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. Keep in mind that \vc still run as our big leader; 12 1-2 cents coftee at ioc. f\sk to see our “wonder” rice at ioc, bull Cream Cheese 15 c. Macaroni 3 for 25 cents. VVheat Brand, Best Cow food on earth. Carload of No 1 Timothy Hay. Western Corn. Extra Quality Feed Oats. Cypress Shingles. The winners of our Undine Flour contest were as fol lows: Dr. Smith Turner, ^Miss C. Beach, H. H. Hickman, Miss A* Herndon, RufhisCrosby, R. A. Stanley, Great guessing contest begins next week, 1st prize one barrel UNDINE. Our dry goods department is in charge of a young lady of great skill and experience in this line. She will take pleasure in showing you our complete stock of summer dress goods. We would suggest that before sending your order to some city house, you examine our stock. ^ '" If we please you then your$ £ $ can be spent in Colleton County. Next week we give ten reasons why $ $ $ should be spent in Colleton. :We have a good thing and want to pass it along We have just received: Eleven pieces of Pineapple Lawns, value 15c per yd, our price 10c. Three pieces of Donzelle Lawn, value 12 l-2c our price d-Oc. Nine pieces of Gascon Organdy, value 7c our price 5c. Two pieces of Almera Organdy, value 7c our price 5c^ Two pieces of Black Albatross, good value at 30c our price 25c. Two pieces of Mull, good value at 30c our price 25c. Also some Mosquito Netting, Fruit of the Loom, and many other things. ‘ We have just received from the Pottery this week, a handsome line of decorated crockery, including several beautiful Toilet Sets with jar combined. . In fact we are getting in new' goods every day. Our line of fancy groceries and meats is immense. If you are hungry w r e are prepared to feed you. Don’kforget your coupons! GrRJLCE <3k WARREN. CITATION : or Letters of Administration, STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Colleton, ly John D Edwards, Esquire, Probate Judge. WHEREAS I P Sauls made suit o me to grant him letters of Admin* dration of the Estate and effects of > P Sauls. THESE are therefore to cite and ad* aonish all and singular the kindred and reditora of the said D P Sauls eceased that they be and appear befor e ie, in the Court of Probate, to be held at. Valterboro on June 14th 1906,next after ublication hereof, at 11 o’clock in the ^renoon, to show cause, if any they have rhy the said Administration should tot be granted. GIVEN under my hand, this 30th day I May Anno Domini 1906. ^Published on May 30th and .June th 1906 in The Press and Standard. _ JNO. D. EDWARDS. Probate Judge. NOTICE. The firm of Glover Bros, is this day lissolved by mutual consent, all debts ire assumed by G. W. Glover, who will sontinne the business, and all parties ndebted to said firm, will make pay- nent to him. U». N. Glover, G. W. Glover. Valterboro, 8. O., May 12, 1906. r ’’or a painful burn there is nothing like DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. There are t host of imitations of DeWltt’s Witch iazel Salve on the market—see that you C he genuine. Ask for DeWitt’s. * too, for snnbnrn, cats, braises, and especially recommended for pllea. The aame E C DeWitt & Co. Chicago, Is on every box. Sold by John M Klein. , — ■ The Firat Sapphire. There is an Indian legend that Brah ma, the crenter, once committed, a sin * . I w ist he might know the torments of >morse and thus be able to sympa- dze with mortals. Bat the mome.it s had committed It he began repeat* ig the mantras, or prayers of purifl- itlon, and in his grief dropped on the irth a tear, the hottest that ever fell om an aye, and from It was formed » first eeonhim. LIZARDS OF BARBADOS. They Drop Can Chanace Color and Their Tall* at Will. The green lizards which swarm on every tree certainly have the hardest life of any creatures In Barbados, since their flcob is so delicate that every thing eats them which can catch them. Cats, fowls, birds, monkeys and snakes all devour the poor lizards, which have only two methods of defending them selves, both very inadequate for the purpose. One is their power of chang ing their color, whereby they can ap pear bright green at one moment on the leaf of an aloe and then dark choc olate brown on a piece of damp earth. If this does not conceal them from their enemy they drop their tails. The caudal appendage Jumps from the ground and makes a frantic dance all by itself, and if the pursuer Is delud ed into seizing it the lizard avails it self of the chance to escape and grow another tall. For the rest the i>oor lizards are harmless things, with pathetic eyes, in which lurks an expression of weari ness and disillusion, as though they were as old as the world itself and had found it all vanity and vexation of spirit. They are fond of plaintive mu sic and wiil enter at the open window s when a piano is playing and sit listen ing and nodding their queer flat heads and looking out of those wistful eyes at the player till he or she, if of an Im aginative temperament, might fancy she were playing to an audience of transmigrated souls.—Chambers' Jour nal. * Notice. ' All pereonfl having claims against the estate of the late David Ramsey will present the same duly attested. 4hese indebted to said estate will LATEST STYLE SILO. Roan>J Wood Structure Lathed and Plastered With. Cement. The silo here illustrated is of wood, plastered with cement. It was built at the University of Illinois in 1903 and is described in a recent bulle tin of the state experiment station, from which the details of construction (only a few of which are here noted) can be obtained. The silo was lathed with common four foot lath, breaking Joints as and make payment in the next 3G days to Abegale Ramsey, Executrix. May. 19, 1906. dr.king’s New Discovery Will Sadr Sto TM ' SILO COMPUTE. [Showing chute through which the silage la thrown down and connection with the barn. The small door In the roof la to admit blower pipe while filling.] . shown In the sqrond cut and nailing the lath solid to the half lofA coifing -without furringjouj^ It Is usually fee- ommended In lathing silos that the edges of the lath 1m* cut on a bevel, so that when nailed to the wall a dove tailed Joint is formed for the mortar, or that the lath be set out on furring strips, so that the mortar may clinch behind the lath. ExjM-rlenee shows that this is entirely unnecessary- "The plaster was made of one part Portland cement to two parts of good sharp Hand. Two coats of this mortar were used, making the plaster a full half Inch thick over the lath. The sec ond coat extended continuously from the bottom of the brickwork to the top of the silo, uniting the foundation and the superstructure and giving an air tight wall for the entire silo. After the silo wall was completed n conical shingled roof was put on, a chute built over the doors through which the silage Is thrown down and the small space between the silo and the bam roofed over, connecting the two. ’ibe silo was then completed, ready for painting. In order to preserve the silo in good condition it is absolutely necessary that fbe half inch lumber with which the sik) is ceiled l>e protected from dampness. To this end the plaster must l)o good quality and kept perfect ly water tight by cementing up any cracks that may af>iH*»ir, so that the wood shall receive no moisture fronj the silage. The wall must also be ventilated, for by allowing a free cir culation of air between the ceiling and the lining the lumber will be kept dry. This silo has been flded twice, and both years the silage has kept perfectly from the bottom to the top, even next the wall and against the doors. The cost of this silo, which is twenty feet in diameter and thlrty-fonr and one-half feet deep, holding 228 tons, was $383, or $1.68 per ton capacity. glnta. Sixty dollars an acre one man says he has made on his peanut crop, and a number of fanners intend mak ing a venture in this new direction now that pioneers have blazed the way and demonstrated successful methods* of growing the crop lu this section. fj an y A X. lien Mnnnre and Aahea. Don’t mix ben manure and ashes for, fertilizer, boeaune the resulting chemb* cal action will cause the loss of am-j monla, as one can readily detect by, the odor. If these two materials oral to be applied to the same ground mlxj the ashetf well with the soil first aadi later apply the manure. What Water Did. A certain IJq^or dealer, a hard head ed old Scot, grew rich In tho trade. After he had grown rich the old man built himself a fine house, u limestone mansion on the hill, with a park around it, with conservatories, stabioa and outbuildings—in a word; a palace. One day the old Scot rode In the omni bus past his flue house. A temperance man pointed up at the grand edifice and said, with u sneer, “It was the whisky built that, wasn’t it?” “Na, na, man; the Water," the Scot answered.— London Mail. a J Years of ’f Th* Poanata of “BffTFt-” It to claimed that the farmers of that rich section of Illinois familiarly known as Egypt are making a great success of peanuts. The warm sun and fertile •oil of Egypt have long produced fa mous watermelons and sweet potatoes, and now the Egyptians boast that the peanut* of their dime are even su- pfiripr la onftltty. to three of old viy- Scistica Cured After Twenty of Torture. For more than-twenty years Mr J B Massey, of $322 Clinton St., Minnea polis, Minn., was tortured by “sciatica. The pain and sofferlng which he en dured during this time is beyond com prehension. Nothing gave him any per manent rellOf nntil he need Chamberlsin’ g Pain Balm. One application of that liniment relieved the pain and made sleep and rest possible, and less than on 9 bottle has effected a permanent care. If troubled with sciatica or rheumatism why net try a 25-cent bottle of Pain Balm ^ and see for yourself how quickly it re lieves the pain. For sale by Jno • X Klein. v See that your druggist gives von* imita- k tion when you nak for Kennedy’s L*x*» , tire cough syrup. Bold by John M Klein. >V1 . 1 ' * ^ ■ * 1 V. .‘A' * J’ ■fP ;S I « V Goodi our' I