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'SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONET BACK.' 232 and 234 King St., Charleston, S. C. THE LARGEST WHOLESALE ?NB RETAIL MAIL ORDER H0?SE IN THE SOUTH. ,fe Cut Fine Piece Goods for tfaiaats in Any Leist! at faolesale Prices. FASCINATING FALL AND WINTER FABRICS. 44- inch satin stripped Poplin, black and all colors, yard $1.39. 45- inch imported Fillet Voile, in blue, gray and brown, yard $1.35. 46- inch Satin Viola, black and all the new color?, yard $1.75. We carry a large assortment of Dress Goods in plain weaves and fan 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 and colors, value $4.00, special each $3.00. FINEST DISPLAY OF LADIES' AND . MISSES' SUITS IN THE SOUTH Ladies' strictly Tailored Suits, in. fancy mixtures, would sell easily at $25.00, our price, suit $10.0*0. Ladies' and Misses' Tailor Made Suits, in plain broadcloth and man nish mixtures, Suits that would retail easily at $20.00, our price, suit $15.00. At $23.00 We have an assortment of Ladle*' and Misses' Suits in plain and fancy stripped broadcloths, plain and fancy Panamas and Herringbone stripes, In all the new colors. The largest assortment and the greatest values in the South, suit $25.00. WARM WEATHER UNDERWEAR. Gents' Heavy Cotton and Wool Mixed Vest and Drawers, valued $1.25. Special each 98c. Gents' All Wool Vest and Drawers (natural color) each $1.48. Ladies' Cotton and Wool Mixed Ribbed Vests, medium and heavy weights, each 75c. Ladies' Cotton Ribbed Vest and Drawers, light, medium and heavy weights, each 49c. Ladles' light weight Silk and Wool Vest and Drawers, each $1.00. NEW WAIST STYLES. Styles, Yes! All that is possible to put into a correctly made waist. But there is service, too, and lowness of price, that, quality considered, is little short of astonishing and most pleas ing as well. New Taffeta Silk Waists in Black, and a full line of colors, each $6.00. Ladies' Lace Waists, trimmed witb lace and medallions, $2.50, $3.00. $3.75, up to $25.00. Ladies' White Linen Waists, some trimmed embroidered figures, others plain tucked, $2.50 to $10.00. McKay Stalk Cutter WHEELS EXTRA STRONG WIDE FLAT RIMS, FLANGED HUBS WITH MOVABLE BOXES IN HUBS SO NEW ONES CAN BE INSERT ED. The cylinder has 8 fine steel blades three inches wide, two feet long, one inch bevel, blades eight apart. .Axle docs not pass through cylinder for vines, hay, etc., to w ap around, but bus steel nibs cast in to the outside of the nanges. Boxes to these have oil holes, and cup ped on inside to keep out dirt. Cuts to ground greener stalks t'iau any other cutter. Everyone guaranteed satisfactory or money i-efunded. SOLD ONLY BY PIKE'S Special Bargains for Ten Days. BEST DRESS GINGHAMS.4 cents. .$1.23 BED SPREADS.98 cents. $1.25 COMFORTS.98 cents. LADIES BLACK HOSE.5 cents. FANCY .5 cents. HANDKERCHIEFS.2}$ cents. HAIR PINS.1 cent. CLOTHES PIN8.1 cent. ALL CLOAKS AT.New York Prices. MILLINERY. WE WILL CLOSE OUT ALL OUR MILLINERY RE GARDLESS OF COST. THESE GOODS MUST GOAT ANY SACRIFICE. LIVERPOOL SALT. Received One Car Load Imported Liverpool Salt. E. N. SC0VILL THE THANKSGIVING TABLE. How to Make a Feast For the Eye as Well as the Palate. As Thanksgiving is a national cus tom it becomes us to treat it hand somely and make it not only a feast to the palate, but to the eye. Nothing can do this so well as the adornment of the table with flower and leaf and vine, making its appearance as charm ing to the view as its aroma is to the appetite, says the Delineator. If you haven't a brilliant little scar let poinsettia for the center of the ta ble now is the time and place for the dish of ferns you brought in some time ago from the wet places before the frost had touched them to wither ed gold and for a wreathlike flat ar rangement about it on the snowy cloth of the small leaves of the whortleber ry (pressed immediately after pluck ing), with all its rich tints of orange and carmine yet uufaded. If, how ever, you are so fortunate as to have an akebia vine anywhere on the prem ises you can have the preferable living green. This is a Japanese hardy vine, acclimated over here for perhaps* a century, whose curious flowers of a reddish purple, male and female in one pendulous cluster, belong to the heats of summer, but whose small leaves are green and delicate even In midwinter. But If you have gathered none of these things you can purchase u little pot of maidenhair fern and can lay the sprays around the centerpiece and up and down the table just before the guests nre seated, as they shrivel so soon. You can hardly have a prettier effect than this in Its pure green and white contrast, unless there is added to It a tiny boutonniere at every place, made only of a single bud, together with a leaf of the rose geranium or lemon verbena filched from those pro vided for the finger bowls. At such a table one dines without feeling as If he were satisfying only the material tastes. How to Make a Room Look Larger. To increase the apparent size of a room there Is nothing better than the Judicious use of mirrors. Suppose that you have a glass about five feet high and two wide, In a wooden frame, you may employ It most decoratlvely In a sitting room. Mount it about a couple of feet from the floor and arrange In front of It a row of ferns, palms or other foliage plants, concealing the pots with a handsome box filled at the top with fresh moss. The mirror should be placed either where It will reflect the view from the window or else opposite the entrance of the room, so that when the door is opened one may see the hall or pas sage beyond reflected in it Of course the room will not be any larger really, but the fact that it will appear so Is a great point for. as a friend of my own snys, "If we cannot have a pleasant reality at least let us have a pleasant illusion." I know one house where the dining room is long and dark, and the only window gives a very insufficient light Here an Immense improvement was effected by placing a good mirror over the sideboard at the end of the room opposite the window. This reflected the llerht and the land scape seen from the window, with the result that one was almost deluded into the belief that the room had two windows, and one certainly was not conscious of the want of an outlet. How to Make Boiled Apple Pudding. Haifa loaf of breadcrumbs, to which add a little salt. Pare, core and cut into thin slices two greening apples, four ounces of chopped suet, half a cupful of boiling water sufficient to moisten the mixture. Rub a little salt on the Inside of the mold to make It smooth. Pack the mixture firmly as tightly a-' possible into the mold. Fas ten the lid down securely and plaee In a boiler with only sufficient water in the bottom to make a steam. Let it boil this way for one hour, turn out and eat with the following sauce: One cup of granulated sugar, quarter of a cup of water. Put together on the fire and allow to melt quickly, to which add the rind of half a lemon chopped fine, not frrated. One minute after thft sirup begins to boll (kept any longer It turns to candy) remove it and add the juice of half a lemon. Serve hot How to Mark Your Linen. The most satisfactory method of marking clothes that go to the laundry Is with a rubber stamp bearing your name. Each separate article may thus be stamped with the least possible trouble, and the result will be a legible marking. The name need not be put In a conspicuous place. In fact. It might be tucked away In some odd corner where it will not show, yet Ls sure proof of ownership. The stamp is Inexpensive, and one may buy a pad and Indelible Ink at small cost It is & very economical Idea. How to Clean a Sewing Machine. To keep a sewing machine In good condition it needs an occasional ciean lng with kerosene. Saturate the ma chine with kerosene and then run the machine briskly for several minutes without thread, of course. This will loosen all old oil and dust which should be wiped away with a soft cloth until the machine Is perfectly clean. Then oil it with machine oil. How to Make Pumpkin Pic. Bofl and press through a sieve n quart of pumpkin. Add two quarts of rich milk. Sweeten it to taste, adding spice and a little nutmeg. A piece of butter the slae of an egg may be added while the pumpkin is still hot Lost add six eggs well beaten and pour the mixture into the prepared crust and bake rather slowly. This will make two large plea. THE BANK OF SPRINGFIELD. Officers. L. M. Mims, President; Jno. McB. Bean, V. P.; J. B. Smith, Cashier; Edith Phillips, Asst. Directors. L. M. Mlms. Jno. Bean, Joe. A. Berry, L. B. Fulmer. W. P. Hut to. J. W. Jumper, H. A. Odom, T. L. Gleaton. O. C. Salley All business Intrusted to ub re ceives careful, official attention. Leave your Surplus funds with ns at four per cent interest Capital.....830,000.00 Undivided Profits.. :.> . 12,000.00 A Requisite for Egg Shells. ? As hens' require carbonate and phosphate of lime for their shells, ft must be supplied In unstinted quantities and in the most conve nient manner for them to pick up and swallow. One of rhe best ways of supplying is to keep old plaster ing, broken oyster shells or fresh hones pounded fine where they can help themselves. ? A Night Rider's Raid. The worst night riders are calo mel, croton oil or aloes pills. They raid your bed to rob you of rest. Not so with Dr. King's New Life Pills. They never distress or incon venience the system, curing Colds Headache, Constipation, Malaria, 25c at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. The retirement of James P. Good rich from the chairmanship of ths Republican State committee in In diana markes the passing of the old Fairbanks Republican machine hi that State. ^Simple Remedy for Da Grippe. Racking la grippe cough that may develop into pneumonia over nigh' are quietly cured by Foley's Honey and Tar. The sore and inflamed lung-; are ihealdd and strengthened. Take only Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellw package. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. The largest band'saw in the world is in use in a mill at Hoaquim, Wash. It is 65 feet long by 20 inches wide and has iee^h .'5 inches apart. There r?si no case on record of a cough, cold or la grippe developing into pneumonia aflter Foley's Honey and Tar has been (taken, as it cures the most obstinate deep seated coughs and colds. Why take auy ining else. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. We will send Tue * im es and Democrat two months fcr 25 cents on a trial subscription. Try it two months and see how much better it is to get the news fresh. DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills are unequaled In cases of weak back, back ache, inflammation of the blad der, rheumatism pains, and ail urinary disorders. They are antisep tic and act promptly. Every case of kidney or bladder trouble should be attended to at once, and the aches In the back, rheumatic pains, uri nary disorders, etc., are warning signs. Don't delay, for delays are dangerous. Get DeWitt's Kidney and Bla?der Pills. Regular size 50c. Sold by A.C. Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle & Co. The department of agriculture has demonstrated that paper can be made, from cornstalks, in much the same manner as from wood pulp, and at a cost of less than half, it is claimed, when the machinery has been perfected. If you will take Foley's Orino Lax ative until the bowels become regu lar you will not have to take purga tives constantly, as Foley's Orino and Lxativa positively cures chron ic constipation and sluggish liver. Pleasant to take. Lowman Drug Co.. A. C. Dukes. The Times and Democrat is now published three times a week. All for one dollar and fifty cents per annum. Never say die! Try L. L. L. Buy Lowman'8 Liver Lifters. Take Lowman's Liver Lifters. Use Lowman's Liver Lifters. Try Lowman's Liver Lifters. Harris Llthla Water. For sal* b? Lowman & Lowman. By placing small cylinders contain ing compressed carbon dioxide, with fuse plugs melting at 200 degrees, In coal bunkers spontaneous combus tion, it is said, will be prevented. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup not only heals irritation and allays in flammation, thereby stopping the cough, but it moves the bowels gent iy and in that way drives the cold from the system. Contains no opi ates. It is pleasant to take, and children especially like the taste, so nearly like maple sugar. Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle & Co. One of the habits a man acquires by being married is lying to his friends downtown about a.ll the (good things his wife gives him to eat at home so that he can't stand the ones in the expensive restaurant any more. Tortured on a Horse. "For ten years I couldn't ride a horse without being In torture from piles," writes L. S. Napier, of Rug less, Ky., "when all doctors and oth er remedies failed. Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured me." Infallible lor Piles, Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Boiles Fever-Sores, Eczema, Salt Rheum Corns. 25c. Guaranteed by J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. By carefully lacquering silverware with banana oil, applied with a cam el's hair brush immediately after cleaning, it may be kept, bright for several months. Pleasant, sure, easy, safe little liver I:ills, are DeWitt'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. There's no way a man can help his wife to enjoy herself when she is having a good cry as to tell hei to go right on doing it. "Had dyspepsia or indigestion for years. No appetite, and when I did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me."?J. it. Walker. Sunbury. Ohio. DOING THE IK DUTY. Scores of Orangeourg Readers Are Learning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kidneys' duty. When they fail to do this the kid neys are sick. Backache and many kidney ills follow; Urinary troubles, diabetes. Doan's Kidney Pills cure them all. Orangeburg people endorse our claim. J. L. Phillips, Farmer, 85 Sellers Ave., Orangeburg, S. C., says: "On several occasions I have used Doan's Kidney Pills procured from Dr. J. G. Wannamaker's drug store and they have always given entire satis faction." For sale by all dealers. Price 5G cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the Unit ed States. Remember the name?Doan's? and take no other. In a once famouns tea district of India the cultivation of rubber had driven the production of the former to second place, nearly 17,000 acres being devoted to rubber plantations. The Jndge Uses Forcible Language. Judge W. B. Simmons of Fincas tle, Va., told the reporter that L. & M. Paint was usuea on his residence in 1882, 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 good. The Judge will now always use L. & 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 16 years. Actual cost of L. & M. about $1.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. made to churches. Sold by J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. Orangeburg. The moving picture business ha? been gobbled up by a trust and you may look for a raise in the pric^ of admission as soon as they get matters fixed up. Life i00,000 Years Ago. Scientists have found in a, cave in Switzerland bones of men, who lived 100,000 years ago, when life was in constant .danger from wild beast. Today the danger, as shown by A. W. Brown of Alexander, Me., is largely from deadly disease. "If it had not been for Dr. King's New Discovery, which cured me, I could not have lived," he writes, "suffer ing as I did fro ma severe lung trouble and stubborn cough." To cure Sore Lungs, Colds, obstinate Coughs and prevent Peneumonia, its the best medicine on earth. 50c and $1.00. Guaranteed by J. nj. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. Trial bottle free. A rumor is current in Washing ton to the effect that David C. Ow ens, postmaster of Milwaukee, is likely to be appointed first assistant postmaster-general, under Frank H. Hitchcock. Mr. Owen and Mr. Hitchcock are intimate friends. A Religious Author's Statement. For several years I was afflinted with kidney trouble and last winter I was suddenly stricken with a se vere pain in my kidneys and was confined to bed eight days unable to get up without assistance. My uriue contained a thick white sediment and I passed same frequently day and night. I conynenced taking Foley's Kidney Remedy, and the pain Igradually abated and finally ceased and my urine became normal. I cheerfully recommend Foley's Kid ney Remedy. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. The largest electr.c advertising sign in the world is at Jersev City. N. J. It is 200 by 50 feet, with let ters 20 feet high, and uses 3,000 in candescent lamps. Sees Mother Grow Young. "It would be hard to overstate the wonderful change in my mother since she began to use Electric Bit ters," writes Mrs. W. L. Gilpatrick of Danforth, Me. "Although past 70 she seems really to bei growing young again. She suffered untold misery from dyspepsia for 20 years. At last she could neither eat , drink nor sleep. Doctors gave her up and all remedies failed till Electric Bit ters worked such wonderful wonders for her health." They invigorate all vital organs, cure Liver and Kidney troubles, induce sleep, impart strength and appetite. Only 50c at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. Experiments in California with electric induction furnaces prove that only one-third as much coke is required to smelt iron as with a blast furnace. Many little lives have been saved by Foley's Honey and Tar, for coughs, colds, croupB and whoming cough. It is the only safe remedy for infants and children as it con tains no opiat*s or other rarcotic drugs, .?nd child;en like Foley's Hon ey and Tar. Car. ful mothers keep a bottl e in the house. Re fuse substitutes. Lowman Drug Co.. A. C. Dni.es. The gum used on United States postage stamps is made from sweet potatoes, as it is considered the least harmful of any that is suitable for that purpose. You would no' delay taking Fol ey's Kidney Remedy at th- first sign of kidney or bladder trouble il you realized that negbtt might re sult in Bright's disease or dmi.??;<?* Foley's Kidnej Remedy corrects Ir regul ii-itics and c.:re? all kidn- y h d bladder disorder?. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. D'ikea. We Are Offering Imported Thomas Phosphate Powder BASIC SLAG EXTRA HIGH GRADE AT LOWEST PRICES. Guaranteed Analysis: Total Phosphoric Acid - - 20 per cent. Free Lime - - - 35 to 50 per cent. WRITE FOR INFORMATION AND PRICES TO PERUVIAN GUANO CORPORATION, IMPORTERS, CHARIvESTON, @. O. 0 *> * ? * THE PEOPLE S BANK ORAXGFSBl'RG, S. O. ?A Bank For AJJ "the People." CAPITAL STOCK.930,000.00 SURPLUS.20,000.00 STOCKHOLDERS FA ABI LITY.80,000.00 ?> ?? Q? O ? o ? 0 0 * * 0 o ? o ? PROTECTION* TO DE POSITORS .$30,000.00 D. O. Herbert.President B. F. Smckenfnss.. . .Vice-President H. C. Wannamaker.Cashier W. M. Richardson.... Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS. W. C. Crnm A. M. Salle? Abial Lathrop W. L. Glaze G. L. Salley Robt. E. Copes D. O. Herbert B. F. Muckenfuss H. C. Wannamaker. Interest paid in Savings Department. s>?4x>c???o??eoea?eje??o?o?e; I FIRE and TGfiNADO 1 INSURANCE!!; City and Country Risks ALSO SURETY BONDS. OLD LINE COMPANIES. APPLY TO i E. PHONE NO. 7. o oo ooooooco coooocoo oooc 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 l?w. 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. ll-lG-Sm* "50 TO 75 THOROUGHBRED BUFF ORPHINGTONS, PULLETS AND COCKERELS Must be sold to make room. Great Fall and Winter Layers when the price of eggs is high. Fresh Eggs for setting, $2.00 per 15. Pullets and Hens $1.50 np. Cockerels and Corks $2.50 up. Apply at once, before they all go, to N. H. BULL 146 E EUSSELL STREET, Orangebusg, S. 0. CABBAGE PLANTS. 2,000,000 or more at Clark's Seed Store. CLARK'S SEED STORE.