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MILUNERY! MILLINERY!- -O- l I have moved into the store next door to Mrs G. A. Sauls’ residence. Will be glad to serve my friends. I carry a fine line of Millinery Goods. I make a SPECIALTY of WHITE HATS. While in town call on me and let me show them to you. My goods are the cheapest in town. It will \ ay you to see me before buying elsewhere. MRS. A. M. HIOTT. THE JOY OF LIVING CAN BK FULLY REALIZED WHRH YOU ENJOY GOOD HEALTH ER8INE The Popular Liver Medicine Will Keep You Well A GUARANTEED CURE for all diseases produced by TOR PID LIVER and IMPURE BLOOD. Do not fill your system with Arsenic, Calomel and Quinine. They act as rank poisons which vitiate the blood, debilitate the system, and leave a trail of bad syrhptoms which require years to obliterate. HERO INE is purely vegetable and contains no mineral or narcotic poisone, is absolutely harmless and is the simple remedy of nature. It carries off all poison in the system and leavee no injurious effects. CURED BY HERBINE AFTER OTHER REMEDIES FAILED Mr. L. A. Hicks, Iredell, Texee, eaye: 41 1 wm trick in bed for eight months with liver trouble, the doctor seemed to do me no good. I was told to try Herbine, and it cured me in a short time. I cannot recommend this wonderful medicine too highly.’ # TAKE IT NOW! r* ^ ^ LARGE BOTTLE, Sic GET THE OEHUHIE Ballard Snow Liniment Co. ST. LOUB. U. S. A. RECOMMENDED (JOHN M. KLEIN. The New Idea [549 Main Steet. We now extend to our Friends and Patrons a spring greeting and a welcome to our store. Come and look at our new line of Spring and Summer goods. All the new and latest styles just in from headquarters, We are making a bid for your trade and want it. Can we have it. W. Buford Sanders. WALTERBORO ami JACKSONBORO, S.^C FARMER’S AUTO. on Gasoline Ilnp-ine Mounted Houiemaue Truck. My gasoline enginp is a one and one- half horsepower machine. I built a truck fof it &:t of an old steel binder. By buying a few extra bolts and a email wagon wheel and using the binder truck for front wheels 1 rigged up this truck for a few dollars. 1 put a plank platform oa the truck. I used the same gearing that was used to run the binder, cut a hole through the plat form and run a l>eIt from the engine ♦down to the pulley. The outtlt then moved Itself along nicely, but I shall put a sproc ket chain belt on. Instead of a rubber belt, as the latter slips some In going up grades. A bevel friction to start with would be another improve- I ment. I put ray engine the following uses: Pump watej: for our stock at a cost of J ENGINE ON TRUCE. 7 cents per week; saw pole wood at the rate of—well, three of us went to the woods and fastened down the buzz saw machine and engine, at 9 o'clock we started to aaw, and at noon we were through. After dinner we piled the wood np four feet high, and the pile was eltfity-three feet long. I go about the neighborhood cutting corn fodder and doing odd Jobs. I have pumped water at our county fair igrounda several tlmea. The engine has il>ald for itself and is at good as ever. It has been worth a great deal to me | In running grindstone, fanning mill, corn shelter, etc. I Some folks think tt pays to bare an ! engine only on a large farm, but a man on a small farm can get along with leas hired help If he has an engine to help hhn, concludes a writer who tells the foregoing story of his “farmer's auto” In Farm Journal. 3. B. Mesterbeicj. Repair worU a npecialty. Waterman’s Ideal Fountain Pens. ^SPECTACLES, CLOCKSTWATCHES, JEWERY^l Growls* Geor*la Melons. I lay off rows 9 by 9 feet each way, put two shovelfuls of some weak com post to each hill, four quarts of cotton seed and one good handful of some high grade fertilizer. Be sure to scat ter It at least four or five feet over the hill to prevent Its burning, then run a four or five Inch bull tongue plow through It twice. Then take a plow and break the l&nd as deep as you can, and follow with the buil tongue In every furrow as deep as you can to subsoil. When you get half done mark your hills by running across lightly, then finish breaking your land with plow and subsoller. Land should have a lot of grass or i»ea vine to keep It mel low. When you plant the melons take a hoe and level the laud about the hill and stick three or four seed with sharp end down one inch deep. When they come up and need work hoe around lightly and always tend very shallow and don’t leave but one or two vinos In the hill, and Ik? sure to never work when the ground Is wet or when the dew is on the vino, says a Southern Cultivator corresi>ondent. Alfalfa In Conneetlcot. I took three and ono-hulf acres of the very highest, driest upd poorest section of my field. 100 fe^'t above the water line, and Intensely cultivated It to the ;!cpth of six inches or more. Then I sowed twenty-live pounds of alfalfa seed to the acre on the 3d of June and S00 pounds of high grade fertilizer to each acre. On July 24. fifty-two days after seeding, I cut and cured 10,700 pounds of dry hay, and on Sept. 13 I put and cured 10,830 pounds more of dry hay. or 21.010 pounds, almost elev en tans, lii Vv? days from time of seed ing—it Is safe to say three tons to the acre, of dry alfalfa bay. I would not advise other* to go into the cultivation of alfalfa very extensively at first, yet I think that there are^ many high and dry fields In Xtw England that could bo utilized In the production of alfalfa. —George M. Clark In Farm and Ranch. Cmra Growl** Co*toot. The Kansas State Agricultural college has announced a corn growing contest for the Kansas fanner boys.. It la hoped, with the co-operation of the farmers’ Institutes, to reach the great- f est passible number of boys. Each county organization will be expected to furnish to each boy who applies for It one quart of seed corn from any of a dozen of more well known varieties specified. The contest is limited to boys between the ages of twelve and eighteen. Each winner in a county contest will be eligible to enter the state contest, which will Ik* hold Jan. 1 and 2 at the state college. County prizes for the best ten ears of corn will probably run In order49. $8. $»*, $5, $4, $3 ; 42^JS^, and liberal state prizes are to be announced later. Established tu 17ltd. j OldestlFirm in Ame-ic* D. A. WALKER & CO. IRON FENCE CHEAPEN THAN WOOD 1 Clover Without Noree Crop. A nurse crop Is not .necessary for ob taining a good catch of clover. In fact. In a dry year It seems to be a decided detriment, as it uses the moisture that Is necessary for the growth of the young clover plant. — Hoard’s Dairy man. It ts possible to obtain relief from chronic Indigestion and dyspepsia hr the use of KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA. Some of the hopeless esses of long standing have yielded to it. It rnables you to digest the food you eat anil ex- erciaes a corrective influence, building up the efficiency of the digestive organs. Th? atomacn la the boiler wherein the steam U made that keepa up your vitality, health and strength. Kodol digests what you eat. Makes the sumach sweet—puts the boiler in condition to do t|je work nature demands of it—gives you relief from digestive disorders, and puts you in shape to do |your best, and feet your best. Sold by John M Klein. 32*Meetina Street, C H A R L E S T O N, 3 C MARBLE AND \ GRAPHITE WORKS. 'and " 1 Am to Bow A bow legged muu usually possesses more than ordinary strength. Why? Because his legs In supi>ort!ng great weight can bend in one direction only, whereas the man with straight legs is Inclined to be wabbly. Such being the case, why should not n knock kneed man be stronger than a bow legged one? His knees, being braced against each other, ought to be more steadfast than legs bending outward. Yet we all know that the knock kneed mrm^gener- ally goes into consumption nnd Is at all times weaker than his bow legged brother.—New York Press. Send For Prices, Mr A. K. Beach repreaent* us at ■<> ^ Waltcrboro A D WALKER. J. D. SCOTT Optlaalatle S*r«. Newberry—Is Sanford of on opti mistic temperament? Baldwin — I should say he is. I have known him to go into a restaurant without a cent In his pocket, order a doaen oysters and feel satisfied that he could pay his bill with a pearl.—Life. <V*at Plarln* Po»«nm. “So you are going to retire from poli tics r “YeR.’’ said the municipal boss, ‘Tm going to retire. But I’m not going to sleep so soundly that I can’t be awak ened.” Men ought not to Investigate things from words, but words from thing-.— Hyson. Stomach Troubles. Mrs Sue Martin, an old ar d hlg’ ly re spected resident of Faisonia, Mist., w.a sick with stomach trouble for more than six months. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets .cured her. 8be says: “I can now eat anything I want and am the proudest woman In the world to find such a good medicine.” For sale by John M Klein. In the Country Schoolhonsca. Missouri is exploiting a fre.«h idea la agricultural training. According to correspondence of the St. Louis Globo- Democrut, E. E. Lnugblin, president or' the Missouri Corn Growers’ associa tion. say a the sending of agricultunl trains to couuty scats to hold farmin'/ institutes has been a failure, tin* farm ers not attending. The plan of send ing speakers to the school districts Irrrs licen more successful. G. IV Eliis. sec retary of the state board of agricul ture, has sent ■ G. V*\ Williams, tin; l)Oo expert, out with an assistant luta’ some of the southern counties, and os Mr. Wllllama sends In such n flatter ing re[/ort about the ntten lance aud enthusiasm shown at the meetings Mr. Ellis has commissioned E. E. I.aujhliu, who will be assisted by II. J. Ilyslap of Columbia. Mo., thoroughly to oan- anss Bates and Vernon counties during the next fev.* weeks, after which other counties will be worked. The plan is to hold meetings in the schoolhouses in the evenings. Mr. Ilyslap will give a talk and practical Illustration on com growing, and Mr. Laughlln will lec ture on corn rotation. Wclmcr .Lews. Editor Press and Standard: Weitner school closed. oiLthe loth inst, and our pleasant little teacher has re turned to her home at Brunson. This has been one of the mott successful terms our school has had for ^some time, and we hope to have 4 Miss Williams for another term. Crops are very backward in this section, cotton particularly. The cotton *)icitiige is about {the same as last year, but the condition is not over 7;*» per cent Small grain crop while fairly good if not so good as was expected. We aie sorry to hear of the serious illness of Maj Howell, and we sin cerely hope and fruit that he may be fully restored. ..... We regret very much to know that Mrs M C Stephens has been called to the bedside of her daughter, Mrs Dr W H Kice of Col um bin. We trust that she will find Mrs Kice convales- cing. " J II \ am of Weimer, has been [in Charleston most ol the week ou busi ness. E F Wils m of Michigan, is down looking after his interests in Colleton and Hampton counties. Cor. , Honor rollof the. Weimer school ior month of May—Kathleen Muller, Beulah Herndon, Rosalie Yarn, Hat tie Muller, George Stephens, Edith Folk, Marion Yarn, Cailisle Yarn. Holland Yarn, Grace Yarn, Puttie Herndcn and Otto Folk. Etta Williams. Teacher. Deaths from Appendicitis decrease in the same ratio that the use of Dr King’s New Lile Pills iDCita»ea. They save you Pom danger and bring quick and painless re cave from c nsti- patlon and the ills growing out of it. btrenglh aud vizor aNayn lotiow their uae. Guaranteed by Juo M Klein, drug gist. 2.% Try ileoi. conrase. The greater part of the courage that Is needed in the world is net of a he roic kind. Courage may be displayed In everyday life as well ns in historic fields of action. There needs, for ex ample, the common courage to be hon est, the courage tn resist temptation, the courage to speak the truth, the courage to be what we really are and not to pretend to be what we are not, the courage to live honestly within our own means and not dishonestly upon the mining of others.—Smiles. Money makes the mare go, but not necessarially the mare on which you place your money. Do not try to find out too much utout your friends if you would re» tain fcbeir friendship. DeWItt’s Salve ]