I PLANT TOBACCO AS A MONEY CROP. i i ADVICE nr A .'AHMEK MHO HAS FOUND PROF! I IV THE GOLDEN uircn WLLV KDITOIJ COl'NTl liKCWU: ? I am much pleased to>? chat Kingstree is going to buiid a tooacco warehouse. In my humble judgment that is a step in the direction ot progress for - Kingstree ami the surrounding i country. Thre is not n*ng else, in my i opiniou, that will add nunc to the business of a town than a live tobacco market, and, too. 1 will say that there is nothing in the way of & money crop that is better adapted ! to the soil of Williamsburg than! tobacco. 1 wish I could impress it upon every fanner 111 the county to plaut some of his land in tobacco. 1 am flee to admit that some lands are j- v % i much belter for tobacco than others: j but, to take the average land in j this county, it will make two dollars | in tobacco to one in cotton: and then ft ku nn irfwi hut whnsp hands VM VUi vvv/wvvv fewvf ? ? - - ? are we in whtn you come to cotton? There is much talk these days about trusts, but Jet me say one thing about the American Tobacco Co:take them Out of the South Carolina markets and we would not get enough for our tobacco to pay the cost of makiug it. Now,it's no use to say that they are forced by competition to pay the price they are paying for tobacco. That's all rot. if it were left to the independent buyers our tobacco would not bring more than 5 cts a pound average. Now, I hope the farmers of South Caioliua won't do as they are doing in Keutucky, run the Americau Tobacco Co only of the State. If so, UUi IVUftVW IliUUCkl J JLO UV^VlVW^i J gone. Let me again urge every farmer to plant some tobacco another year. My clear profits this year will be at least 8 to 1 in favor of tobacco. Verry respectfullv, J Davis Carter, Leo, S C\, October 7, 1908. Weaan Interrupts Political Speaker A well dressed woman interrupted a political speaker recently by continually coughing. If she had taken Foley's Honey and Tar it wonld have cured her cough quickly and eipelled the cold from her 8y stem. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar contains no opiates and is in a yellow package* Refuse substitutes. Just received at Farmers' Supply Co's nice line of crockeryware ail kinds. MAN THE NATION REQUIRES. | John A. Johnson the Ideal Occupant of the Presidential Chair. As president Governor Johnson would I have the qualities that might be de scribed as logically and historically needful at this time, representing both 1 in thought and by concrete achievement all of the progressive reforms to which the American people are now i thoroughly committed. His personality [ and bis methods are such that, coming i into office after the strenuous and eveu j terrifying political and financial expe- ; riences of recent years, he would be prepared to hold all that has l?een gain cd. restore an era of good fee.lng and j smoothly and comfortably prepare the way for such additional advanced legis- ; lation as the times require In a word. Governor Johnson is precisely the kind of leader the nation requires at this time, ready for new legislation to meet aew needs, but careful and conservative in his methods The same confi deuce inspiring, vote getting attributes that have made Governor Johnson so popular in Minnesota that there is ab solutely u<> eine- | come acqu.iin.e.l with the man. Every |H>liticnl campaign lias its in- | dividual conditions. It is found in this contest that Governor Johnson possesses a strength peculiar to hint alone and by which he is certain to bring to the Democratic |wrty upward of a mil- } lion votes in the middle west that have j hitherto been Itepublk-nii. This condi- I tion insures l>eyond a reasonable doubt victory for Democracy and Governor Johnson in the following states: Min nesota. North and South Dakota. Illinois. Wisconsin. Iowa. Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, MoBtana, Washington and Michigan. PLATFORM BROAD AND STRONG Declarations of Governor Johnson All Democrats Will Indorse. ? "The man from Minnesota" believes In the "immediate revision of tbe tariff. to the end that articles now controlled in America by illegal and immoral combination* may be deprived of their tariff power to rob the community." Lie believes that tariff revision is one of tbe most important; works for the correction or tne aouses that are plaguing the country. Be believes that the maintenance of government by the people Involve# the least Interference by federal flower with the domestic affairs of the states consistent with efficient national ad ministration. Be believes in the constitution. "For a president." he says, "to go outside the constitution, even to accomplish a beneficent purpose. Is to enter the road that leads to the destruction of repub lies." He is opposed to the government ownership ot railways by state or nation, but as his acts show, Is a strong believer in Just and rigorous regulation. He is opposed to oversea expansion. He favors "the peaceful consolidation of the continent from Panama to the arctic circle." lie Is opposed to great military establishments, but believes tbat the size of the American navy must necessarily be determined to some extent by the naval activities of other countries. He is opposed to snip suosiuivs. "You can't kill combinations," be says, "but when you come in to crush the business of Individuals they must be opposed as evils." He believes iu an income tax. lie believes in the just and equal enforcement of law and that the observance of the law is as incumbent upon the rich and powerful as upon the poor and weak. LEADER IN INSURANCE REFORM Whole Country Benefited by Action of Governor Johnson. Having had some valuable experience In reorganizing a powerful Minnesota Insurance company, Governor Johnson was well prepared to deal with the emergency which arose when the corruption and extravagance of the management of the great national life insurance companies were revealed in 1905. In November of that year he wrote a letter to President Roosevelt r,i.no,i him in the frnnf rank of TV UXV.U [iiavvu UIUJ 4ti national leaders. In this letter the governor suggested a conference of governors and attorneys general to be called by the president at Chicago. The conference was held In the following February, and Governor Johnson, as Its chairman and dominant figure, named the famous "committee of fifteen" whose recommendations were embodied in the law in Minnesota and In about a dozen other states. While the momentous decision recently given by the supreme court In 6lmilar cases coming up from North Carolina and Minnesota may nave uie effect of invalidating some of the railway legislation secured by Governor Johnson In Minnesota, fhe fact remains that he has done what he set out to do and secured the enactment of popular and beneficent legislation. If, as now seems probable, the epoch making de? eision of the court in large measure transfers railway legislation from the states to the national legislature, it becomes of particular significance that one of the earliest acta of Governor fohuson's career as a member of the Minnesota legislature was the Introduct iou of a memorial to congress to extend the powers of the interstate commerce commission, a memorial which antedated the extension of thoee powers by some four years. A Csrdbcsrd Capita!. Every time I come to Paris I arr sir'it-k with * lit' unreal appearance < ?f the town, especially in t!ie less hu.-y quarter whieh lies all round t lie Champs Ely sees. The tall, blank gray houses, with their pray wooden shutters, iook no more real than the cardboard houses in a stage play. Moreover, it seems impossible than any one is alive inside the houses. You never see a face at a window, and no one ever seems to emerge through the great brown doors?doors which are obviously made of painted cardboard and not wood. The grayness, the monotony, the absence of colors, the comparative silence, are incredible after the warm colors, the red brown skies, the portentous, seething "movement" of London.?London Sketch. Imagination Left Unassisted. A Germantown woman discovered one morning recently that her maid Nora had broken the thermometer that hung in the reception hall. "Well, Nora," sighed the mistress of the house in a resigned way, "you've managed to break the thermometer, haven't you ?" "Vis, mum," replied the maid in a tone equally resigned. "And now, mum, we'll jist have to take tlie weather a9 it comes!''?Harper's Weekly. Acrobatic Baby. Three-year-old May had a penchant for cutting everything sight when she could get scissors. One da hein^" with her curly he. *ed er, she promptly v cun from the back of his a. 1. When the nurse disc vered the damage she said: "Oh, May! How dare you cut baby's curls off?" "He cut them hisself." - "How did he reach the back of his head?" "^e stoodod on 6tool." ? T. delphia Ledger' . t % An Accident. "What have you to say?" asked the magistrate of a woman who was charged with breaking an umbrella over the complainant's head. "It was an accident, yonr worship." "Did vou not mean to hit her, then?" "Oh, yes, 1 meant to hit her, but I didn't mean to break mj umbrella !" Repair your -window blinds for five cents at Farmers' Supply Co's. i lealtky Faally. "Our whole family has enjoyed good health since we began using Dr King's New Life Pills, three years age," says L A Bartlet, of Rural Route 1, Guilford, Maine. They cleanse and tone the svstem in a gentle way that does you good 25c. at D C Scotts's drug store. TresuinwaHMMHaaa iK^STlj \ I/iQpg rterwe Norths Florida A passenger servic and comfort,equipped Dining, Sleeping and For rates, schedule tion, write to WM. J. Oer STOLL BF WE. STOt BUY BON AND AN[ SELL LAN It will pay you to alway any business of this kind. OFFICE OVER BANK The Biggest and ' the Best Net For Getting Results. In seining fsh to get results ' Vou have to take t!ie net r ..its. In business, too. to get r alts Vou figure on the net re ^.T Netting fish and Detling profits suggest each other. In each case you must put out a net that moves around and gathers tip I lie results. - as business goes, the local r is the biggest and best net ig results. It circulates around .d in the country also. yon advertising? Had a Close Call. i Mrs Ada L Croom, the widely known proprietor of the Croom Hotel, Vaughn, Miss., says: "For several months I suffered with a severe cough, and consumption seemed to have its grip on me, when a friend recommended Dr King's New Discovery. I began taking it, and three bottles effected a complete cure." The fame of this life saving ! cough and cold remedy, and lung ; and throat healer is world wide. ! Sold at D C Scott's drug store. 50c. i and $1.00. Trial bottle free. In settling for your paper please remember that the credit price is $1.25 a year. We made this announcement last April and have published it j once a week ever since. tf Saved His Bay's Life *My three year old boy was badly constipated, bad a high fever and was in an awfnl condition, I gave him two doses of Foley's Orino Laxative and the next morning the fever was gone'aod hel was entirely well. Foley's.Orino Laxative saved ! i:*^? a 117 ?ll,r ardware. in Farmers', Builders' dware that you want privilege of quoting :ure you that you will A' M' M/ \MS \*/ ? k> Stock k Closer * I closer I* K IK /Vv ^ this season in larger I es than ever before in J ware trade in Kings- J [quarters in this coun- ^ ''"b lis, Glass, Varnish- I Tools, Wire, Cook 8 orite Ranges. r xjj 1 Caskets. ? i Day or Night. 0 WARE COMPANY.s * . ? ? f -J n f ? ' * v.lf I saved ir made" 0 save your dollars than by 1 reliable live-stock % ? n nnd Unrnionp i mill MOM, , l am offering at 10 per cent j MI II CQ nn ailu iu\j l-i-u ai t? aj ^ 4 i KCy, Lake City, S. C. Kodol for f Indigestion, , Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, Digests all the food . s you eat. Makes your I j stomach strong. I Money back if it fails.