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Every Month mitesi Mrs. E: Eournier of Lake Charles, La., "I: used to suffer from headache, backache, side ache, pressing-down pains, and could hardly walk. At last I took Cardui, and now I feel good aL the time. It Will Help You J 25 Cardui is a medicine that has been found to act j upon the cause of most women's pains, strengthen ing the weakened womanly organs, that suffer be-j cause their work is too hard for them. It is not a pain "killer," but a true female remedy, composed of purely vegetable ingredients, perfectly harmless and recommended for all sick wo men, old or young. Try Cardui. Women's Relief. AT ALL DEUGr STORES SATISFACTION OE TOUE MONET BACK.' 232 and 234 King St., Charleston, S, C. THE LARGEST WHOLESALE &ND RETAIL MAIL ORDER HOUSE IN THE SOUTH. ^??m gm fjjj pj8ce Goujijj f0r Herchajits in Any Length at Wholesale Prim FASCINATING FALL AND WINTER WARM WEATHER UNDERWEAR. FABRICS. Gents' Heavy Cotton and WooJ 44-inch satin stripped Poplin, Mixed Vest and Drawers, valued black and all colors, yard $1.39. $1.25. Special each 98c. Gents' All Wool Vest and Drawers (natural color} each -$1.48. Ladies' Cotton and Wool Mixed heavy Ladies' Cotton Ribbed Vest and Drawers, light, medium and heavy weights, each 49c. 45- inch imported Filiet Voile, in blue, gray and brown, yard $1.25. 46- inch Satin Viola, black and all the new colors, yard $1.75. We .carry, a large assortment of Ribbed Vests, medium and Dress Goods in plain weaves and fan- weights, each 75c. cy mixtures, in all the newest colors, 12 l-2c. 15c, 25c, 39c, 48c up to $3.50 the yard. Special! Ladies' Taffeta Silk Waists black Ladleg. ? w we,ght snk and and colors, value $4.00, special each Wool Vegt and powers, each $1.00. f 3%00? FINEST DISPLAY OF LADIES'AND NEW WAIST STYLES. . MISSES' SUITS IN THE SOUTH Styles, Yes! . Ladies' strictly Tailored Suits, In All that is possible to put into a fancy mixtures, would sell easily at correctly made waist. But there is $|5.00, our price, suit $10.(TO. service, too, and lowness of price, \Ladles' and Misses' Tailor Made that, quality considered, is little Suits, in plain broadcloth and man-, short of astonishing and most pleas nish mixtures, Suits that would retail mg as well, easily at $20.00, our price, suiL $15\h0. New Taffeta Silk Waists in Black, At $25.00 and a ful1 1Ine ?* colors, each $6.00. W? have an assortment of Ladies' Ladieg, Lace WaIgt trimmed and Masses Suits in plain and fancy Iace and medall,ons ?2<50 ?3<00i stripped broadcloths, plain and fancy ^ up tQ $2g QQ Panamas and Herringbone stripes, . in all .the new colors. The largest Ladies' White Linen Waists, some assortment and the greatest values trimmed embroidered figures, others in the South, suit $25.00. plain tucked, $2.50 to $10.00. THE MONITOR SELF-HEATING SAD IRON. The Monitor is a perfect Self-Heat-fuel, saving many dollars in a year; Ing Sad Iron. .Generates its own heat can take your ironing to any room in the body of the iron. Alwnys hot, . ... ... _ . -? * ? , . . * . in the house or out on the porch if and you can regulate it to any tern- ^ perature desired. No firing up the J?n choosc?that which every woman range ?you heat the house. No has sighed for many times. . Can iron walking from the ironing table to the all day without the least uncomfor hot range to change irons and back tableness from the heat of the iron. again, therefore saving labor, work Can put it in your suit case or trunk that is most disagereable On a hot and take it along when traveling to summer day. Yiu can do an iron, prees the muse and wrinkles out of lag for the cost of about one cent for clothing, ribbons, etc. Orangeburg Hardware & Furniture Co. The E?isto Savings Bank, ORANGEBURG. 8. O. Capital.?100,000.60. Surplus. ?30.000.00. B. H. Moss, President. J. M. Oliver, Vice-President, P. S. Dibble, Vice-President. Wm. L. Glover, Cashier. DIRECTORS M. O. Dantzler, J. M. Oliver, W. R. Lowman, W. F. Fairey, B. H. Moss, T. C. Doyle, Sol. Kohn, J. W. Smoak. Money saved is money rnJtde, and the way to save is to deposit your Eoney in the savings department and draw interest on the first days of January, April, July and October at the rate of four per cent per annum. This bank's absolute safety is best attested by its capital stock, its surplus and by the character and standing: of its officers and board of directors. Money leaned on good stcurity. A GREAT ENDURANCE RACE. A Rccord-Breaklng Ride Along the Old Santa Pe Trail. When we come to talk about mod ern endurance races for sport or for pelf, the present riders can scarce ly hold a candle to P. X. Aubrey, who used to do some great stunts on the roof of a oroncho. In 1S50 he made a bet that he could cover the distance from Santa Fe, N.M., to In dependence, Mo., over the old trail in eight days. It is 765 miles be tween the two points as the freight caravans travelled It,, and by that route on a wager cf $l,??u Auorey was to ride. He succeeded in winning, making his destination, the Jones House ir. Independence, three hours before the , expiration of that time. During th r, his first ride he killed a number or n horses, the death of one when with in twenty-five miles of Counci. Grove, compelling him to walk tc that place, carrying his sadd'e on h s back where he obtained another ani mal. This feat of Aubrey was regarded as the greatest tide ever made .by j anyone in ancient or modern timer and he became the hero ol the in cipient bprder town, Independence, where he was feted and made the lion of the day. His fame spread throughout the entire West, includ ing California, where he was wel' known. Although people marvelled mucb at the wonderful endurance of the man and the remarkab'e t mo In which he had made the trip, still Au brey himself was not at all sati5?eH with it. He determined to break that record, and the following reason made another wager of $5,000 In gold that he would do it. He ac complished his record-breaking dash across tho plans in the marvel'ouE time of only five days and thirteen hour3. His objective point was the same hotel to which oe had ridden on h!s former trip. On this ride when he reached that hostelry he was perfect ly exhausted and In fainting condi tion, his horse quivering from head to foot and white with foam. Au brey was lifted from the bac!- of the animal by his friends and carried Into his room In the house, where he lay in a complet btupor tor two days. Six horses, which previous to starring irom Santa Fe had been stationed at distances varying from twenty-five tc fifty miles along the route fell dead under him, so terribly fast had he forced them on. He possessed' a beautiful mare, i^ellle, a favorite anmlal, noted for speed and endurance, but she expired at the end of the first 150 miles. On his last great trip he rode day and night, stopping only long enough to leap from his tired animal and spring on to a fresh one. He made more taan two hundred miles every twenty four hours, and all the sleep he took aggregated but three hours during the entire live days. Diet for Sleeplessness. Dr. William Stevens days that in somnia is not a disease itself, but the effect of an unhealthy condition or body or mind. When the causo is removed the Insomnia may be ex pected to disappear. Every physician has had stubborn cases of It which would not yield tc any treatment, and for which . a change of air or of scene may be necessary. But such cases as these should not occur, and do occur only when the sufferer has neglected pre cautions that should have been tak en wnen the trouble first made it self manifest. Insomnia results . from cause: which can be removed if attended to In Beason. The most common cause is found in the digestive organs? either unsuitable food causing som nla as a feature of indigestion, or in sufficient food causing the patient to be kept awake by hunger. There are few things which car. be unlrersally recommended as diet ior sleeplessness, since what will agree with one man will disagree with another. But two things which may almost always be recommended are lettuce and celery.?London Globe. On the Ocean Bottom. Sitting inside a submarine on the ocean boctom you won d be no more conscious of the enormous water pressure without than if you were going to sleep in your own bed. You might remain twenty-P. nr hours un der water without coming op, using only the natural air supplied by the boat without feeling the lr-ast un comfortable. If you wished, you might remain down four or five days, tapping the air tank, as you needed a fresh supply of air. In the mean time you would bunk over tr.e torpe does and torture yourself by le:t'ng your Imagination loos? to your heart's content., or you might read by electric light, or play cards or dominoes or checkers, the cook serv ing you with coffee or canned th ngs that can be heated on an electric fur nace.?St. Nicholas. Bee's Bod Points. , "I .have been, bearing of the busy bee until I am tired of It," says Drake Watson. "A bee works dur ing the Bummer and theu rests all winter axe a plarterer. And a bee has bad habits. Go into a vineyard and you will nnd bee drunkards around bursted grapes. The drunk ard be?3 Bip the juice until they be come full, and then fall to the ground and Bleep off their debauch; a drunk, ard bee knows enough not to go home with a jag. CASTOR IA Fo; Infants and Children. Die Kind You Have Always Bough! Bears Signat xxe of If a man is a good guosser and possesses the faculty of keeping his mouth shut he may be able to pose as a statesman. Tax Notice. Office of County Treasurer, Orangeburg, S. C. Tax duplicates will be open at the Court House for the collection of jTaxes from October 15th to the 31st 'day of December, 1908, as follows: State tax .5% mills County tax.3 " Road tax.1 " Constitutional school ._3 " Total .12% mills Special Taxes? Mills B'.D District No. 10.2 District No. 11 .2 District No. 12.2 District No. 13.2 District No. 18.4 2 District No 20.4 District No. 21. 2 District No. 22.2 District No. 23.'.. 2 District No. 23.*... .2 District No. 26.3 2 District No. 27.1 District No .28.3 District No. 33.3 District No. 34.3 3 District No. 36.4 2 District No. 37.2 . ' District No. 38.2 District No. 40.2 District No. 41. ..4 ? District No. 42.2 District No. 43.3 District No. 4 4.3 District No. 46.3 District No. 47.1 District No. 48.4 District No. 55.3 District No. 64.3 District No. 65.2 2 Disticrt No. _68.4 District No. 70.4 2 district No. 71.3 District No. 72.3 District No 74.4 District No. 75.2 District No. 78.3 District No. 83.3 Commutation Tax for the years 1909, payable from October 15th, '908, to 1st March, 1909. A. D. PAIR, Treasurer. Orangeburg Co., S. C. Oct. 1st, 1908. Notice to Trespassers. We, the undersigned, land owners In Zion Township, in the county of Orangeburg, in the State of South Carolina, hereby warn all persons not to trespass upon our lands. All hunting, fishing or any other form of trespassing prohibited. Any per son caught violating this notcie will be prosecuted to the full extent of the Ipw. Mrs. W. D. Autley. J. W. Mack, Mrs. T. M. Kennerlly, D. J. Hughes, A. B. Hughes, W. L. Mack, M. D., Mrs. H. A- Gibson, P. B. Sanders, E. Hughes, Mrs. J. M. Riley, A. E. Smoak, J. V. Brickie, B. W. Jeffcoat. W. T. Brickie.- 11-16-3 m* Notice to the Public. Hunting on our lands is strictly forbidden, WM. C. WOLFE, MARVIN B. HORGER, 11-20-4 LUCIUS B. WOLFE. Valuable Farm Lands for Sale. By virtue of the power in me vested and by consent of all inter ested, I offer for sale three valuable farms as follows: First. 185 acres situate in Aiken County, near Salley on the Orange burg County line. Adjoins lands of Henry Tyler, John Jordan, N. W. Salley, John Jordan and J. W. Joh 1 son. About two-horse farm, in cul tivation; balance woodland. Nice dwelling with barns, stables and ten ant houses. Good water. Place in good repair. Known as the "Hey ward Place." Perfectly healthy. Second. 150 acres also situat-: in Aiken County near the town of Salley on the Orangeburg County line. Known as J. J. Collum place. Adjoins lands of Orpha Baggot:. Deborah Baggott and Mrs. E. M. Durham, and being on Giddy Swamp. About two-horse farm in cultivation; balance woodland. Nice dwelling with outhouses, etc. Giood water and. place in good repair. Perfectly healthy. Third. 75 acres situate in Orange burg County known as the Jake Sal ley place in Rocky Grove township. Adjoins lands of Thomas Stansel!, C. F. Sailley and touches highwater mark of the old Salley Pond. About one horse faam cleared, and balance in woodland. Tenant hoKse with barn and stables. Place in good con dition. Good water and perfect./ healthy. These three places will be sold at the town of Salley, South Carolina, on the second day of December. 1908, at eleven o'clock a. m., at public auction to the highest bid der. Terms, cash and purchaser to pay for drawing papers. Further particulars furnished by addressing me at Manning, S. C, or Wolfe & berry, Orangeburg, S. C. CHARLES W. PICKERING. Nov. 17th, 1908. Notice to Creditors. All persons having claims against the estate of P. M. Weathers, de ceased, are hereby required to prove their respective demands, before the undersigned, on or before December 17, 1908, or be debarred payment. DELILAH WEATHERS, Executrix of the Last Will of P. M. Weathers, deceased. November IS, 1908. Notice of Discharge. On December 18, 1908, I will file with the Judge of Probate for Or angoburg County, S. C, my final ac count as executrix of the last wiil of P. M. Weathers, deceased; and will on that day ask for my final discharge as such executrix. DELILAH WEATHERS. November 18, 1908. More people ane taking Foley's Kidney Remedy every year. It i considered to be the most effective remedy for kidni?y and bladder trou bles that medical science can devise. Foley's Kidney Remedy corrects ir regularities, builds up worn out tis sues and restores lost vitality. 1* will maqie you feel well and look well. Lawman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. The first thing for a man to learn after marriage is not to do any of :he things he likes because they are not good form. Foley's Orino Laxative cures chronic constipation and stimulates the liver. Orino regulates the bow els so they will act naturally and you do not have to take purgatives continuously. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. The rule that works both ways ::s the exception. A Sure-enongh Knocker. J. C. Goodwin, of Reidsville, X. C, says: "Bucklen's Arnica Salve ;.s a sure-enough knocker for ulcer*.. A bad one came on my leg last sum mer, but that wonderful salve kuock ed it out in a few rounds. Not even a scar remained." Guaranteed for piles, sores, burns, etc. 25c at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.'s drug store. Some people will take anything in reach except good advice. "Had dyspepsia or indigestion for years. No appetite, and when I did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock 31ood Bitters cured me."?J. n. Walker, Sunbury. Ohio. Ever notice what a profound re spect a married man ha9 for his wife's husband? EHeasant, aure, easy, safe little liver Pills, are'SeWitt's Little Early Ris ers. They are easy to take and act gently. We sell and recommend them. For sale by A. C. Dukes, M. D. , and A. C. Doyle & Co. FOR SALE 1,500 acres highly improved farmlands with in 4 miles" of Orangeburg. New dwelling, barn and servant houses. Will sell as a whole or cut to! suit pur chaser. Terms reasonable. Only a small cash payment necessary. W. K. SEASE STERLING ' SILVERWARE Did yon know t ;?>???' can place before yo ' n rpy o*' dependable goods In ""rUDV Silverware? We do not t?ucr- c-/thing that we are not gl;?d fo '-"ova-* tee?and handle ??????. ? n.ir the output of the ' u?9W makers. Now, It onght to e th a good deal to yon tbi*. You need never b V*j about the probable quality r* 1 : th?rz in this line if you ^vne ~e for it?because we m*ii:*h 3 re* sponsibility, an'* >? "uivelr guarantee our Sten is "VYfT? ware. There may be bu~ t ^ uk Silverware ud cert ilr*3*^- br* you couldn't get tl e?- ?, at. matter how badly yon wnnreO them. H. Spahr &|Son. 4? W. Russell, Street. ORANGEBURG. 8. C. Wm. V. Izlar. J. Stokes Seile? Fire Insurance. IZLAR & SALLEY We repreHont the The Home Insurance Co. Liverpool and London and Globe German American Continental Northern Assurance Phoenix and Georgia Home. The Strongest Combination in the State, PRESGOTT'S Great Christmas Sale t read this ad unless you want to join the money savers. 1,009 pounds plain and fancy Cimdies. Lowney's Fine Chocolates ami Ron-Bons. Others get 50c, our price 33c to 40c per pound. Other grades 8c and upwards. A big supplly of Fresh Cakes and Crackers. 1,000 FOUNDS NUTS. Paper shell Almonds.18c lb. Fancy Grenoble Walnuts.... 18c lb. Fancy long Pecans.18c lb. Jumbo Brazils .15c lb. RAISINS?15c pounds, 2 pouw's 25c. (3rd invoice.) Seeded Raisins 9c pkg. Currents ffc pkg. Citron 18c. Mincemeat 15c. Preserves, Jams and Jellies. ARRIVING AND TO ARRIVE. 100 bunches line Bananas. 50 barrels Apples, 50 boxes Or anges. Also Grapes Lemons, Co coanuts, Cabbage. FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES. Rest stock on hand over carried. 50 boxes fine cream cheese, 17c, Fresh invoice of that fine Batter that has given such universal sat isfaction, 30c lb. Best Hams 14i?jc to 15c. Best Granulated Sugar If) pounds for 1.00. Other grades in this line at cut prices. ' CROCKERY. Glass Lamps, 25 to 50 per cent off the regular prices. SHOES AND LEATHER. My stock of Saves at cost to close ont this line. Leather at jobbers' prices. I will have for sale one million Island Cabbage Plants, all varieties, $1.00 to $1.50 per thousand, accord ing to quality. C. W. Prescott, PHONE 153. ORANGEBURG, S. C. To the many who patronized the Big ! Bargain Sale I know you found everything as represented and are pleased. I wish to say I will be found at the same old stand with a new and up-to-date line of Dry [Goods, Clothing, Shoes and Hats, in fact everything that is to be found at a first class Dry Goods Store. Yours a little cheaper than any other merchant. Of Ail Kinds on k You eaa Kava ill ihe Uexilca you ( ???d by our plto. Writ: (er t^at beiciilully il'aalratatj aas* daaoriptrra bo?k. "A Book Sioro In your home." Ii la free. Wri'.a '?dar. W, guarantao ?m il> aod raluo. Oar price, 'he lowt.i. Write for catalog. It ia free. Tka !?7jo3i mail order Boot beule ia tbe world. 48 yaara ia buaiaaaa. D?t TD 71 THE FRAKKLIN-TURNtR CO., 65-71 Ivy St? Atlanta, Ga