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T113 PICKENS SENTINEL:J0U Entered April 23, 1903 at Pieken., %. C. as second class matter, under act of Congress of Marca 3, 1879 Year PICKENS, S. C., MARCH 18, 1909. e trade-mark of mulsion bottle of it sold hich amounts ons yearly. it has made ckly children well-given health and .osy cheeks to so many pale, anaemic girls and restored to health so many thousands in the first stages of Consumption. Send this advertisement, together with name of paper in which it appears, your address and four cents to cover postage, and we will send you a Complete Handy Atlas of the World." SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., N.Y. mofessional Card! J. E. BOGGS W. E. FINDLEl BOGS & FINDLEY Lawyers Pickens, S. C. , ie over P'ickens2 48tf so. ~rter, Pickens foi is profession. air 'Freem, nrBldg Res' ence . Notice of Final Settlement and Discharge. NOTICE is hereby given that 0 wi 1;ake applicatien to J. B. Newberr, Esq.. Judge of Probate for Picken: county, in the State of South Carolina on the 1 day of Aprti!, 1909, at 11 o'cloc in the forenoon, or as soon thereafter a said application cau bb Aurd. for leavi to made final ettlement ofhe !'.eQ Mahaley C. Kemp deceasea. and' obtair discharge as adtmnistr ter of said estate P D. Dacus. Administrator. I Final Settlement and 1rge. . -hereby givirfthat I wil ication to J. B. New berr: e of Probafe for Picken te of South Uarolina April 1909, at 11 o'cloci ,or as soon thereafter a can be heard, for leav< ttlement of the estate c ed, and obtain die nistrator of said estate. J. .P. Smith, Ad mrt. p on a Hard Bed. ow ~ ortable a sot soft pilvamay be y. Women'specialla void them, for theJ juring the phys the body sinki nsiderable por edof propel Is interfer 1 make thi eful. what you? of the which er as hat they medicine. ea perfect edge. Sohe ieach bottle ines are made of This lie feels dbecause the more o whlich his medicines dre"made are_- -a udr ~thecre f oman's peculiar weak nesses, irregularities and derangements. giving rise to frequent headaches, back ache, dragging-down pain or distress in lower abdominal or pelvic region, accom panied, ofttimnes, with a debilitating, pelvic, catarrhal drain and kindred symp toms of weakness, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a most efficient remedy. It is equally effective in curing painful periods, in giving strength to nursing mothers and in preparing the system of the expectant mother for baby's coming. thus rendering chiildbirth safe and com paratively painless. The "Favorite Pre scrption" -Is a most potent, strengthening tonic to the general system and to the ~rgans distinctly feminine in particular. Jt is also a soothing and imvigorating rervine and cures nervous exhaustion, rervous prostration. neuralgia, hysteria, pams. chorea or St. Vitus s dance. and ther distressing nervous symptoms at, ndant upon functional and organme dis' of the distinctly feminine organs. A host of medical authorities of all the eral schools of practice, recommend h of the several ingredients of which vorite Prescription" is made for the of the diseases for which it is claimed ba cure. You may read what the: yo Dourself by sending a postal car( est for a free booklet of extracts the leading authorities, to Dr. R. V Invalids' Hotel and Surgical In .Buffalo, N. Y., and it will come ti yreturn post. N6 IEW DISCOVER1 Stop That Cough. Around the With Sixteen T HE return home of the American fleet from its trip around the earth ends the greatest battle ship cruise in the history of the world. The distance covered has been approximately 43,000 nautical miles, or nearly 50,000 land miles, LEY D. EVANS. which if extend ed in a straight line would go twice around the earth at the equator. The time consumed has been a few days over fourteen months, the start having been m.Rde on Dec. 16, 1907, from Hampton Roads, and the trip ending at the same point and in the same battleship formation on Wash Ington's birthday, Feb. 22, 1909. Presi dent Roosevelt reviewed the fleet on its departure and again on its return. During the entire cruise there was not an accident worth mention or an untoward event. The schedule pre pared before the ships started was fol lowed throughout. At one or two points, notably Yokahama, there was a variation of a few days due to storms. The delay was made up easily, how ever, and on other legs of the journey the vessels had to loaf to keep from coming in ahead of time. The good effects of the cruise It Is impossible fully to measure, but enough benefits are already apparent the extra cost of the trip, as has been sai ington, many times over. This extra the way, has been only nominal, the chief item being coal. One moro added cost has been in the transportation of food. Other outlays have been but lit tIe more than they would have been if the ships had remained at home. It is estimated that the increased cost in coal has been about $1,300,000, a, ap proximately 365,000 tons have been burned, costing $2,600,000, about half of which amount would have been required in home waters. Much of the extra expense waz in transporting. Oil has cost approximately- $100,000 and food nearly $200,000, little of which represents added outlay. The passage through the Suez canal cost $130,000. From this trifling expenditure has 1 come an incalculable good. The bene ficial effects of the cruise naturally fall -under two heads-first, the diplomatic results or influence on the world at large; second, increased efficiency or influence on the fleet itself. Of the diplomatic results the chief is the added respect of the world for the American navy. It is safe to sa'y that no naval event outside of war has ever so much attracted the attention and admiration of all nations. At the be ginning all sorts of pessimistic proph ecies were made concerning it. The NEW LINCOLN MONEY. One Cent Piece Searing Martyr Presi dent's Portrait Simple Design. Victor D. Brenner, the New York sculptor who made the Lincoln cen tennial medal, is the designer of the new one cent piece bearing Lincoln's portrait. He received word from Washington recently that his design had been accepted, with suggestions by President Roosevelt for several minor changes in the lettering. Mr. Brenner said that he considered the Splacing of Lincoln's likeness on the coinage- much more symbolic of Ameri can ideals than the present design. The new coppers have the bas-relief head of Lincoln in profile on the coin Iin place of the Indian. The word I"Liberty" is to the left of the head. and to the right is the date "1909." On the reverse side at the top is the motto "E Pluribus Ujnum,'' with un derneath in the center the words "One Cent," in large letters, with a sheaf of -wheat on each side. veda the Lincoln head ~e con before has been used on only the five cent design in nickel of 66. It is said that not more than five of the Lincoln five cent pieces were struck in nickel and that single im pressions now sell for about $12 each. NONMAGNETIC SHIP. Odd Construction of the Carnegie For Studying Compass Variations. The Carnegie institute is having built at Brooklyn for the study of phenomie na of magnetic variations an auxiliary craft of 568 tons displacement. in the construction of which less than 00 pounds of steel or iron will be used. The vessel will be called the Carnegie and will be used chiefly for the study of compass variations. The use of steel and Iron has been limited to the greatest possible extent so that obser vations will not be affected by the compass deflection usual on modern steel ships. The Carnegie will be built of wood, with locust treenails and copper and bronze bolts. The anchors, plumbing and cabin fittings will also be bronze, and even the engines, with a few small exceptions, will be constructed of a special alloy called Victor vana dium bronze. Hemp cables will be used instead of anchor chains. Honor For a Mexlcan Hero. The government of Mexico has voted an appropriation of $50,000 for a mnon~ ument to a humble hero-Jesus Garcia, a locomotive engineer. Garcia a year ago bravely hooked his engine to a burning car filled with dynamite and hauled it out of Nacazari, Mexico. He saved the town from disaster, but was blown to nieces himself. Whole World Battleships' perfect manner in which it was car ried out has changed all this to praiae, It has advanced the cause of brother hood. Its motto from the beginning has been that it was made for peace, not war. It has brought added friend ship from all the lands visited. This was especially nctable in South Ameri ca, Australasia and Japan. It immeas urably helped the pan-American centi ment. It was taken by Australia and New Zealand to mean white supremacy In the Pacific. Its arrival, in Japan was timed exactly to assist in bringing about the Japanese-Arrerican aliiance. As for the effect on the ficet, iHs valuI in training officers and men has been incalculable. Added efficiency in navi gation, in economy and in marksman ship has been marked. The target tests at Magdalena zr.d Manila bays not only showed the highest rccord in the American navy, but in the world. More than all else, it helped the fleet find its spirit. On this head Admiral Sperry says: "This cruise marks an epoch in our naval annals, for the fleet h's found itself-been welded into a unity. An aggregation cf battleships irrespective of the power and efficiency of the in dividual units is not a fleet in the high est sense of the term until by long, faithful and harmonious wcrk on the part of the personnel the spirit of the fleet has been developed. That now has been accomplished." At the start the fleet was commanded by Rear Admiral Robley D. Evrsn "Fighting Bob"-who jaikhe-Vas pre parect'?{c-afight or a frolic." Because of ill health he was relieved at San Fr;ncisco and was succeeded by Rear ,Admiral Charles N. Thomas, who com manded but a few days when ill health also caused his retirement and ended his life shortly after. The command then devolved on Rear Admiral Charles S. Sperry, who took the fleet from San Francisco around the world. Of the sixteen battleships that origi nally started on the cruico the Maine and Alabama dropped out at San Francisco, and their places were taken by the Nebraska and Wisconsin, both Pacific built ships. The chief ports touched at in the cruise were Trinidad, Rio Janeiro, Punta Arenas, the southernmost port in the world; Valparaiso, where no stop was made; Callao, Magdalena bay; our own Pacific ports; Honolulu, Auckland, Syd ney, Melbourne, Yokohama, Ma nila, the Suez ports; Messina, to relieve the earthquake suf ferers; Gibraltar and home. At almost every point touched the enthusiasm was ,-1EAR ADMIIRAL prodigious. C?ARLES S. SPERRY. COSTLY GIFT FOR UNCLE SAM. Gem Studded Rug, Worth $50,000, Pre sented to the White House. What is said to be one of the most costly gifts to the nation by .an indi vidual was recently accepted by Presi dent Roosevelt at the White 1Iouse. H. H. Topakyan, a wealthy Armenanl connoisseur and a personal friend of the president, presented an imperial silk Jeweled Persian rug, said to be the finest in texture and weave in tie world. The rug, which is valued at $50,000, contains twenty-four square feet o: unblemished Persian silk. It is stud ded with strings of sapphires, rubies, emeralds and turquoises. surrounded by ropes of pearls, causing the color design, which is modeled after the in teor of a Turkish mosque, to run inte delicate shades of rose, green and ho rizon blue. The whole effec-t is one of indescribable softness and richness. The rug, which Is hand woven, rep resents the labor of an entire Persian family for five years. -It was originally ~~ded for use as a wall tapestry in *thje .sbah of Persia, but it the palae - ' M. Oi onW on1o struck Mr. Top 2 , .dera his trips to the orient ~ ,; great deal of trouble he sneCeet purchasing it and bringing it to Ainer ica. A framework of mahogant has been built around the rug. :a a may be used as a hanging tapes.; in the White House reception room. SETON BEAM FOR ROOSEVELT. Device Determines Weight and Meas urement of Animals Accurately. Ernest Thompson Seton (of Green, wich, Conn., has presented to Presi dent Roosevelt a sportsman's weigh beam for use on his South African ex pedition. It is called the Seton beam and ls the invention of the naturalist. By the use of this beam animals up to 00 pounds may be weighed to with in half an ounce of accuracy. The out fit itself weighs but one and three quarter pounds and is on the puir gravity principle, without spring. 11 also provides for the measurement of the animals. Race Transplanting Test. A British religious -rgnization is trying to transplant a1 r-: - by eneour aging the emigraltionl <? the Lapp from Lapland, where they are in dan ger of extinction to Labrador and New foundland. Groundhog Night In Missouri. Mrs. William Berry of Belfower, Mo., who is a widow, and consequent ly a trapper, caught seven ground'iog! In her seven steel traps a few night! ago --n - CARROLL WRIGHT'S JEST. Clark College President Used Mathe matics to End Friction In a Choir. When Colonel Carroll D. Wright, president of Clark college at Worces ter. Mass., and former United States labor commissioner, was a young man he was appointed by the church with which he was connected chairoan of the comm!ttee on music. He w is no musician, but he was a mathematitan, and he used ma.hematics to terect music. He promptly made three of the com mittee members of the quartet. That removed the possibility of friction be tween the committee and the choir. le soon found, Lowever, that there was some feeling between the con tralto and the soprano singer. Either was likely to exhibit sensitiveness if the other seemed to be assigned to solos tho more frequently or more prominently. When Easter Sunday came it so hap pened that the anthem which had been selected as suitable for the occasion contained very long soprano solos. The contralto soloist was plainly dis concertcd. Noting this, the chair man of the music committee quietly whispered to her that he had made an accurate measurement of the num ber of inches of the soprano part and that he would see to it before the month was out that anthems were se lected which not only harmonized with the religious needs of the occasion. but afforded an equal number of inches of contralto solo. "I am not much of a musician," Mr. Wright is said to have added, "but I am great on fig ures. You can trust me to equalize the account to the eighth of an inch." This piece of waggishness, which naturally put an emd to friction in the choir. furni.hpd a key to Colonel Wright's success a life. This choir incident of his youth epitomizes his methods In handling all questions. COLONY OF COMMUNISM. How Dr. Van Eeden Would Abolish Human Ills. Dr. Frederik Van Eeden of Holland, poet, scientist, artist and sociologist, whose views on communism attracted so much attention a year ago when he visited the United States, recently ar-I rived in New York-and tis 6: with: a well defined plan for the elimination of all human ills and the realization of universal happiness. "I am going to form a corporation or a trust, as you call it here in Amer Ica," he said the other day, "whose scope will be worlilwide and whose ob ject will be the suppression of usury, special F.tilege and barter. The trust will eliminate the man who does not work, the drone who dissipates his usefulness. I "The corporation will be conducted on purely business lines. We will have a company with a president, a treas urer, a secretary, and we will have a board of trustees. I do not know who the officers and the trustees will be, but they must be men of high stand Ing and undoubted honesty. The gen eral manager must be a capable busi-' ness man, and the basic-principle will be the prevention of unemployment and malemployment." Dr. Van Eedeu hopes to organize several communistic colonies in Amer lca. Hie has already founded such a c (o-operative society in Amsterdam. which has grown to large proportions. CALL FOR THREE PRESIDENTS Petition of Civic Federation of Huron,; S. D.-Wanted "With Vices.' IRepresentative William Sulzer of New York -presented to the house the other day a petition from the Civic federation of Huron. S. D., urging an auirdment of the federal constitution. The petition sets out that there ought to be three presidents-one from the east, one from the west and one from. the central part of the United States. The adoption of this scheme would keep the judiciary out of politics, would prevent the concentration of power and would serve to diminish the, centering of popular dislike on ong man. A pparently the petitioners desire thai there shall he three vice presidentt also, although their language is a bit vague en this point. The petitiorrfa vors "three presidents with vices." WOME 0 DED WITH IDEAS. But Men Come Home ply Loaded, ISays Bishop Anderson Bishop Charles P. Anderson has ath ed a uniqune contribution to the argu ments in favor of woman suffrage. In an address the other night at Chicago to a men's club he took up the cudgels for the other sex. "When men have an afternoon off they go to a ball game or a circus," he said. "When a woman has an after noon to sp1end she goes to a meeting of the Browning club. The women come home loaded with ideas; the men come home simply loaded." The bishop went en to say that there was as much reason why the women should get together and refuse to al low the men to vote as for th oppo site condition to exist. New Eye Disease. A new disease, called "electric oph thalmia," is said to threaten all users of the electric light. According to two Dresden scientists, the damage is done to the eye tissues by the ultra violet Iras of the electric light, and cataract Imay ultimately result. The same in Ivest igators have discovered a simple preventive for electric ophthalmia in the shape of yellow or green specta cles,- which, they prophesy, will be come universal as electricity comes more and more into use as an illumi nnt. ALL SUFFER AIKE NO CLASS EXEMPT FROM TRUST EXTORTION. Recent "Little Flurry," Has Shown In Stronger Light the Bogus Pros perity That Is the Repub lican Party's Boast. All classes of citizens are suffering, in this boasted era of Republican' prosperity, and if the recen trouble' was, as our Republican contempo raries declared, "only a little flurry,., what will a real Republican panic do? The farmer has discovered that the "little flurry" has prevented the cot ton buyer and the wheat buyer from having money to buy the crops; that the price of farm products is falling, while the price of the tariff-protected trust products is still at the top notch. The workingman finds wages declin ing and factories either running on short time or closing down, with but little or any corresponding reduction in the price of what he is compelled to buy. The railroad men, the telegraph operators, and other employes of pub lic utility corporations, are threatened with a "lay off" as winter advances, and but little saved to keep the gaunt and hungry Republican wolf of "pros perity" from the door. And yet the Republican leaders in congress, and out of congress for that matter, stand pat and sing their monotonous song of "let well enough alone," and advise us all to join in the chorus. Under this joyless Republican symphony, while the tariff still protects the trusts and. not a trust magnate, a malefactor of great wealth, though he may be, is prevented from continuing his plunder ing, every one is suffering but the fa vored few. How do you like it? Will you still vote to protect the trusts and indorse the Republican policy of "leaving well enough alone?" Do you think Presi dent Roosevelt can be a real reformer and not even recommend to congress the reform of the tariff that protects the trusts, which is the chief cause of prosperity for the few and panic for the many? Are you farmers satisfied with the bogus protection the Republican tariff p-zetedi to give you, and do you real ly believe that tne tairff on wheat and other cereals has added one .ert a. bushel to the price paid you? If you get two or three cents a pound more for wool, you more than pay it out again in dearer clothes. If you grow sugar beets, and the tariff tax on imported sugar makes such beets a dollar a ton higher, the sugar trust gets it back from you in higher priced sugar. Do you workingmen still believe the tariff tax on iron and steel and glass and all other manufactured products protects you and adds to your wages or shortens your hours of labor? Is a carpenter or bricklayer or painter pro, tected by the tariff? You know they cannot be, but their wages are higher than their brothers who produce tar iff-protected products because they are better organized and have thus been able to secure better terms and shorter hours from employers. It was not the tariff, therefore, that pro tected them, but rather plundered them, for all alike have to pa~ the tariff tax to the trusts in high Wices for their products. There is another class of wofkers who are especially robbed by th tar iff and have no particle of taril pro tection, and that is the stcrekeepers and their clerks. The trusts cuts down their profits, and in ma4r in stances dictate the price they hhall sell for, and thus reduce profits~ and very naturally their clerks suffel by small wages and long hours. Then there are those se in comes are fixed and do -ot increase as the price of trust pro :ets ad vance. All such have throufthe increased cost of living iad ! purchasing pow er of es reduced over 50 y r sent.in th ist ten years, or since the present tar-ff law has been on the statute books. So all these classes suffer from the tariff that our Republican brethren boasted produced prosperity until thit panic took the wind out of their sails and they wonder what has struck them. Nursing the National Banks. It is seldom that an admission o1 the close connection of the Roosevelt administration and the frenzied finan ers is made officially, although it is well"nown that such exists. In his opening epeech to the jury in the case of the goveanment against Banket Walsh of Chica&s. United States At' torney Dorbyns said:~ - I is the policy of the government to a . e a bank found to be in t uuble, + wa * con ceal crime until its affa t 'an be straightened out." How ni ich lenkei Walsh paid to the Roosevel- campain" fund for concealing the crime he was charged with has not yet 'nc tce light, but like the corrupt ini-ur air contributions, it may yet be dih i The inspection of national bai. would seem to be run in the interest of the Republican party instead of for the protection of the people. Our Beneficial Millionaires. It Is to~ be hoped that the expiatory offerings of the very rich for charita ble purposes will do some people as much good as the means by which these multimillionaires secured their fortunes did harm. The sums donated the past year for educational institu tions, religion, libraries, museums, art galleries and public improvements are said to amount to $148,902,130. Still this vast sum is not a tithe of what ou beneficent millionaires possess. I WITH THE SAGES. Efforts are always successes.-Bish. op Walsham How. To love is to obey; to know how to love is to rule.-Levi. What would you have? Take it and pay the price.-Goethe. The measure of a man's life is the well-spending of it-not the length. Plutarch. I will listen to anyone's convictions, but pray keep your doubts to your self.-Goethe. If a thing is possible and proper to man, deem it attainable by thee. Marcus Aurelius. Our greatest glory consists not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.-Goldsmith. Assume in adversity a countenance of prosperity, and in prosperity mod erate thy temper.-Livy. Every man is worth just so much as the things are worth about which he busies himself.-Marcus Aurelius. An able man shows his spirit by gentle words and resolute actions. He is neither hot nor timid.-Chester field. It would be better for most of us if we complained less of being misun derstood and took more care that we do not misunderstand other people, Dr. John Watson. Acquiesce In the present without repining, remember the past with thankfulness, and meet the future hopefully and cheerfully, without fear or suspicion.-Diogenes. SUNFLOWER PHILOSOPHY.. No one has as much money as peo ple Imagine. Discount your expectations at least 80 per cent. The man who really.enjoys fighting is not much good for anything else. When a man is loser you can't con sole him by telling him how much you won. The more people talk about the proper thing to do the less apt they are to do it. The average woman will use almost any kind of soap if it is recommend ed to Improve the complexion. Probably more men would join the church if some initiatory work were put on when a new member is added. It is said if you do not blow your own horn no one will blow it for you. Well, they certainly will not blow it if you are blowing it. - Let three women talk together, and within five minutes one of them will ay that she doesn't 'Intend to work herself to death for any mnan"-Atch ison (Kan) Globe. WHAT THEY DO IN THE NAYY. The ship's bell is struck every half hour to announce the time. The quarter-deck must always be saluted on being approached. Postal orders are sold at face value without poundage being charged. The master-at-arms-or chief of police is the only man In the shijp, not being an officer, allowed to wear a sword. From the minute a ship commis sonls to the day of paying off, there is always an officer on watch day and night without intermission. Grog Is always mixed with three parts water before being served out to the men; warrant officers and pet ty oficers alone receive It undiluted. MERE OPINION. In addition to being hard, the way of the transgressor is well greased. Most men are able to appreciate the blessings of toil only after they lose their jobs. When a man has nothing to do he finds it very wearisome unless he can persuade somebody to help. There are many people In this world whose actions indicate that they think with their stomachs. The world may owe every man a living, but it is not under any obliga tion to pay interest on the debt. rt . hard for some people' to unden. stand-that there may be plempure4 anything which doesn't cost than they cam-afford to pay. ABOUT YOU. Your bones number 'as. Your stomach has four cots Your brain is seven-eighths wates There are but four bones to yous ear. Your lungs contain five quarts of Your sense of touch Is dullest 01 van back. -- L T been Picken? auspices sionary It is ex will be pr these meetin have been leaders in churches: Pickens-H. Cross Roads Mile Creek-N. Griffin-S. H. Br Pleasant Grove-J. Secona-0. P. Field Mountain Grove-R. Mt. Tabor-S. M. L Nine Forks-J. P. Rob Cateechee-Furman N Cedar Rock-J. H. Mille Peters Creek-J. E. Singl Pickens Mill-J. C. Child PROGRAM. Pickens-Fourth Suiday in March, addresses by T.U. Vau ghn and T. 0. Lawton. Secona-First Sunday in Apr. Addresses by T. 0. Lawton, Jr. and H. M. Hester. Griffin- Second Sunday in Apr. Addresses by J. T. Taylor and C. E. Robinson. Pickens Mill- Third Sunday in April. Addresses by W. J. Bolt and R. T. Hallum. Mountain Grove- Fourth Sun day in April. Addresses by R. T. Hallum and W. E. Findley. Nine Forks-First Sunday in May. Addresses by C. E. Rob inson and J. T. Taylor. Cedar Rock-Second Sunday in May. Addresses by R. T. Hallum and W. J. Bolt. Pleasant Grove-Second Sun day in May. Addresses by J. T. Taylor and C. E. Robinson. Crm Roads - Third Sun day in May. ldiressesb T. Hallum. W. J. Bolt add W. E. Findley. Mt. Tabor-Fourth Sunday in May. Addresses by R. T. Hal um, W. E. Findley and J. R. Conley. Mile Creek-Fourth Sunday in May. Addresses by J. T. Tay lor and C. E. Robinson. Peters Creek-Second Sunday in June. Addresses by J. T. Taylor and C. E. Robinson. Cateechee-Third Sunday in June. Addresses by R. T. Hal um anid W. J. Bolt. Each of the above meetings will be in charge of* the Church eader who will conduct the oening services. Every lay member of the churches are re :uested to attend these meetings and we earnestly request th~e cooperation of the pastors to make them a success. J. T. TAYLOR, Asso. Leader. Botanic lood Balm (.B. 3.) Vres Thro8gh tihe D00o EEI,SIALY S4.i FIEPLES, Rheumatism, Eczema, Itching Humors. B.B. B. (Botanic Blood Blood) is-the only Blood Remedy that kills the poison in the blood and then purifies it-send ing a flood of pure, rich blood direct to the skin surface, bones. joints, and wherever the disease is located. Ia this way all sores. ulcers. pimples, eruptions are healed and cured. pains and aches of Rheumatism cease, swellings subside. B. B. B. completely changes the body into a clean healthy condition, giving the skin the rich, red hue of perfect health. B. B. B. cur worst old cases. Bf;wic gr*int. *t u ieranrce the blo. B. B. Bokegtense neBrve gits $1.00 PERhLARGE BOTPTLE with direc. tions for home cure. o14li nickens, S.C. by Bolt & Co. tice te Debtors and Creditors. All prsns having claims against the state of late Isaac Durham deceased, nt the same duly proven on or te1st day of April 1909, or be debarred payment, and all prsons debt~d to said estate must wak pay ment oai or before the above date to the gndersitned. /R. N. DURHAM, Adinr.