The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, October 31, 1906, Image 1

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PUBLISHTi-D WEEKLY WINNSBOR09 S. C.WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1906. DRZ. G3ILL WYLIE'S rIALARZIA Treatment a Sure Cure for Chronic Malaria. A few days ago, while at Great Falls, we noticed posted in many conspicuous places the treatment below for chronic malaria. Working in the summer along the river in a section partially mala rial, it was natur&lly expected that this treacherous disease 'would lay hold on the workmen. So the president of the Southern Power Company, Dr. Gill Wylie, the eminent surgeon of New York, took great precaution against malaria among the workmen by posting everywhere his treatment - of the disease. The very fact that it bears his signature makes it well worth trial on the part of any one suffering from malaria in 1 any form. DIRECTIONS FOR TREATING CHRONIC MALARIA. Take four 1-10 grs of calomel after dinner at night, and the next morning a saline laxative, a seidlitz powder or mineral water sufficient to give one free move ment of the bowels a day. After each meal take three of the 3 gr.. capsules, or two of the 5 gr. cap sules of quinine with the juice of a half of a lemon in a half glass of water, so as to insure its absorption, making 27 to 30 grs. a day. In large strong people the amoynt of the quinine can.be increased up to 40 grs. a day in stead of 30 grs. Keep t h is calomel and quinine up for four consecutive days in the above quantities. If during the four days the quinine makes your head buzz or disturbs you ex cessively, take 20 grs. of bromide of potash in a half glass of water in the afternoon or evening. After taking 27 or 30 grs. a day for four days, then take 3-grs. three times a day, or one capsule after each meal for four days longer. After this a tonic pill which has arsenic and iron in it may be taken three times a day for several weeks if indicated. Then if at any time after this you have the pains in the back ?f your neck and exhausted feel ings, and more or less depression or disturb :d digestion have your blood examined and report to me for further treatment will be in dicated. Ib would be perfectly safe if the same general symptomas return to repeat the above treat ment in two or three months or more, especially if you live in a malarial district where there are Smosquitoes. By using Merk's bi-sulphate of quinine, 5 grs. dissolved in a Steaspoonful of sterril water, an injection can be made in the deep muscles of the buttocks with a Ksterri] glass syringe, giving two injections of 5 grs. each instead of one of the 9 or 10 gr. doses by Fmouth. In extreme capses two of these 10 gr. doses may be given by hypedermic instead of b y Smouth, more effectively. (Signed)' Dr. W. Gill Wylie. M1eeting of Two Old Vets (Sunday's State, Oct. 21.) Dick Hogan, celebrated Hamp ton scout, and Col. W. W. Miller, ainother one of the men who wore he gray the under Hampton, et yesterday. This simple state ent may seemn trivial to those o were not associated with the or in companies that were r Hampton, but to the two t meant much. It was the time they had seen each r in 42 years. Of course it a mutual friend to bring them ether. Col. U. R. Brooks did 5. "This is Col. Miller" said ick," with the polite and con. traine~d air used with entire trangers., "Yes," said the colonel with the same intonation. "Hogans my name." "Hogan. The name is familiar." "Think I met you on thie fiz it g line," said the scout. Then the two men eria raced. "This man," said Col. Miller, "was shot through the lungs and still lives." The astonished by standers said it was remarkable. Then the three men wandered off' ajid sat down to talk over old tiines. Mr. Hogan gained extensive fame as one of the Hampton ncogts and sh-.rpshooters. Hie came from Fairfield county and after the war went west. He~ is now a memiber of the Arkomsas legislature andis <meo~ of the most peacefal of men. Hearing of th homecomiing he le sided to comec back to his native State for afe days and visit old friends. L'c called on the governor and othen~ around the capitol and .will re main in the city until after thie A Life Worth Living. Under the above caption the editor of the Union Times pays a beautiful tribute in his paper to the memory of young Jeffares, of this county who met such a tragic death only a few week ago: "Over in Fairfield county, there is now a very sad home. Sad because the pride of that home has met untimely death; untimelv it appears, because it was cut off in the very bloom of - oung man hood, with all its vigor and. force. John W. Jeffares, a young man of 27 years, riding terenely along the public highway. with buoyant thoughts and energetic longings for the work he was soon to begin, was thrown from the ani mal be was riding and .in a few short hours died. "He was on his way from Chester to take charge of a achool. a rural school, where he shoud instruct iu the ways of knowledge and morality the young of that district. A word should be said of his own school days, so fraught with obstacles and set-backs. In childhood he attended the littld school near his home, going when other duties did not prevent. The desire for knowledge was the burning spirit of this youth, and when he reached the proper age, overcoming many obstacles he entered Clemson college. There lie carried the mails back and forth from Calhoun and did many other services. to help pay his way. When the season was over he would return to his farm and work a crop to aid in defray ing the coming year's expenses. These things be did until he was graduated from college, and when he received his diploma there was none who was more honored, and we believe none who felt prouder on receiving his commission. After leaving college, he worked on his farm during the summer and taugh't through the winter. He gave back to those who were struggling for an educ.ation, those things which he had gained with so much labor. "And be has been cut )ff in this work. Was it all worth while? Who can say? those years of privation and -bitter toil and now the result, cut off. Aye, there's the point! The result of that man's life can never be reckoned by man's mind. Even in the few years of his life, he has instilled principles that never die, and that will go on and on working good in the mind and heart of man, finding a culmination only when the .eeds of man are all summed up. And the influence of his example, his character and his strugg' es, may induce othe s to exhaust every recourse in se uring that greatest of treasures knowledge. "We beg to place one flower over the grave of this young man, for his wa the lfa worth living.? A Veung Mother aty. "My mother has suddenly been made young at 70. Twenty years of intense suffering from dyspep sia had entirely disabled her, until six months ago, when she began taking Electric Bitters, which have completely cured her and restored the strength and activity she had in the prime of life," writes Mrs. W. L. Gilpatrick, of Danforth, Me. Greatest restor - ative niedicine on the globe. Sets Stomach, Liver and K~idneys right, purifies the blood, and cures Malaria, Biliousness and Weak nesse3. Wonderful Nerve Tonic. Price 50c. Guaranteed by Jno. H. McMaster & Co., druggists. "I live for those who love me For those who know me true; For the heaven that smiles above me, And awaits my spirit, too; For the cause that lacks assist ance, For the wrong that needs resist ance, For the future in the distance, And the good that I can do. True and tried friends of the fanmily -DeWitt's Little Early Risers. Best for results and bEst to take. Rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes follow the use of these dependable little pills. They do not gripe or sicken. Sold by all druggrists. We haven't any admiration and mighty little r spect for the !knocker'' This world is very very wide and the best thing man can do when he is dissatis fled with conditions is to pack his trunk and hut a more congenia: elie.-Gaffney Ledger. Many men give lavishly of gold. To buti bridges and ceastles and tower of old: If you want everlasting fame, a bene 'factor be, Give the poor~ and needy Rocky 2Mour tain Tea. JOIIN ROBINSON'5 Ten Big Shows Combined, Will Ex hibit at Chester, November 9. Indications are that a lar ge crowd will attend from here. Very low excursion rates will be in ; ffect on all railroads. The show, under the manage ment of John Robinson, is now. enjoying its eighty-third year of prosperity. and is one of the i foremost amusement attractions of America, if not of the world. It numbers among its arenic favorites some of the m o S t ex'ensive and best acts that money can procure. The Capt. Thomson troupe of American -cavalrymen, in expert feats of daring and original horsemanship;' Dare-devil DeBurry who sets at defiance all the fixed laws of nature when he dashes down a dizzy incline, and with the speed of a hurriedsUe loops the gap on a bicycle; the mirvelously edu cated group of seals, under the master hand of Capt. Winston; Edna, acknowledged Princess of the realm of horsewomanship, the world's only lady somersault rider, and twenty equestrian associates; fort, jo)ous subjects of King Momus in a gleeful rufficiency, and more than a hundred other foreiga and American features in three rings and an elevated stage, and introducing as an- added feature King Solomon, His Tem ple and the Queen of Sheba, requiring a cast of a thousand men, women, children and horses, 100 ballet girls reproducing the dances of the day of the king of a thousand wives. The Robinson Show has always been famed for its menagerie, and this season finds the zoological annex the most complete ever carried by a tented show, com prising costly and rare animals from every section of the globe. This splendid array of animal talent will. be seen in the big daily street parade, proncutued by all as the most gorgeous and elaborate pageant o f modern times, comprising more than a mile of go'd encased wagons, chariots and 500 of the finest of Ainerican horses.. This is the only big-show that is not in the circus trust and no adv4nce in -"." the prices will be made. Letter to J. C. Caldwell. Winnsboro, S. C. .Dear Sir, Here's 4 tale with three or four tails to it, Professor Irvine has an Aca, demy, Meroersbury, Penn. He paints the floors in summer 1 vacation. It used to take 90 gallons of paint. There were two paint-store's there, and he used to buy (one year of oneI next year of the other) 90 gallons year after year.I Now he paints Devoe; 60 gal lons; and the difference is a say ing of :iO a year. 1R. C. Fallon was one of those dealers, good zan; but h e wouldn't take-up Devoe; so we F turned to the other, J. A. Boyd.. But Fallon has found it necessary to get a good =paint to compete with Devee. He got one of the eight honest paints. He has a big hardware store and is doing an excellent hardware business; but Royd, of course, has the run on .paint-~hes a little hardware E man. We don't care how little or big a nman is, if he wants good paint and is active and sound. Yours truly F W DEvoE & Co New York Jno. H. Mc~Iaster & Co. sell - our paint, Blood PoisoningI results from chronic constipation, which is quickly cured by Dr. King's New Life Pills. They re move all poisonous germs from the system and infuse new life and .vigor;' cure sour stomach, nause:1, headache, dizziness and colic, without griping or discom fort. 25 Guaranteed - by Jno H. McM aster & Co , druggi-.ts. aThe be- t roads are in ti e most progr"ssive commumties. Tyner's Dyspepia Remedy--A Guar anteed Cure. If you suffer fromi Dysyepsia o . In dgestion in any form, gas, belching,~ bitter taste, offensive bad breath, dizzy~ fall spells sour stomach, heart flutter, say nausea, gastritis, loathing ofrfood, painski rswlig in the stomach back or side depseated kidney or liver trouble, then they will disappear in a short time after taking Tyner's Dyspepsia Rjemedy, made cspecially to c u r e Dyspepsia, Tiudigestion and all Stomach Trouble, even of the wo'rst cases. Tv ner's Dyspepsia Remedy expels the ases and sweetens the breat h. It - ures Sie-h Headache, Colic and Con stipation at once. Druggists or by express' 50 cents a bottle. Money refunded if it fails to cure. Derrick's Drug Store, Lexington, 8. C. IF YOU TOUC your tongui Agl and look in the glass-you will You can't help puckering-it m to thitik of tasting it. By the use of so called Powders you take this puckering right into your system-you i and ruin your stomach. AVOID 4 Say plai Royal is made from pure, refir than Alum but you have the pro R. J. & R. SO O 'e above letters represent one of the Iarn and most up-to-date shoe houses in America, while W. C. B. Co. represents the firm that sell their shoes. r prices, comfort, style and durability we them against any line of Shoes on the marlket. Ve have in stock a Hunting Shoe, guai teed to stand the roughest usage; comfor able, and as tough as whit-leather. :mine our Shoes and get our prices be buying. W. C. Beaty Cc YIONEY SAVEI When you step into our shoe store to buy your sho ave a complete line of all the new shapes and leather tyles, and they are very snappy and at prices that g to you on every pair you buy from us. We carry al Lister Men's Dress Shoes.........1.0 up to SG6 " Ladies' Dress Shoes.. . .... .1.00 up to $4( A trial order will convince you. Farmers' Heavy Work Shoes a specialty. Remember our motto: SAME SHOES FOR LESS 2 -armon's Shoe Sto COLUMBIA, S. C. 172 Main Street. Postoff ice B a to see the effect-. akes you pucker - cheap Baking , injurious Alum njure digestion, L BAKING POWDEEJ ed Grape Cream of Tartar-Coc fit of quality, the profit of good HOT St WE ARE POURING INTO.IGH I RESULT A MOUNTAIN OF I rest OUR CUSTOMERS IN DEPARTMEN'I Men's Suits and Pants, M and Boys' Clothing in great at the very lowest prices. Ladles' Dress Goods, Cloal pit In many various styles and I prices. Shoes in abundance. No -an- Winnsboro to buy your shoes. t-lats are a specialty here. without end. fore Bargains all the way throu fore see for yourself how much save by buying here. )I ldar ness, Sd& - Call andl examine my sto< Saddles, Robes, &c., before t a complete line of up-to-dat< best quality and at prices 1 you. If you mean business, * buying, as I will not be under es. We graes Horses, Mules an 10 always on hand to sell or exci 0 of horse medicine in stock. "A little higher in price, bi ON, Buggy is the best and cheape D. A. Cras lck. 4:. ts more health. lOT RICES AND THE BARGAINS TO EVERY e's Overcoats isortmient and s, Skirts, etc., |at attractive elter place in flat bargains ~h. Come and oney you can cker. lesiEtc. U ck of Harness, ying. I have goods ofr the at will please ee me before old by any one. .d Buggies iage. All kinds " the Rock H ill f ord.