BORDERED PERCALES ?The very best Windsor quality, every pattern and color; brown, gar net, navy.12 *?c OUR LINE OF 50c DRESS GOODS is complete in every shade and va riety of fabrics;, they, are worth 50c and we ask, a yard. .... .50c Of course 'tis useless to write prices; paper decs not show quality. We ask your inspection in this mat ter and promise you can't do-better any where else. Our stock of Dress Gcods has been refilled and today we can show what is worn. All the Silks, Satins, Velvets and Buttoni here to trim them with. If it s Dress Goods, why tr,y us for it. Domesestics This Department is one of our strong points?Outings, Flanneletts, Percales, Chambrays, Ginghams, Bleachings ,Sea Islands, Cotton Flan nels, are; needed. Why, you can t afford to miss the chance of vis iting Moseley's to fill out your list. We name a few prices for ready inade Sheets?Slx90, Salem Sheets, bleached, at 70c; 90x90 inches Salom Sheets, bleached, at 80c; 45x3G Pil low Cases J."3c; Single Bed Shets, 51x90 at 50c. BED SPREADS?We have an " enormous line of these goods from ?Oc to $00.00. The best values at SI.00, $1.25, .$1..10 and $2.00 you ever saw; all extra large size and ready for use. How about BLANKETS? We, this year, bought our wool Blanks from a Southern mill, and you can find elegant all wool goods as cheap as you usually pay for' rough made Blankets, of only one-half wool and cotton. Ask for prices on our Blankets. We will make it interest ing for you, $1.00 to $10.00 a pal?. Our line for $3.00,to $5.00 we say just can't be duplicated. COTTON COMFORTS?Our stock of these very necessary goods is very full jr.st now. They start at 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 to $S.00, for the finest down Comforts. You will see all you need in Bed Coverings to keep you warm here at very interest ing prices. > ^ e a Our line cf Clothing is the equal of any store in the city. We ask yo i to inspect our stock. Don't be mis led by any big display of pricss; ? come in; if we can fit you the trade* is easy. We promise to show you only the very latest cuts and pattern.-.; The stock' of extra Pants we have embrace every style in stripes, in worsteds for $2.00 to .V5.50 a pair. They arc cut right, full hips and small bo'.toms. Now is a good time to size up. Our stock is full on every size, from Infants to Men's and Ladies extra sizes. We have every size In Uuion Suits for 2.7c, 50c and $1.00 a suit. We have just opened several cases this week, which puts every line complete in sizes, no matter who you want to fit; we have the site for -you, prices ivv to $1.50; House Draperys We show a full lin^ o? Portier:-. Couch Covers, Table Covers, etc. WINDOW SHADES?The be.t quality with fring?, all colors, S5c. ami ."Or. CURTAIN SWISS?A very com plete assortment of 36-inch Swiss, worth 12c and 15c, at only_10c Shoes! Shoes!! We again assert our supremacy along this line. We are agents f >;? several cf the very best lines of all leather Shoes, and simply guarantee them to wear, but we charge what they are worth, no more and no less. You will be convinced of oi.r claim as to the honesty of it, if you drop in and examine the Shoes we have to s.iow you?Crawfords fe;\ men, Deacon Light for Men; Dun:i Selsly, Co. and American Girl Shoes for Ladies; Kueder's Shoes for Boys, R. T. Wood & Co.' Shoes for Giris and little folks. These are the on. ; we brag about. Ask to see thorn. Prices range from ? 50c to $1.00 a pair. Now just a word: We must say that our. business up to the present , has been the best we have ever enjoyed, but we can't rest on our dcors. , We must push ahead, so if you have read what we have said in this add and wish to prove the truthfulness of it come and let us show you through, we will do our best to convince yon, and at the same time please. Every clay is a bargain day at :: :: See Zeigier & Dibble Today For Life and Fire Insurance. Office Over George Zeigler's Store. Call or Phone. make print paper OF THE BEST KIND OUT OF CORNSTALKS. Tue Government Chemists, Wh< Have Been Experimenting for Ycairs, Succeeded at Last. Chemists of the bureau of forestry and of the bureau of plant industry of the department of agriculture, says a Washington dispatch, believe that they have solved the problem of a cheaper paper that will dispense altogether with the use of wood fiber. The new material, from which al ready five grades have successfully been made, is the ordinary corn stalk, and officials of the department! predicted that the new product when made on a larger scale will be at lean 50 per cent cheaper than the print paper now made from wood pulp. The two bureaus have been work ? ing on the problem for years, but ? not until now have the results been so.,positively successful as to permit I of any announcement. The first practicable samples have been man-| ufactured by Dr. H. S. Bristol and assistants atthe new laboratory on' Pennsylvania avenue. Dr. Brislol has already carrk! his experiment to the p^int of mak ing the paper in five shades. ;One grade is dark gray, thick and heavv like parchment and almost as tough as sheepskin. Then there is a light er shade of tho same character, two shades of yellow and one of white. The white paper la made from the hard outside shell of the stalk and the yellow grades from the pit.1. The yellow grades have a much long er fiber and resemble paper mado from linen rags dr cotton. It is very soft and pl*ftble. Millions of tons of cornstalks will be available for this new manufac ture, according to the department of agriculture. At present the stalks are annually destroyed in enormous quantities to get them out of the way or else are simply turned under the soil with a plow to add slightly t > tho fertilization of the next year's crop. The process of manufacturing the new invention is much easier than that involved in reducing wood pulo to paper. The chemists have used in their experiments the "soda cooked" process, which has been found to be the best for making the finer grades of wood pulp paper. But the cornstalks only need about two and a half hours of cooking in this process against the thirteen or fourteen hours needed to soften the wood pulp. So far the new paper has been rodpe only in a laboratory without special machinery or the wholesale production necessary to insure cheap ness, but the department is goiag to experiment at once on a larger scale and believes that the price of white paper as weil as the other grades ?will be reduced to a startling degree.1 "No special growth of corn is needed," said one of the chemists. "We have used the ordinary stalk from the Virginia fields, and the kind that Is destroyed in Texas, Ten nessee and elsewhere in wasteful quantities each year can now be turn ed to use. Not only will the cost of paper be greatly reduced, but the farmer will have an added asset in a by product that ought to net him a neat sum each year." The department will at once take steps to have the manufacture of the new paper undertaken on a large scale. Notice of Election. State of South Carolina, County of Orangeburg. Notice is hereby given that the General Election for Presidential and Vice-Presidential Electors and Rep resentative in Congress will be helJ at the voting precincts fixed by law in the County of Orangeburg on Tuesday, November 3, 1?0S, said d- y being Tuesday following the ? first Monday, as prescribed by law. The Qualifications for suffrages are as follows: ?Residence in' State for two years, in the County one year, in the.poll ing precinct in which the elector of fers to. .vote, four months, and the payment six months before any elec tion of any poll tax then due and payable. Provided, That ministers in charge of an organized church and teachers of public schools shall bo entitled to vote' after six months' residence in the State, otherwise qualified . Registration.?Payment of all tax es including poll tax. assessed and collectable during the previous year.. The production of a certificate or the receipt of the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall be con clusive proof of the payment thereof. Before the hour fixed for .opening the polls Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe to the Constitu tional oath. The Chairman of tho Board of Managers can administf-.r the oath to the other Managers and to the Clerks; a Notary Public must administer the oath to Chairman. The Managers" elect their Chairman and Clerk. ! Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m., and closed at 4 o'clock p. m., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be ? opened at 7 a. m. and closed at i! p. m. The Managers have the power to fill a vacancy: and if none of the Managers attend, the citizens can appoint, from among the qualified voters, the Managers, who, after be ing sworn, can conduct the elec tion. At the close of the election, the Managers and Clerk must proceed i publicly to open the ballot boxes and count the ballots, therein and con tinue without adjournment until the same is completed, and make a state ment of the result for each office, and sign the same. Within three days thereafter, the Chairman of the Board, or some one designated by the Board, must deliver to the Com missioners of Election the poll lisr, the boxes containing the ballots and written statements of the result of the election. Managers of Election?The fol lowing Managers of Election have been appointed to hold the election at the various precincts in the said County: Federal Managers. Ayers?P. F. Shuler, S. D. Fogle, C. F. Bozard. Bowman?G. E. Fairey, 0. L. Cam, W. H. Whetsell. P.ranchville?A. E. Shuler, G. M. Noble. R. I. Metts. Cedar Grove?J. F. Jennings, W. A. Snioak, M. K. Antlcy. Cope?F. II .May, W. H. Smith, R. K. Hfnerey. Cordova?N. N. Hayden, Jr., H A. Gibson, H. S. Holman. Dantzler's Mill?F. D. Rush, W. L. Felder, L. B. Connor. Dantzler's P. O.?Geo. W. Dantz ler, S. P. Shuier, W. D. Moorer. Ellorce?A. B. Bookhardt, J. S. Weeks. A. A. Way. Jamison?R. H. Riley, J. W. Hor ger. J. M. Bell . Livingston?D. V. Livingston, R. L. Pou, 0. V. Fogle. .Vorth?W. G. Pou, P. L. Wingard, E. C. Hydrick. Norway?W. R. Williams, Eugene Gue. V. S. Hutto. Orangeburg?J. F. Blanch, W. L. Izlar, J. B. Livingston. Phillips?W. C Davis, G. S. Kirk land, L. P. Jamison. Quattlebaum?S. H. Inabinet, J. N. Sistrunk, E. L. Culler, Jr. Rowesvilie?T. G. Robinson, E. S. Dukes. Cleveland Crum. Sawyerdale?II. J. Salley, J. B. Sharp. L. P. Inabinet. Springfiold?Henry Inabinet, W. S, Porter, Lloyd Morgan. Vance?W. A. Dantzler, Felix P. Shuler. T. J. Hart. The managers at each precinct named above are requested to del egate one of their number to secure tho boxes and blanks for the elec tion from M. F. Inabinet at County | Auditor's OfTic? ?"y ?inio after Tues day, Octobrr 27th. 190S. M. E. ZEIGLER, Chm. A. A. DANTZLER, .1. 0. COFGIIMAN. Commissioners of Federal Election Tor Oraneoburg bounty, S. C, October l?>th, 1 90S. Don't be ashamed to take the wife's advice. She knows a great deal more than she pretends, and has reserves of sense that would as tonish you if you could see them. A Jeweler's Experience. C. R. Kluger, The Jeweler, 10GO Virginia Ave.', Indianapolis, Ind, writes: "i was so weak from kidney trouble that I could hardly walk a hundred feet. Four bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy cleared my complexion, cured my backache and the irregularities disappeared, and I can now attend to business every day, and recommend Foley s Kidney Rem edy to all sufferers as it cured mo after the doctors and other remedies had failed. For sale by Dr. A. C. Dukes. Yes, Abram, one can readily af-1 ford to eet married on an income of I $12 a week, if he will ag-ee to t urn j it over to his wife every week. At any time when your stomaca I Is not in good condition, you should take Kodol, because Kodol digost-s1 all the food you eat, and it supplies health and strength for the stomach in that way. You take Kodol just for a little while when you have slight attacks of indigestion, and you take it just a little longer in order to get relief from severe attacks of Indigestion or Nervous Dyspeipsia. Try Kodol todoy. Sold by all drug gist. When a man's half-backed he may still be undone when he goes home and gets roasted. Chance to Save Money. The country schools-are now open ing over the county. In famllle." where there are several children go ing to school the book bill is pretty heavy. If any of our readers would like to save money on their Bchooi books they can do so by buying them second-hand at Sims Book Store. If you have any book that you used last year and do not need this year caTry them to Sims Book Store where you can exchange them for new one j. Don't give your boy a knife unless he will first promise not to swap. Swapping leads to cheating and that is bad for the boy and worsj for him when he grows up. Married Man in Trouble. A married man who permits any member of the family to take any thing except Foley's Honey and Tar, for coughs, colds and lung trouble, is guilty of neglect. Nothing else li as good for all pulmonary troubles. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar contains no opiates and is in a yel low package. For sale by Dr. A. C. Dukes. Put the lid on that peck of trouble. Never say die! Try L. L. L Buy Cowman's Liver Lifters Take Lowman's Liver Lifters Pse Lowman's Liver LlfterB Try Lowman's Liver Lifters FTavis. Lfthia Water For aala by Lowman &. Lowman. N naughty man says that a woman has about the same feUing for logic in an argument as for cockroaches in the kitcl t.n. Woman Interrupts Political Sj>eaker. A well dressed woman Interrpute 1 a political speaker recently by con tinually coughing. If she had taken Foley's Honey and Tar it would have cured her cough quickly and expe'.l-, ed the cold from her system. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar con tains no opiates and is in a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. For sale by Dr. A. C. Dukes. Ho who abandons the farm will liud too late that good fortune has abauden^d him. Do not let anyone tell you that something else is just as good as DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills because there isn't anything just as good for weak back, backache, rheumatic pains, Inflammation of ,the bladder, or any Kidney and Blad der disorder. A week's trial wiil convince you. Sold by all drrggist. A girl who can manage to. ge three engagement rings must have circus cf her own. The Judge I'.sos Forcible language.. Judge W. B. Simmons of Fineas ' tie, Va.. told the reporter that L. & M. Paint was usuea on. his residence in 1SS2. and held Its. color well for 21 years; he furthermore said that S years ago he was Induced to use another paint and Is sorry he did. because the other paint didn't make Rood. The Judge will now always use L. A 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 If) years. Actual cost of L. & M. about $1.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. j made to churchss. Sold by J. G. Wannamaker Mftr. Co. Oraugchurg. I Rene- ??. mi'-n never pur checks toi their purr-It i.-1;. Th'-v leav? that for their husbands. Burns, bruises and scratches, big and little cuts or in fact anything requiring a salve, are best and quick est soothed and healed by DrWift's Carbolized Witch Hazel ?alve. The best salve fur piles. Be sure yo i get DeWitt's. Sold by all druggis.s. Ir is :t waste of efort to try "o heal one's house with hot air A little less talk and a little more time at the wood pile. Constipation causes headache, nau sae, dizziness, languor, heart palpita tion. Drastic physics gri'^e. sicken, weaken the bowels and don't cure. Doan's Regulates act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your drr-rglst. Chronic Constipation Cured. One who suffers from chronic j constipation is in danger of many serious ailments. Foley's Orino I Laxative cures chronic constipation as it aids digestion and stimulates j the liver and bowels, restoring the natural action of these organs. Commence taking it today, and you will feel better at once. Fuley's Orino Laxative does not nauseate: or gripe and is very pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes . Lowmau Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. Many a man's dog can give him lessons in fidelity and integrity. ? Saved His Boy's Life. "My three-year-old boy was badly constipated, had a high fever and was in an awful condition. I gave him two doses of Foley's Orino Laxative and the next morning the fever was gone and he was entirely well. Fol ey's Orino Laxative saved his life." ?A. Wclkush, Casfruer, Wis. For sale by Dr. A. C. Dukes. As the mind is bent so is the tongue inclined. Why James Leo Got Well. Everybody in Zanesville, O., knows .Mrs. Mary Lee, . of. rural route ^ She writes: ".My . husband, . James Lee, firmly believes he owes bis Ufa to the use of Dr. King's New Dis covery. Mis lungs were so severely affected that consumption seemed in evitable, when a friend recommended New Discovery. We tried ir, and ii i use has restored him to pefect health." Dr. King's New Discovery is the Kirit of throat and lung rem edies. For coughs and colds it has no equal. The fir^t dose give.-; relief. Try it! Sold under guaran tee at J. G. Wannamaker's drug store. 5uc. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. ?Whiskey straight makes a man crooked. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup Is used nearly everywhere, because it not only heals irritation of the throat and stops the cough, but it drives the cold out of the system through its laxative principle by assuring a free and gentle action ot r:.'r bowels, and that is the only way to cure a cold. You can't cure it as long as you are constipated. Insist upon Kennedys Laxativ?; Cough Syrup. Sold fcy all druggist. Buy Kodol today. It is guaranteed. Sold by all druggist. Kodol is a combination of the natural digestive i, !"OS and it di gests all elapses ot food and every kind of food, so you see it will do the work that the stomach itself does. The only difference between It and the stomach is the stomach can get out of order and Kodol can put- the stomach into good order. [ Foley's Honey und Tar cures, coughs quickly, strengthens the lungu and expels colds. Get the genuine in a yellow package. For sale by Dr. A. C. Dukes. Why is a pig in a parlor like a house on fire? Because the sooner it is put out the better. "Had dyspepsia or indigestion for years. No appetite, a?d when I did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me."?J. Walker. Sunhury. Ohio. Some expect to find vour field of labor full of shade trees. On Chest, Back, and Head?Pain, Heat, and Tingling Were Excru ciating?Nerves in Exhausted Condition?Sleep Badly Broken. CURE BY CUTICURA SEEMED LIKE MAGIC "?Words cannot express the gratitude I feel for what Cuticura Remedies havo is fifteen y.ars of r.ge, and hud never had anything the matter with her skin until four months ago, when an ; eruption broke out en her cheek. The first symptom wa? a redness, and thenfbllowed thicken in:; and blisters, which would break and run matter. I took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to l>o eczema of a very bad form. Ho treated her, buH instead of being checked, the disease spread. It showed itself on her back, and then quickly spread upwards until wh >le of her head was affected, and nil her hair had t > be cut off. The pain she suffered was excruciating, and what with that and the heat and tin gling her life was almost unbearable. She became run down in health, and a* times was very feverish, languid, and drowsy, and occasionally slio was de lirious". Her nerves were in such a low state that the could not bear to bo left alone. In spito of the ccld weather 6ho would insist on having her bedruor? window open, and would lean out on tho window-sill. She di'i not havo a, proper hour's sleep for many night?. The second doctor wo tried afforded her just as little relief as the first, ratfi L reallv do nut know what wo should ha%'0 dono if we had not read how Cuticura cured a eir::ilar case. I pur chased Cuticura S^ap. Cuticura Oint ment, and Cuticura Pills, and before tho Ointment was three-quarters finished every trace cf tho disease was Sme. Ifc really seemed li!:o magio. cr hair is crming cm nicely, and I stiil apply the Cuticura Ointment as I find it increases tho growth wonder fully. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, I, Ongar* Place, Brentwood, Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1007." Cuticura Soap f25c.) to Cleanse toe- Skin, COt eura Olntrnrnt <50c.) to lira! tnc Skin, and Cuti cura Kcwlvun <?0c). (or In the form or thooulato Coated Pill?. 25c. per vial o(60) to Purlfr UM U ;??-. Sold throuchoiit the world. Potter Drug & Cocm. Corp.. Sole Pmps.. Dortnn. Mass. ?' *_ o-ilaus? free. Cuucmailoutwr i\r D?eaae?