The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, November 13, 1908, Page 4, Image 4
PUBLISHED TWIOE-?-WEEuX
Taeaday and Friday*
Vol.40... .. .... .... ..No. 57?
"JCntored. as second-class matter
fea. 1, 1908, at the postofflco at Oxs
aaieburg, 8. C, ander the Act of
Congress of March 8. 187?._
fas. lb Sims, Editor and Proprietor,
foe. later B?na, - Assoctatw Editor.
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ctoeey orders, registered letters, or express or
Csrs, payable to
The Times and Democrat,
Oraneebursr, S. C.
The Taft prosperity wave has not
reached this section yet. -.
Where, oh where, Is Little John
Temple Graves? We have not heard
a chirp from him since he heard from
the Georgia returns.
We have some white Republican?-.
In Orangeburg who are not ostra
cised on account of their politics
because they are gentlemen.
No people in the United States
are robbed more by the tariff than
tn?? farmer. Why any of them any
where should vote the Republican
ticket is a mystery.
Those deluded farmers who were
afraid that Bryan's election would
cause cotton to go down will please
hear in mind that it went down thJ
day after Taft was elected.
It looks very , much from this dis
tance as if Senator Carmack was
assassinated for political purposes.
According to the doctor he was ev
idently shot from the rear...
Teddy thought the labor leaders
would toumble over one another
to get a chance to dine with his
mighty highness, but he knows bet
ter niow since (his ttnvitaftion was
turned down by them. *?>
The cowardly assassination of
Editor Carmack should be probedHo
the bottom and all the facts laid
bore. We believe men high in au
thoitfty had something to do with
?IT the talented editor.
The man nominated in the pri
mary for mayor of Atlanta got on
an old fashioned jag the other day.
and possibly an effort will be made
to get rid of him by beating him in
the regular election by an indepen
dent candidate.
If a white Republican party Is
organized in Orangeburg county we
would like to know what would they
do with Jacob Moorer? They would
have to give Jacob about lten thick
counts of white wash and take him
ia as a mascot.
As the Republicans have been
continued in power we are glad that
old man Cannon is still with them.
He should be re-elected Speaker by
ad means. No other man would fit
the job as well as he, while Sherman
presides at the other end. ?
The Standard Oil comes out on
top in that $29,000,000 fine. In
its petition for a rehearing the gov
ernment has been knocked out by
the court. So it seems that the oc
topus owns Republican judges as
well as Republican senators.
Hearst is. a woefully disappointed
demagogue by the result of the
election. He boasted that Hisgen.
his man Friday, would poll about one
million votes. Instead Hisgen, with
the assistance of Little John Temple
Graves, polled Ipss than one hundred
thousand in the whole country.
President Roosevelt's attempt to
humiliate Gompers by failing to in
vite him to the White House with
other labor leaders shows that Gom
pers' reply to Roosevelt's letter to
Root pierced the thick hide of Teddy.
Gompers is a bigger and better man
in every way than the man who tried
to insult him.
Taft will spend the winter In
Augusta, Ga. He turned down At
lanta, Savannah and Charleston In
selecting Augusta as the place where
he will exhibit his huge self in the
South. Why not run excursion
trains for the benefit of the flunkey
in the cities that failed to land him
as an attraction?
The Steel Trust is said to be very
prosperous. We shouldn't wonder.
AVith the aid of the Republican par
ty they manage to rob the Ameri
can people of eighty million dollars
each year through the operations of
be prltbcbbbu cmfwy cmfwyfwyppp
the robber tariff. Why shouldn't
they be prosperous?
The people of Atlanta arc very
indignant because the man they
nominated in the primary for mayor
went on an old fashion j.ig the other
day and was pulled by the police.
The same man made an exhibition
of himself some years ago when he
was mayor, atd as the people re
nominated him again we don't see
where they have any right to kick.
There Will be No Redaction.
When Taft is.Inaugurated he will
call an extra session, of Congress
with a great flourish of trumpets for
the purpose of revising the robber
tariff laws that now exist, but it will
amount to .nothing so far as the
public is concerned. The benefici
aries of the revision will be those
trusts and corporations who want to
get their hands deeper in the peo
ple's pockets. The Republicans dare
not legislate for the benefit of the
people. If they did they would put
their paTty out of business. The
Intrusts and larger corporations own
the Republican party and they will
name the schedule that will go in
the new tariff law if one is framed.
A few days before^ the election
Walter Wellman, writing to his
paper, the Chicago Record-Herald,
one of the Republican organs that
was supporting Taft, said:
"During the past week or ten days
money has been pouring in upon the
Republican national committee in a
golden stream. The contributions
are coming from heads , of large
business concerns, from the big
bank6, ifrom the* chiefs of corpora
tions, from men of wearth and sub
stance. The explanation is fright.
Serenity has given place to panic.
And the men of wealth have reached
for their check books. Fear of
Taft's defeat is no longer by the
men who are managing the- cam
paign. If extraordinary means
should be necessary to win they are
prepared to employ them. In other
words, they will use money to bring
victory."
Wellman went on to say that the
practical politician in New York
claimed that there are 40,000 votes
that can Be turned one way or the
other with money. Up the State,
sorry to relate, there are said to be
60,000 or 70,000. Not all of them
need to be bought. Some of them
can be "hired" to bring in the vot
ers on election day. These are the
admissions of a Republican in a Re
publican newspaper and the result
of the election shows that he knew
what he was talking about. The
m,oney used freely by the Republi
cans to debauch these voters was put
up by the trusts and large corpora
tions who arte allowed, (to recoup
themselves out of the pockets of the
people through the operations of tho
robber tariff. What chance has
the people in the face of such con
dition of things?
^ ' Proved Its Charge.'
The Omaha Bee published approv
ingly a letter from a man in Kearney
ridiculing the: idea that Swedes in
this, country are sending money to
banks in Sweden for safekeeping.
"Such an assertion," says the learn
ed contributor,, "is so palpably fool
ish* that one would' hardly care to
.discus* it if the World-Herald did
hot give It such prominence." ?'
The Omaha* World-Herald says
with great pleasure it presents the
following extratjts from pages six
and seven of the last annual report
of the postmaster general, submit
ted to President Roosevelt, Novem
ber 3071907:
'More than seven millions of
immigrants landed in this country
durisg the past ten years, and it
has been demonstrated that in the
aggregate immense sums of mon
ey have been hoarded or sent
away by these people. In many
Instances it has been found that,
for want of postal savings hanks,
money orders are being bought,
payable to the purchaser, good for
one year. During the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1907, the post
office department sent to Euro
pean countries alone in the form
of money orders, $72,111,748.94.
This money, while it was accu
mulating, woulf^ naturally have
been placed for safety in the
postal savings banks. In fact,
it has been brought to my atten
tion that money of the Immi
grants, on account of its posses
sors .being ignorant of our lan
guage and suspicious of our priv
ate institutions, is being sent
home in order that it may be plac
ed in the postal savings banks of
their native countries."
This statement bears out direotly
the charge the World-Herald made.
It also explains why thirty-three of
the banks of Sweden advertised in
a single issue of a Sweden news
paper published in Chicago, for the
deposits of Swedes who have made
this country their home. So exten
sive is the practice, not only among
Swedes but among foreign-born cit
izens of other nationalities, that the
postmaster general used the fact as
a strong argument in favor of postal
savings banks. It is, of course
equally strong as an argument for
guaranteed bank deposits.
An Object Lesson.
A prominent citizen of Butte,
Mont., wrote Mr. Bryan a letter from
which the following is taken:
"While reading your speech at
Des Moines, in which you so
strongly show up the iniquities
of the present tariff, it occurred to
me that I could give you from an
experience of my own, a pe: tinent
illustration of the infamous rob
bery perpetrated upon the Ameri
can people by the millionaire ben
eficiaries of said tariff. In 1S93
I bought from the Singer Sewing
Machine Company a sewing ma
chine, for which I paid $65. In
1894 I went to South America and
located at Montevideo, the capital
of the republic of Uruguary, a
city of 250,000 inhabitants, where
I found in the principal stores,
the same identical Singer sewing
machine with all the latest at
tachments, all brand new and just
received from the Singer factory.
I inquired the price and was told
it was $35. I bought one, and
thinking the pirce astonishingly
low, I inquired at the other stores
and found the price the.same, and
had I so desired I could have pur
chased a dozen at that price. Now
these merchants had paid freight
for 5,000 miles, and a heavy im
port duty, on those machines, and
yet could sell them at a profit
'.. for S3 5."
Sewing machines are not the only
things that are sold cheaper -away
from home than they are to our
own people. The trusts1 are enabled
to do this under the operations of the
iniquitous tariff laws now In oper
ation, which literally hold up the
home people for the trusts tc rob
by shutting out all foreign compe
tition. Taft is pledged .to a revis
ion of the tariff, but'the*general im
pression is that it' will be, revised in
the interest of the trusts, and not
the people. That is the. way the
Republican party pays the corpora
tions for putting up a :large cam
paign fund to carry elections with.
It is a kind of you tickle me and 1
tickle you game.
Shocked the Country.
The entire country ^vas shocked'
at the cowardly assassination of
Editor Carmack on the streets of
Nashville last Monday afternoon by
his political enemies. At the time
ne was cruelly murdered he was ed
itor of. the Tennessean. His ene
mies feared him and determined to
get rid of him. To do this under
cover of law they pretended to take
offense at some remarks he made in
his paper about one of the men who
actually participated in the assassi
nation. Behind the scenes are men
who are prominent that helped to
plan the cold blooded murder. Mr.
Carmack was one of the most brill
iant men in the South.
He was murdered four days after
celebrating his fiftieth birthday, and
yet for more than half his life he
has had an active part in public af
fairs. He was a member of the"
State legislature when he was
twenty-four years of age, and two
years later he entered newspaper
work as. a member of the editorial
staff of The Nashville American.
H"e afterwards became the editor
of The Memphis Commercial-Appeal,
where his strong and graphic style
soon made that paper one of the
most popular and influential in the
South. i
Mr. Carmack represented the
Memphis district in Congress for
several terms. He also served six
years in the United State Senate.
In both these bodies he was regarded
as one. of,.the ablest, and most el
oquent members. He was univer
sally loved, and his cowardly assas
sination has been denounced from
one end of the country to the other.
While serving in Congress he wa.~'
universally beloved by all the
members regardless of political dif
ferences, and some of the warmest
tributes paid him has come from Re
publicans who have served with him
in the House or the Senate. The men
who cowardly assassinated hin,
?hould be .speedily tried and pun
'l?hed. a 1
Poor Excuse for Murder.
The following Is the article for
which Editor Carmack, of the Ten
nessean, was assassinated Tuesday
afternoon on the streets of Nash
ville by the man. referred to in it
and his son; who seems to. have way
laid him:
To Major Duncan Brown
Cooper, who wrought the great
colition; who achieved the harmo
mious confluence of incompatible
elements; who welded the pewter
handle to the wooden spoon; who
grafted the dead bough to the liv
ing tree and made it to bloom,
and bourgeon and bend with gold
en fruit; who made playmates of
the lamb and the leopard and boon
companions of the spider and the
fly; who made soda and vinegar
to dwell placidly in the same bot
tle, and who taught oil and water
how they might agree?to Major
Duncan Brown Cooper, the great
. diplomat of the poll^icafi Zwei
bund, be all honor and glory for
ever.
There is nothing in this paragrapn
to cause two men to lay wait and
assassinate the man who wrote it,
even if it djd refer to one of the
assassinators. Politics is at the bot
tom of the murder of Editor Car
mack, and if the truth is ever
brought out about the cowardly af
fair it will be found that it was
planned and carried out to get the
brilliant editor out of the way be
cause he was in the way of certain
schemes. This assassination is
similar to one that occurred some
years ago in this State, and is a
repetition of the brutal assassina
tion of Governor Gobel of Kentucky
with slight variations. In one case
the men who did the assassination
concealed themselves in a house and
in the other they slipped up on their
victim in the street' and shot him
down in the presence of a lady to
whom he had just spoken. This
circumstance reveals the brutality
and premeditation of the cowardly
assassination of Editor Carmack.
His Pull Is Gone.
Charles M. Morse, one time known
as the ice king, and who, two years
ago, was said to be worth twenty
million dollars, 1 '.t now under a
sentence of fifteen years imprison
ment for the misappropriation ol
bank funds, says he is a "sacrifice
to the desire of the public to see a
rich man in jail," and attributes his
conviction and consequent imprisot,
ment to the politicians. The trouble
with Morse is his millions are gone,
and with them went his pull with
the Republican party, whose cam
paign funds he use to help out with
his check. If he had not lost his
millions he could still be enjoying
his freedom with the thieving in
surance officials who robbed the
three ,big Insurance companies of
New York for the benefit of the
Republican campaign fund. He had
a right to expect immunity. He is
fully aware that hundreds who ha I
robbod the public had been shielded
by the leaders of the Republican
party, although they were worse
sinners than he is. But he loses
sight of the fitct that these rascals
managed to save their money and
are still in a position to make lib
eral contributions to the Republicau
campaign funds', as he us to do when
he had his millions. But he can
no longer put up: the dough, and the
Republican leaders thought him a
good one to make an example of to
illustrate their spasm of virtue.
So Mr. M?rse will have to do time.
And there are hundreds of high Re
publican officials who should be do
ing it with; him.
Hits Him About Bright.
The Columbus, Ga., Enquirer-Sun
gives . Clark Howell, editor of the
Atiaata Constitution, this well de
served jab:
-/"The State Republican cam
paign manager;, of ?jfe?rgia, is proud
ot the rejmlt in thia State. ' Judg
ing, from'--an Editorial in* the At
lanta Constitution' of yesterday
morning the Georgia member of
the national Democratic commit
tee'"and the Republican campaign
chairman should exchange mes
sages of congratulation and good
feeling."
? Such men as Clark Howell should
not be allowed to hold official po
sition in the Democratic party. We
have /no objection ,to th(Sir being
Republicans if'-'they want to be, but
we decidedly object to such men be
ing at the head ? of the great Demo
cratic party in the great State ot
Georgia. If such men would throw
off the mask- of hypocrisy and go
into the Republican party where they
belong we would have more respe.it
for them.
A Resting Place,
The country's always Bomewhere
Howe'er the city grinds,
Cool, grassy fields are waiting
Howe'er the dust cldd blinds,
The oaks . we ;knew aforetime
Are each one in their place,
And butterflies drift past them
And cool cloud shadows race.
Howe'er work mars the pattern
Of things we planned to do,
Howe'er dreams of our dreaming
Lag in the coming true,
The country waits off yonder
With balm for work-worn hearts.
Vistas of blowing blossoms
To soothe the eye that smarts.
Howe'er the world misuse us,
Howe'er the years shall pile
Their burdene on our shoulders,
Out yonder all the while ? -
The country waits to greet us
With things we used to know,
The blossom-sprinkled uplands,
Tree branches bending low.
Elfe can not-be all futile,
We scarcely dare to fall
When somewhere 'way out yonder
The calling; of the quail
Rings clear across the morning,
And while the distant wood
Waits with its shadows for us
The world is. always good.
And there are laughs of children
To meef us down the way.
And the gold vof the sunset
Wipes all the dun and gray
Out of the world before1 us, 1 *
And^.jhowe'er we shall, fare,
Whate'ef our climbs or stumbles
The country's always there.
Several prominent labor leaders
have declined1-Teddy's bid to dine at
the White House, and he is as mal
as mad can be.
Wanted?Sofas, lounges, couches and
chairs to recover in leather,
leatherette or regular upholster
ing cloth. Satisfaction guaran
teed. Reference given if wantei.
M. Hatch, 59 Green St. Drop me
a postal.
FOR SALE.
1,500 acres highly improved farm
lands, within 4 miles of Orangebur^.
New dwelling, barns and servant
houses. Will' sell as a whole or cut
to suit purchaser.
Terms reasonable. Only a small
cash payment necessary.
_W. K. 3EASE.
Guardian's Notice.
On December 11., 1908, I will
file with the Judge of Probate for
Orangeburg County, S. C, my final
account as guardian of the estate
of J. M. O'Dowd; and will on that
day ask for my discharge as such
guardian. ,
H. A. ODO.M.
November 11, 1908.
Notice of Application for Final
Discharge.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned Executors of the late
Capt. W. W. Culler will file the:r
final account with the Judge of
Probate, in and for the County of
Orangeburg, on Wednesday, the l?'h
day of December, 190S, and will
thereupon apply to the said Prohate
Court for their final discharge and
Letters Dismissary as Executors of
said estate.
WESLEY W. CULLER.
CHARLES W. CULLER,
FRANK W. FARNUM.
Nov. 11th, 1908. 11-13-4:
Notice to Creditors.
Notice is hereby given that all
persons holding claims against the
estate of the .late Capt. W. W. Cul
ler are hereby required to present
the same duly proven on or before
the 15th day of December, 1 908,
and all persons indebted to said es
tate must make payment on or he
fore the above date to '.he under
signed or to Glaze & Herbert, At
torneys, Orangehurg, S. C.
WESLEY W. CULLER.
CHARLES W. CULLER,
FRANK W. FARNUM.
Nov. nth, 1908. 11-13-41
Notice to Creditors.
All persons holding claims against
the estate of M. N. Riley, deceased,
will present same duly proven and
all persons indebted to said estate
will make payment to Raysor & Sum
mer, Attorneys, Orangeburg, S. C,
on or before Monday, November 30,
190S.
P. C. RILEY,
Qualified Admr. Estate of M. N.
Riley, deceased.
October 30, 190S. ll-3-4t
The Testimony of These Three Hons
That Peruna is a Sal
Gained Flesh on Peruna.
Mrs. Hattie Hamilton, R. F. D. No. 2,
Sparta, Ky., writes:
"I have taken two bottles of Peruna
and commenced on the third one. I did
not really need the third one, but thought
it best to take another bottle.
"I have always weighed 102 pounds,
but since I began taking Peruna I weigh
120, for the first time in all my life, and I
am now thirty-three years old. Youi
medicine has surely done me a great
deal of good, and I have recommended
It to several others who have begun
taking it.
?'My mother, who is seventy-sixyeart
old, had grown so weak she could
scarcely walk. She took two bottles ol
Peruna and is fleshier and looking well.'
Internal Catarrh.
Mrs. M. P. Jones, of Burning Springs
Kj., writes:
"No family should ever be withou
Peruna, for it is an unfailing cure foi
colds, and it is an excellent .remedy U
prevent and relieve croup.
"And to speak from a standpoint o
experience, I can candidly say that it 1
the remedy for internal catarrh. I shal
not hesitate to recommend it, especially
to all suffering women.
"Peruna has gained full confidence
and a permanent stay in our home."
FOR SALE?Horse, buggy and har
ness complete; horse perfectly gen
tle, not afraid of automobiles, etc;
good driver and guaranteed sound.
Apply to John Gelzer, 77 Sellers
avenue.. , ll-6-4t
j FOR SALE?'2.0,000 Paper Shell Pe:;
can/ Trees. Seedlings from largr
selected nuts and heavy bearing
trees. Fair delivery. Jude Rob
inson, Rowesville, S. C.
For Rent or Sale.
A seven-room dwelling and store
combined, in the town of Jamison.
Barn and stables on lot. Good water.
Desirable location. Apply to J. D.
|GoIson. Jamison. S. 0. 10-fi-R*
Notice. '
I will be at North station Orange
burg County every Monday, hours
from 10 to 2 o'clock for the purpose
of buying chickens, ducks, geese,
ginnea's, turkeys, hogs and cows.
Will give the best market prices.
J. B. Mack,
9-19-4mo. Swansea, S. C.
For Sale.
400 Acres of land situated in
Southern part of Orangeburg Coun
ty. One hundred and seventy-five
awes of cultivated land and balance
well limbered One dwelling, and
out buildings suitable for farm
ing purposes. Five tenement hous
es. For further particulars apply to
F. A. Falrey,
8-28-3mos.* Branchville, S. C.
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. Neeces, S. C.
Land For Sale.
84 acres of Land North of Or
angeburg and within thirty mnutes
drive of the Court House, 100 acres
upon cly sub-soil, remainder wood
land. Will sei as a whole or in
tracts. Apply to L. P. Zeigler,
7-31-tf Neeces, No. 2, S. C.
Executor's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that all
persons having claims against the
estate of D. Q. Sturkey, deceased,
present same to the undersigned, and
notice is further given that on the
th day of December, 19OS, I will
I file my final account with the Judge
f Probate for Orangeburg County
as Executor of the last will of the
said D. G. Sturkey and ask for let
ters dismissory.
ENOCH STURKEY.
Qualified Executor of the Will of D
G. Sturkey, Deceased.
Nov. 5th. 190S. * 11-6-it
Notice of Sale.
Under and by virtue of an order
f the Probate Court. I will sell at
public auction, for cash, at the late
esidonce of J. E. Corley, deceased,
n the 27th day of November, 190<f,
all the personal property of the es
tate of the late J. E. Corley, de
ceased, consisting chiefly of horses,
mules, corn, fodder, cotton seed,
hay, wagons, buggies, engine, saw
ill and farming implements; sale to
commence at ten o'clock a. m.
JOHN D. SHULER,
Administrator of the Estate of J. F.
Corley, deceased. 10-30-4
The only valuable test
can have is the testu
is worse than use
retical otandpoi
what people
Tl
know '
lewives Demonstrates Beyond All Cavil |
fe and Useful Remedy,
Constipation, Torpid Liver.
Mrs. Anthony Ranch, 306 N. Walnut ]
street, Bucyrus, O., writes:
?'I was suffering from obstinate con
stipation and torpid liver, when I took
your advice and purchased six bottles of
Peruna and Manalin. WhenI had taken
only one bottle I felt much better, and
since 1 have,taken two more bottles I
feel entirely well, but I will continue
taking the medicine for a short time to
make snro of my cure.
"I think Manalin is one of the finest
remedies for constipation that I ever
tried. I will never be without it. It
has made me so strong. I can do a
day's -work and never tire. I am so
glad I do D"t get those dizzy spells any
more. J. haven't had one since I took
your medicine.
"I cannot thank you enough for what
your medicine has done for mo. All
sick people should give it a fair trial,''
Kidneys and Bladder.
! Mrs. Qua. H. Carlson, Box 201, Orton
ville, Minn., writes:
"I had catarrh of the kidneys and
bladder. I have taken Peruna until
now, and I do not think I need to take it
any longer.' u
"I feel well, and my tongue is clear,
and I have no bitter taste in my mouth.
X *?u very thankful for Peruna." . .
For, Sale.
213 acres of fine farming land, 139
acres in high state of cultivation, 50
acres clear of stumps. One nice nine
room dwelling, .2 tenant houses,
large barn, good stable and other
outbuildings .located . thereon, 2 %
miles'of wire fencing Also 26%
acres adjoining the above tract, new
four-room cottage, new barn and
stable, and1 poultry yard and housed,
and one-half mile from the town of
Elloree. S. C.
One of the best equipped farms In
the vicinity.
Good reason for selling
Apply to
J. C. EVANS, Elloree, S. C.
Notice of Bankruptcy.
In the matter of Jhe Felder Com-|
pany, Bankrupt.
To the creditors of The Felder
Company, of Parier, in the County
of Orangeburg and District afore-1
said a Bankrupt.
Notice is hereby given, That on
the 26th day of October, A. D. 1908,
the said The Felder Company was
duly adjudicated bankrupt, and that
the first meeting of his creditors
will be 1 ild at my office in Oarngc
burg, S. C, on the 16th day of
November, A. D. 1908, at eleven
o'clock a. m., at which time the said
creditors may attend, prove their
claims, appoint a trustee, examine!
the Bankrupt and transact such oth
er business as may properly come
before said meeting.
JOHN S. BOWMAN, JR.,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
November 2, 1908.
Notice to Stockholders.
The Board of Directors of The
Bolen Oil Mill, a corporation duly
chartered under the laws of the
State of South Carolina, having by
resolution determined to mortgage I
its property, real and personal, for |
the sum of seven thousand dollars,
meeting of the Stockholders ni
the said corporation is hereby call
ed to meet at the ofiice of said cor
poration at the said Mill on Monday,
ne twenty-third (23rd) day of No
vember, 1 908, at 10 o'clock a. m..
to consider such resolution and to
determine whether the said corp ?
ration shall mortgage its property,
real and personal, for said sum of
seven thousand dollars.
F. A. ADDEN, President,
Attractive Farm for Sale.
297 acres of land in high state of
cultivation, well terraced, tile drain
ed and highly fertilized. Has been
composted for 12 years. Almost
entire tract under fence. Good pas-1
ture. All but 40 acres in high sta'e
of cultivation. 200 acres entirely
clear of stumps. Plenty of fire
wood.
Situated on public road. Price
low. Apply to
J. B. TRAWICK,
Cope. S. C.
Notice to the Public.
All hunting, fishing, trespassing,I
stock running at la reg, and any en
tering on my lands In Zion Town
ship, in any manner whatsoever, .s
hereby strictly forbidden. And peo
ple are warned that if they do not
comply with this notice, that they
will be prosecuted to the extent of
the law.
ll-3-4t MRS. E. M. SMOAK
amony which any household remedy
nony of those who have used it It
less to discuss Peruna from a theo
nt It is what Peruna will do, not
say about it, that constitutes evi
le housewives of the United States |
what Peruna will do. They have f
it - They have realized its benefit |
the family. They are the ones that
ire competent to speak of. it
Self-appointed critics know noth
V ing of it whatever.
Peruna Their Family Medicine.
Mrs. Anna C. Hyde, 712 E. Yamhill
street, Portland, Oregon, Vice President
Literary and Educational Organization,
of New Hampshire, writes:
"I am pleased to endorse Peruna as an.
all-round good family medicine, and
one that is safe to give children. I give
it to mine at the least suggestion of a,
cold, and take it myself to build up my
strength and nerves. ?<
"My sister, who 1b living with me,
uses Peruna, too, and she is loud in itat
praises.
"Your medicine is certainly worthy
of praise." j)
Backache, Headache. j;
Mrs. Tressie Nelson, 609 N. Fifth Ave.,,
Nashville, Tenn., writes:
"As Peruna has done me a world of*
good, I feel in duty bound to tell of it, in.
hopes that it may meet the eye of some*
woman who has suffered as I did. ?
"For five years I really did n jt kripwi
what a perfectly well day was, and if l!
did not have headache, I had backache-'
or a pain somewhere and really life was.
not worth the* effort I made to keep*
going.
"A good friend advised me to use
Poruna and I was glad to try anything,
and I am very pleased to say that six
bottles made a new woman of me and I
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again."
Catarrh of Bowels. (
Mrs. Maggie Dur bin, 1332 North street*
Little Bock, Ark., writes:
"I was troubled for five years with a.
chronic disease. I tried everything L
heard of, but nothing did me any good..
Some doctors said my trouble was ca
tarrh of the bowels, and some said con
sumption of the bowels. One doctor
said he could cure me. 1 took his medi
cine two months, but it did me no good*.
? "A friend of mine advised me to try
Peruna and I did bo. After I had taken,
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me sound and well.
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OUR STORE IS CROWDED
WITH GOODS. OUR CUS^
TOME RS ARE INCREAS- j
ING IN NUMBERS. WON'T'
YOU JOIN THE CROWD .
OF MONEY SAVERS? ::
Granulated Sugar 19 lbs.
for.$1.00
Raw Coffee, pe** pound 8c,
10c and.12c
Fine Roasted Coffee, the
ii?c kind, 23c. Try it.
Fine Butter.30c
Fresh Saratoga Chips.
Fresh grown Coffee ?. .21c
NUTS?100 Pounds Fresh
Nuts for sale.
Paper shell Almonds . .18c
dumbo Pecans.18c
Jumbo Brazils.13c
New crop Figs, fancy. .18c
Potted Dates .10c
Seeded Raisins.Oc
Currents.Oc
Citron.18c
Maccaroni.9c
Fancy Cream Cheese. . . 17c
THESE ARE ONLY A
FEW OF MY BARGAINS.
LOOK FOR MORE NEXT
WEEK.
Sale of Personal Property.
We will soil on Thursday, Nov.
12, 1908, at the residence of the
late D. W. Crook, all of his personal
property, consisting of Horses, Mules,
Cattle, Hogs, Corn. Fodder, Hay,
Cotton Seed. Farm Implements, Ma
chinery, etc.
M. R. EVANS.
J. W. CROOK.
10-22-3 Administrators.