University of South Carolina Libraries
SHIPS JUST LIKE A VILLAGE. Strange Little Worlds Are the South. Pacific Ocean Steamers. In the imorning (how strange at sea) I was awakened by the bleating of a lamb and by a lusty cockcrow. The Royal Mail steamers of the west coast are a strange little world. Built for an ocean where storms are unknown. they combine certain comforts not to be found on much more pretentious boats. Their saloons and cabins are excep tionally large and open directly upon the promenade decks that stretch the entfre length of the ship, there being, properly speaking. no steerage and no second class. The natives and others who cannot afford the first class ticket travel In the "cublerta," as it is balldd, a deck at the stern roofed vith canvas, but otherwise open, where in pictur esque confust6n, surrounded -by bags and bundles, they loll in hammocks or lie wrapped in shawls. Toward this deck the hencoop faces -- big two story affair, partly filled with ripening fruits, bananas, oranges and the like and partly with chickens, ducks and other forlorn looking fowl, fattening for the table. Between decks stand your -beef and mutton on the hoof, gazing mournfully up at you as you look down the hatchways. Upon this homelike boat, quiet and contented, with no unseemly hurry. you meander down the coast at ten knots. The air- is soft as a caress. and for at least eight months of the year the sea is as placid as a mountain lake. a glassy mirror reflecting- an azure sky.,-Ernest Piexotto in Scrib ner's Magazine. POCKETS VERSUS HAND BAGS. Real Reason. of the Subjection of Wo. man to Man. Civilized -man finds it difmcult to make his way through life without' a dozen pockets. -The ordinary walking suit has 1ftsen. Civilized woman makes her way through life without goekets, depending on a single bag carried in the hand. The professional hnmorists -have never tired of com menting on woman's pocketless condi tion. but It is really no laugh!sg mat ter. Here is a sex difference which is something 'more thaq fashion. which goes to the very heart of the subjec tion of woman to man. If we accept Spencer's definition of the evolution -,a87 process as consisting in progress from .an indefinite homegenelty to a deAnite heterogeneity the superior po sitlen of man is at once established. His fifteen diversified pockets, each al 'located to a separate use-watch, cigar case, pocketknife, purse, newspaper aid package of garden seeds-need only be contrasted with the single reticule in which, the female of the spe ces stores aWay an unco-ordinated - mass of handkerchiefs, toilet articles, F car fare, press clippings, telephone ad -dresses, dress goods samples, confec-., tionery, memoranda and tradesmen's bills that have -long been settled by cheek. Strong in his pockets, maa walks the,esith free in the play of his upper limbs, whereas wtnian sacrifices the use of her right arm before venturing out in a world of street cars, motor cars, moving staircases, elevators and ti'eket booths.-New York Post. -e Einp and Biddr Sight Wouldn't itbef Linen you could use at the same time ki saved money when: offer you the opporta need and save mone: SThis week all Linen SSpecially Redi Brown Dress Linen, full yard Linen, regular 35c. quality week to .....,. ....... 36 inch Dress Linen, Light B Tan, Dark Brown, Etc., a medium weight, regular 353 ity, this week...... .... S-27 inch Colored Dress Line> 8 . regular 25c. quality, this we 45-inch Round Thread Emb regular 75c. quality, this w 90-inch Linen Sheeting, all p 8 width, the best quality, thi~ S72-inch Table Liuen, all pure width, regular $1. and $1. week .......... ...... IStock Specially l terLnR White and Colored 8 fromiOc- yard to 2 Sthing in Linen you have it, and will st .the purcase. 8 "All Specia Prices 8 Th' *""r 8J.H.* Surprising Cure of Stomach Trouble. Whien you have trouble with your stomach or chronic constipation. don't imagine that your case is beyond help just because your doctor fails to give relief. Mrs. G. Stengle, Plainfield, N. J., writes, "For over a month past I have been troubled with my stomach. Ever thing I ate upset it terribly. One of Chamberlain's advertising booklets came to me. After reading a few of the letters from people who had been cured by Chamberlain's Tablets, I decided tor try theni. I have taken nearly three fourths of a package of them and can now eat almost everytning that I want." For sale by all dealers. Plenty of Room. She-A woman has a greater capacity for learning than a man. He-Yes; a woman Is never so full of gossip that she can't hold more.-Philadelphia Record. Good Reason. "Hello, Spraddles?' "Hello, Borom. I haven't seen you for a week." - "No; I've been seeing you first." Birmingham Age-Herald. If I am building a mountain and stop before the last basketful of earth is placed on the summit I have failed. Confucius. For Cuts, Burns and Bruises. In every home theresbould be a Pox )f Bucklen's Arnica Salve, ready to ap- I ly in every case of burns, cuts, wounds >r scalds. J. H. Polanco, Delvalle. ex., R No.2, writes: "Bucklen's Ar Aica Salve saved my little girl's cut bot. No one believed it could be cur d1." The world's best salve. Only 25c. lecommenided by all druggists. Use the Toothbrush. The regular use of the toothbrush is necessary not only to remove the acid Incrustations that eat holes in the teeth. but also to sweep away the germs of many terrible diseases. These fnd the necks of the teeth an ideal nesting place. They multiply a aitillion fold in a few hours unless washed away; then they go down the throat. enter tbe fungs. the stomach: the eusta chian tubes and. the passages behind the nose. There they cause consump tion. diphtheria, earache. catarrb. bron chidis, tonslitis-in fact. it would be difficult to say with certainty what dis eases may not arise from the germs that have grown upon the teeth. It is now considered almost certain that many cases of appendicitis have this as their origu. Hence there is no process of the toilet so important as that of brushing the teeth.-New York World. The Best Medicine in the World. "My little girl had dysentery very ad. I thought she wonld die. Chan erlain's Colic, Cholerr. and Diarrhoea Jemedy cured her, and I can truthfully ay that I think it is the best medicine a the world," writes Mrs. William Or ,is, Clare, Mifk. For sale by all dealers. The Hottest Manes. it is said that the hotftst mines In the world are those of the famous Comstock lode. On the lower levels the heet is so great tifat the -men can not work over ten or fineen minutes at . time. Every known means of miti gating the heat has been tried in vain. Ice melts before it reaches the bottom f the shafte. e, to have all'the to advantage and aow that you had you bought it ? We unity to buy all you y on your purchase. s in our stock iied in Price. g -wide, all pure ', reduced this . . . . . . . . . . 2 2 1 -2 c . y a r d lue, Dark Blue, 1 pure Linen, .and 40c. qual ............. 25c. yard, us, also white, ek.......... 62-3c. yard iroidery Linen, eek... ........ 4c, yard. ure Linen, full - week at...... 85c. yard. Linen a'nd full 25 quality, this tsdLinenes ing educed this week. @ ranging in price 5. yard. Most any could ask for we we you money on are Strictly Cash." SReliable. ~igby. MAKING A CHAIN. B The Big Ones and the Heavy Ca-, bles Are of Wrought Iron. is is SOFT STEEL FOR SMALL ONES. f ei. it The Larger Sizes Are All Hand Forged, is and In This. Work the Metal Must th Be of Precisely the Right Heat and i the Blows Quick and Sure. tb PC The great bulk of chains. including et all cable and mooring chains. are sold ci; by the pound. The price ranges from 3% to 12 cents a pound. according to the size, material and quality. All cables and other very heavy chains are made of wrought iron, and there are made wrought iron chains of all sizes down to and including chains T of material a quarter of an inch in Th diameter, but nowadays most of the E: chain used in cornparatively smaller th sizes is made of soft steel, such chain being made in sizes ranging by six teenths from three-sixteenths of an inch to an inch and a quarter. When the size of a chain is referred to by those familiar with chains, It always means :not the link, but the t material used in it Thus a one inch chain would be' made of one inch steel I or iron. The completed link would be about five or six times as long and about three and a half times a'S wide across as the thickness of the material t of which it was made. I In other days all chains was hand made. but the modern chain Is of soft' steel and machine made. .There is -d taken along bar of steel. which is bent di cold around a mandril that is or, in shape. The bar is thus bent into what looks like a spiral spring witb its coils not round. but oblong. This spiral is E cut up cold in a cutting machine, which 01 cuts It into as many parts as there are coils, each of these being the material ty for a link, and af the same time the s machine spreads each of these sections apart a little at the opening and cuts 0f on each of the two free ends a long e scarf or bevel and bends the ends over within the opening. This bent piece of steel is now in w shape, roughly speaking, like a letter U with rather long arms and with its two ends bent over inward. It needs only to have those scarved ends weld ed together to make it a link of chain. T The chainmaker sits at a foot oper ated power hammer. with a forge be side him. in which he heats the open g links. at He takes from the fire a link suitably a heated apd hooks it into the chain as in far as completed and then pinches the w open ends of the new link together un der the hammer, and wit,h three or four quick blows he welds the link to- a, gether. When he takes a hot link tt from the fire fe puts a cold one in, and E so he continues to work. It is alto gether a quick and more economical e process of manufacture than hand forging, but it has not yet been adapt- d ed to chains of the larger sizes. There are wrought iron chains of some sizes that are machine made, but to all wrought chains of material above an inch and'a quarter in dIameter are band forged. Of whatever size the big chain Is to be the worfmen cut up the iron bars into straight lengths, each suitable to be made into a link. This length ofa Iron is heated, one end at a time. and as one after. the other the ends are ham- ' mered down by hand on an anvil to shape the scarves or bevels. Then this straight piece of heavy wrought iron with scarved ends is swaged into C link~ form. and if it isto be astud or - bar chain there is placed within 'the link before It is welded together thet stud or bar. This is a stout little bar of cast iron. -with its ends rounded in, concaved to fit the rounding surfaceb of the link iron, the stud being placed across the link Inside of it and mid-g way of Its length. Once in place and the link pinched together on its'ends the stud could niot be got out except by breaking It out with a sledge. Its purpose Is to pre- el vent the links from drawing together g at their sides and wedging under el heavy strains. In a stud chain there n Is a stud in every link. i With this stud In place and the link 01 beat to shape with the scarves over- et lapping, the link is again put In the o0 fire to be finally heated for the weld- rc Ing, which Is done by hand. It takes P a blacksmith to handle It and on big - chains two or three helpers striking with sledges to do the welding. The iron must be of precisely the right heat, and the blows must be quick ti and sure to complete the work perfect- al ly before the iron cools. Stud chaisr Is sometimes made of iron as small as five-eighths of an Inch In diameter. From that the Iron e used runs through various diameters p up to three Inches and more. A three I Inch chain makcs a tremendous cable, suitable for a five ton anchor-Har per's Weekly. Unlawful. I What the man spent for flowers and a candy before his wedding was quite b some.e But not a red afterward.I Accordingly the florists and confec tioners filed a bill in the federal court "This merger," they protested. "'is in restraint of trade."-Life. A Corn Cure.d Soak feet in warm water to which a et little borax and soda have been added. Repeat several days and corn will come out--ationatl Magazine. Have something to do. so-mething to love and somiething to hope for.- oi Thomas Chalmers. s To Prevent Blood Poisoning tpply at once the wonderful old reliable DR. P'ORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a sur gical dressing that relieves pain and heals at hie same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. $1.00. Petitio"' to the Czar., T In Ibussia n-r-e is a court or1 peti tions through whiich appeals. .are ad dressed to the emperor. The court was originally founded in the reign of van ly. in the sixtguth century. When Catherine the t.reatt ascended the throne she intended to receive all ppeals personally. but the task soon passed beyond lher powers. The Czar aul as a young ae tried to imitate Catherie's example. and he had a large yellow iron box attached to one of the groumd floor wvindows of the Winter palace at St. .Petersburg, into which petitions were dropped. The box was periodically openaed nud the contents submitted to the czar. This method of receiving pe titicus was alsm tund to be unworkable. The extent to which the subjects of the czar avail temselves of' tile court's pi v ilego may be gaithered from the fact that a~ many as G3,000 odd petitions. have been presented in ayear. , - a f~ PAUPER SNOBS OF. INDIA. eggars That Will Not Work Because They- Are Aristocrats. One-fourth of the Anglo-Indian popu tion in India is supported by charity. )r the Anglo-Indian thinks that work beneath him. and really at heart he a born snob. It isn't drunkenness bich .makes hin an object of charity, r there is comparatively little drunk Luess among the poor i:a India. Nor is the seasonal trades, as it sometimes with us, for work there is continuous e year round. Neither is it the mo tony of a dreary home or daily toil at drives him to drink and then to verty. Foi there'is no part of Cal tta where there are people of one so l grade, but the homes of the poor e interspersed with the rich. Ee is a pauper purely and simply be .use he'is an aristocrat. He has Eng h blood in his veins and he wants to e like the English. and the English India are the successful and the rich. 2ey have-their well appointed homes, eir servants and every luxury. The uglishfun who works with his hands. e men in the factories, the day labor s, the frontiersmen. the farmers are >t found in India. The beggar snob >es not know of their existence. He tows only the coolies and the Hindns. ho work with their hands, and he ill not be one of them. He wishes pattern his life after the English an whom he knows. He wants to Lve a servant -snd be waited on, and he cannot he will not work. To dig ith a shovel is a disgrace in his eyes id begging'is infinitely more respec ble. So the Anglo-Indian pauper is sup rted on a scale better than that of e'faithful workmen among the Hin is and coolies. and the burden of the tarity falls on the rich Eglish. The ealthy Hindus will take none of the .sponsibilities. They say that the agishman created this class and that t him falls the weight of support. There is another cause of this pover also. apart from this- strong false *ntiment. That is the insanitary con tions of life which cause the death the father of the household at an rly age. This reduces the family to Luperism at once, as the lines of rk open to the 4ng!o-Indian woman hich she will accept are practically me.-Chicago Tribune. INGENIOUS SUNDIALS. hey Were Quite Popular In Paris In the Eighteenth Century. Parisians have always been extreme devoted to sundials, and it is prob >le that the French capital pesusses greater number of these time indicat g devices -than any other city in the orld. Even in the eighteenth -century the indial was most popular in Paris, id fashion singled out for its choice e sundial of - the Palals Royale, very day at noon this was the center interest of an eager crowd. A writ of that period tells of a "great crowd the corner of tlie Palace Royale gar mn, standing motionless with their >ses in the air," each was waiting for son, having his watch in hand, ready set at 12 o'clock. When the Duke of Orleans was alter g the palace in 17S2 th'e Parisians ere much disturbed, thinking that Ley were to be deprived of their fa >ite sundial. But the duke not onl 'eserved the sundial, but added to I' little powder magazine, which was arranged that it exploded when the mlight fell upon it, thus notifying ev y one who heard the explosion that e hour of noon had arrived. Later Lnnon which was discharged by the n at noon took the place of the little wder magazine. Buffon arranged an ingenious dial it se botanical garden. A globe whicla spresented the earth was suspended 7 a hair. The hair. was burned rough by the sun at noon, and the tobe fell upon a Chinese gong.-St ouis Republic.' The Greatest Discovery. We were talking of the great discov les and wondering which was the eatest, and some of us suggested ectri .ty, wireless telegraphy, fiying achines and microbes and anaesthet s. One fell back on steam, but an :her-a reticent man usually-remark that the most surprising discoverl man was that this earth moves und the sun and Is not the most im rtant small holding in the universe. London Spectator. Began to Enjoy Himself. "He stayed so late that in despera on I brought out the graphophone bout..:30 and played 'Home, Sweet "Did ..at start him?" "Quite the contrary. When he learn 1 we had a graphophone he made me lay about every record we had." ouisville Courier-Journal. What She Had. Swabbs married a widow on being >d that she had an ocean of money. e afterward found she did not havE bank account at all. lie had only een told that she had a notion of mon , which he found out soon enough. ondon Telegraph. A Second Edison. Farmer-Yes. sir. That hired man of inc s one of the greatest inventors the century. City Boarder-YoI )n't say! What did he invent? Farm Rather Odd. "It's pretty exypensive to have one'L "tut it doesn't cost anything to keel 1e's own counse."-Boston Trans CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. he Kind You Have Always Bought eas the A Gerse Hint. Thi .n attribuitedl by thb '10k'4yn iav' to a boardV~in' hsou's oer of t h:t city. is ::nod enough ti I. :-a-.;-o ha:d tihe dloubil :'s~s ofl sto'.'s in p'ayim: lhis bill ani usiness ~aou't the~ tahk--c'ser'vice. On a rusim lhe sal p,'vishily to the land -Ys. NI r \w~cs." replied the land *.vpt-opty. 'It-s because there i G.nmh due on your board." ..imitatier3 of Fame: i' l l'rofessor Kight's reminiscence of Teinuysou it is related that on on occasion when the poet laureate wa, stopping it an iun in the island oi Skye the I adbrd was asked if he knev who Iad been staying In his house and on being informed that it was th4 poet Tennyson. he replied: "Lor'. to think o' that! And, sure, I thought he was shentleman." At Stirling some one asked the land lord of the house where the poet wan stopping: "Do you ken who you had wi' yo t'other uight?' "Naa. but he was a pleesant shentel man. "It was Tennyson. the poet." "And wba' may he be?" "Ob. -he is a writer o' verses sich a! ye see I' the papers!" "Noo, to think o' that! Jeest a poob lie writer, and I gi'ed him ma lbesl bedroom!" But the charms of Mrs. Tennyson her gracious manners. did not pass un noticed. for the landlord said. "Oh. sh( was an angel!" A Great MusTical.Library. - There Is no public library which con tains so many works of interest to stu dents of music as the one in Manches ter. England. says the Musical Courier Henry Watson, who spent a lifetime ir accumulating rare musical works and original scores, bequeathed the entir collection to the Manchester librar3 on the condition that musical students members of musical societies and al others Interested should be allowed free access toit. The Manchester 11 brary is very proud of the collectiot and continues to add to it. Among It, treasures is a volut of pieces foi viola da gamba. written by Euglist composers of the sixteenth century and the frst half of the seventeenth cen tury. and collected in 1650 for , wealthy amateur. Populai songs men tioned by Shakepeare are in thiL unique and most valuable volume. The King of All Laxatives. For const,ipation, headaches, indiges tion and dyspepsia, use Dr. King's Nev Life Pills. Paul Mathulka, of Buffalo N. Y.. says they are the "King.of a] laxatives. They are a blessing to a] my family and I always keep a box a home." Get a box and get well. Prici 25c. Recommended by all drugirists. The Kick of the Cook. During one of his first tours in th United States Paderewski enjoyed 1 dinner which was equal to anythin, he could have expected in one of thi best Parisian restaurants. He was si surprised and pleased that-he sent hi, thanks and compliments to the chef. A few years later. happening to be i the same city, he again went to tha restaurant. The meal he got was stil far above the average, but was not s, good as before. However, on the occe sion of a third visit he again tried th same place. The food was uninterest Ing from the beginning of the meal t the' end. He asked the head waiter whethe the former chef had left. He had no left, the waiter informed him. andk o being pressed for an explanation of th change in the quality of the meals, h said: "'If you had to play, night afte night. before an audience of barbarian who did not appreciate the best thing -in your performnce, would you coz tinue year after year to play as wel as you do now?"-Henry. T. Fink "Food and Flavor.". Causes of Stomach Troubles. Selientary habits, lack of out door ex ercise,' insuifficient mastication of food constipation, a torpid liver, worry an anxiety, overheating, partaking of foo and drink not suited to your age an occupation. Correct. your habits an take Chamberlain's Tablets and yo will soon be well again. For sale by a) dealers. Salt la !utter'. Thi'e :othion r!: r a: ''bIx.. t: s It" th dhsert ofbTer is rhlb-uloUts it' C:Mi5 for1 c'nlxigthe rhaurotis px'et " Euofeathri. con tixnttr by ith e addto: salt. bepIt doinot beten h et mti into tep renry T. Fusink'i co~eo the Flavoren" tie fr desr.Thereorm Tbourey ns. cu ofs denagring A mis berble wt Oudtio of ysayt. You'e alway eveide lug bease I keep. to et oT Fink TheWomrTrn.! Mr. Gnaggs-NoW, look here Mrs. Gnaggs-Not a word from you now! Come here and hook up m: dress! Mr. Gnaggs--Now, look here, Jennie If you mean to imply J'm a hookworn I'm darned if I stand it.-St. Louis Re public. _______ Unpardonable Offense. Visitor-Who is the long haired ofi cer? Police Chief-He was formerly musician, but changed his calling t benefit his health. Visitor - Is he good policeman? Police Chief - Gex erally. But the first day he was on th force he arrested a man for tryingt play Schubert's "Serenade" on a bag pipe.-Youngstownl Telegram. All His Own. "Does your iad find his sums hard? "Oh, no. The sums are easy enough but his results are too original to sul the teacher."-Fliegende Blatter. I began life with a sixpence and be ieve that a man's best capital Is hi ind.try.-Stephen Girard. Mlaria or Chills & Fevel Prescription No. 666 is prepared especiall: for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER Five or six doses will break any case, an if taken thea as a tonic the Fever will nc return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25 Hiere We r / eBetcie~ade ordneyandBladdrouNles ~.FOLEY _KIDNEY ~PILLS -- Kidneys and Bladder. Backache Miss Myrtle Cothrum, of Russellville, Ala., says: "For nearly a year, I suf fered with terrible back ache, pains in my limbs, and my head ached nearly all the time. Our family doctor treated me, but only gave me temporary relief. I was certainly in bad health. My school teacher advised-me to TAKE Cardul The Woman's Tonic. I took two bottles, in all, and was cured. I shall always praise Cardui to sick and suffering wo men.". If you sufferfrom , pains peculiar to weak womeng such as head ache, backache, or other symptoms of womanly trouble, or if you merely need a tonic for that tired, nervous, worn-out feel ing, try Cardai. _Es Lawyers' Fees. Do professional men earn as much now as formprlf? We hear of big-doc tor bills and huge attorney fees, but Is the average as good? Jefferson. who' never iurned around without noting the fact hi his dairy. has left a record of his .legai fees. He' was earning $3,000 very shortly after he began to practice in what today would be called I a village. I have the word of former t Attorney General W. U. Hensel for the statement that James Buchanan, Penn sylvania's only president of the United States, earned an average of $6,500 a year for the first five years he prac ,ticed law i Lai. aster. At the end of that period he was making $8,000 a year. .How many young lawyers in America today do that well? Lancas ter at the time when Buchanan was doing this was a town of but a few thousand people. And a dollar when t Monroe was president bought as much as several dollars would buy now. Philadelphia Public Ledger. A Good Investment. W. D. Magli, a well known merchant of Whitemound, Wis., bought a stock of Chamberlain's medicine so-as to be able to supply them to his customers. r After receiving them he was himself t taken sick and says that one small bot 3 tle of Cba mberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was worth more to him than the cost of his entire stock of these iedicines. For sale by all dealers. r4 s A Good Docikor. ' "Sunshine and fresh air are the4 greatest enenr :es of tuberculosis," says a medical au;thority. So sit onth sunny side of the house, the car, the 4 office or the fishing pool. Get out in 4 the field with the birds and the beasts. Face the breeze and don't be afraid of the gale. Roll the window shade ever 4 up and never down. Make your sun- 4 shade over into a -cane. -Remember Dr. Sunshine is not only an enemy to4 tuberculosis, but to more diseases than4 you can remeniber to name, including .4 1the ingrowing grouch and many other4 things. So let him shine in!-.Detroit Fred Press. A Curious Superstition. 4 Among the superstittons of the Sene ea Indians wvas this most beautiful4 one: When a young maiden died they4 imprisoned a young bird until It first4 began to try its powers of song, and then, loading it with caresses and mes-4 sages, they loosed its- bonds over her4 grave in. the belief that it would not fold its'witIgs nor close its eyes until it had fiowni to the spirit land and deliv ered its precious burden of affection to the loved and lost one. Not a Bit Like Cricket. The Englishman was attending his first ball gamne. He seemed very un easy after the fifth inning and finally said to his American friend: "I say. old chap, when do theyserveI the tea?" "They don't serve tea at a ball game." laughed the American. "No tea between innings?" gasped Sthe Englishman. "Then what's the ob- + ject of the blooming game?"-Cincin nti Enquirer. Obey That Impulse.. Instead of enduring the daily torment of weak back, backache, sore kidneys, swollen joints and rheumatism, obey that impulse to take Foley Kidne:y Pills.4 eThey co-operate with nature, which ac 0counts for their success in all kidney and bladder disorders. They are heal-4 ing, strengthening and tonic. Obey that impulse to-day and giv-e them a chance to hellp you. For sale by all dealers everywhere.. For Weakness and Loss of Appetite The Old standard general strengthening tonic,. GROVE's TASTEL.Ess chili ToIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. A true tonic and ure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c. Notice of Discharge. ,5 I will apply to the Jud:ge of Pro rbate for Clarendon county, on the 4 1th day of July, 191:3, at 11 o'clock. C VA. M., for letters of discharge as ad m inistrator of the estate of Joseph dS. Bell, deceased. .JOHN D. GERALI, a Administrator. Ju ne, 17th. 1913. E!lectric Scedwhen everything else fa.its. .4In nervous prostration and femna!c veaknesses they are the supreme R remedy, as thousands have testiied.~i FOR KIDNEY,ULVER AND STOMACHT1ROUBLE it isa the best mnedicine ever sold 4 over adrugist coulter.~ Dr. Kang's New L-ife Pills The best in the world. c. metop the coudh anmd heals aungs I< It's the car with the down keep. The Ford's surprisingly low first cost is match ed by its low cost of maintenance. And six tho'usand service stations-where all Ford repairs are- io Be had at reasonable prices -insure its onstanit and efficient service. Here's the test: 300,000 Fords now in service. Run abouts $525: Touring Car 1600, Town Car $800-f. o. b. Detroit, with all equipment. Get. catalogue and all particulars from D. C. SHAW.aR The Ford Man. 10, 12 and 14 Sumter Street, SUMTER, S. C. 'Phone 553. We are Going to Sell Out'Qur Entire Stock of CUT GLASS. AT 25 Per Cent. DisoO-t V FOR CASH. and we are going to keep a full stock of it all the tim to sell at the same discount prices. This is not cheap store Cut Glass, but the very best thskt can be sold for considerably more than we.- ask for it. Cam, P at . ARANT'S DRUG STORE and see it before buying elsewhere. oved! N We leg to announce to the trading pub Hc that we tave moved across the street from our old stand to the store formerly occupied by Rigby Dry 6oods Co., on Levi Block, next door to Plowden Hardware C0. We are showing the 'most represedita tive Line of Dry Goodra. Notions and Shoes to be found in the.county. A visit to our newiquAirters is earnestly desired. - R. R. JENKINSON. - r 15C. Lb. This is a regular 20c. pouud grade of good Rio-Nuf said-It will do its own talk inq. SOAF1' 32c. a Bar. Will do the same washing as the kind you pay 5c. for. 5,10, 25c. STORE *MA NNIN6. S. C. We hve mved extto D. Hirschmann's. "The Wood Everlasting" CYPRES DOORS. SASH AND BLINDS. Lengthens the Life of Your Buildings I Ask Your Dealer. L. WETHERIHORN &SON, Lrg t M,. '.:- ut h . - Charleston, S. 0.