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.IpTo Th< \ ol Sixth Congre As many of you wer gressional campaign mee my privilege, but a duty as to myself, to put mys involved in this campaig; I feel that I have ru fought a good fight, thai have endeavored to mak ures, not of men; of issu< have done no mud-slingii ' ^ ^~ MAiflinv oIn 1 IlciVtJ IltJcipeu CtJU ponents. I have offered my own merits, and not else. I believe that I air sent this District. I feel our people want clean po above all else, that a car a man of high character, this District will utterly , elections, and that they to buy his election wants f sonal gain instead of pul [ I stand for Democra ough accord with our b all of its great policies, and welfare of the nati( pend to a very large deg power of the Democratic ship of Woodrow Wils< been accomplished in the us great good, but much 1 \ I believe that the nee this nation against the p serious one. I stand fc equipped, and a navy set that of England. J I stand for the extei eral Government in fa building of good roads, i lands by a proper draina I stand for laws thai Knv and remitaL which wi WVJL Milvi v/ j? _ j . . and lockouts. \ I want to express to my appreciation of the ? my behalf,and to say to ing successful to a most; and I are jubilant over r ing assurances of suppoi glad tidings of success, support stronger than tt The crown of victor ?I only want to urge m -s forts in my behalf until Julius S. r VI * 1 e Voters f the i f\*.i . issionai uistnci: e unable to attend the Contings, I feel that it is not only which I owe to you as well elf on record as to the issues n. % in a good race, that I have ; I have kept the faith; for I e this a campaign of measss instead of personalities. I ig, either in public or private, use nor ridicule upon my op myself as a candidate upon ; on the demerits of anyone i qualified to properly repre[ that the time has come when litics, when they will demand ididate for any office must be , I believe that the people of condemn the use of money in will think any man who tries ; office for opportunity of per)lic service. tic principles, and am in thorlational Administration upon I believe that the prosperity )n, especially the South, deree upon the continuation in *, party under the wise leaderon. The things which have ; past three years have done nore remains to be done. -F/v** -FnvfVinr nvonarpHnPSS of 1VI 1UL 1/llVi. ^/JL V^/Wl VVIX4VWU Vd. ossibility of war is a real and >r a large army, thoroughly ;ond in size and power only to ision of activity by the Fedrm demonstration work, the md reclaiming of our swamp ge system. t will give justice to both la11 tend to prevent both strikes ' my friends and supporters rood work they are doing in them that their efforts are bectvqtifvincr flppree. Mv friends &iwvixj c/ ny prospects. _ Letters bear t are pouring in, bringing the My friends are finding my ley had even hoped it could be. y seems to be within my grasp v friends to keep up their efthe primary. Tk/t f , ivicinnes, andidate for Congress, Sixth District, S. C. I I DO YOU KNOW THAT The hand that carries food to the mouth can also carry disease germs? Health first is the highest 1 form of safety first? ; Tuberculosis and poverty go | i J 4 imuu 111 uauu. I The breast fed baby has the | best chance? Physical fitness is prepared- | ness against disease? ? Pneumonia is a communic able disease? | Cockroaches may carry dis- X ease? The U S Public Health Ser- I vice will send a booklet on flies x and disease, gratis to all ap- | | plicants? | SUFFERED THREE YEARS WITHOUT MINUTE'S EASE. Mrs. Pilgrim Had Terrible Attacks Nearly Every Day. LIKE A HORRIBLE DREAM. sue Declares nrsr uotne 01 laoiac Completely Relieved Her?Had Been Id Bad Health 10 Years. After suffering three long years without "a minute's relief" from stomach trouble, Mr? Rcna Pilgrim of 15 Harris street, Anderson, S C, found complete relief in the first bottle of Tanlac she took, according to a statement she gave the Tanlac representative. Her statement follows : "I suffered from stomach trouble, which caused me continual pain foi I .1 T J:J I ? | three years. 1 uiu nut im\c u ?mr I ute's relief. I could not eat anything, and I was so very weak that 1 could not do my housework. I had been in bad health for ten (10) years, and my ailments had beer very bad during the past five (5) years. My nerves were all torn to pieces, too. Nearly every day for about nine months, and less frequently durinp the two previous years,I would have terrible attacks. My nerves had something to do with them, I suppose. These attacks would continue an hour or longer and I would become unconscious. Members of my family several times thought I was dying, and I thought so myself. When these attacks wore off it seemed as if I had had a horrible dream, and I would be too weak to sit up or talk, even, for two or three hours after the spells ended. Before I took Tanlac I was so weak I could not dc my housework and I would have tc go to bed three or four times and rest a short while during the time I was cooking each meal. 1 did not dare eat meat, and everything I ate would cause me terrible pains. "I had tried so many medicines and had spent so much money without getting relief that I had lost faith in medicine almost and had aboul lost hope of ever getting well again I was persuaded to take Tanlac, though, and when J. began taking il I could not walk across the street. "Well, I am a well and happj woman now, and it is all due tc Tanlac. I do my cooking, wash clothes occasionally, and go to town and anywhere I care to, for mj strength has been returned. Tlu very first bottle of Tanlac endeti those terrible attacks and stoppe* the pain in my stomach. You car imagine how grateful I felt when J ^ *UAOA rkoinc iiftor f lirot ^ W88 IIX'Cll ?Jl JNUIIO WKI ui?v> I long years of steady suffering. "Since I began taking Tanlac I have taken two trips to Georgia t< ! visit relatives. I never get tired nou and I find a lot of pleasure in m\ housework. I am 4o years of age, but I am going around a lot now t< make up for the time I lost during the post five years. I can eat any j thing now and a lot of it,and I never have indigestion. "I am really a new and an entire ly different woman now,so great has been the change since my healtl was improved. I felt fine when 1 ' had finished the second bottle ol Tanlac,and I have not taken any ir J over a month. I bought six botties j at one time, but L ga-.*o cue to: 'friend, and other members of mj family took the rest. I took just twe (21 !>ottles. "I am sure I can recommend Teniae, and I have persuaded a lol of my friends to take it. If you had seen me before and - fter T took Tan| lac, you would say it has worked a j real miracle for me. Thai just tie [size oi it; Tanlac worked a niirach j for me." Tanlac, the master medicine, i: sold by King-tree Drug Co., Kings tree; Mallard Lumber (Vs st< re j 'Leciyyilie; It P Ilinnant, Suttons; [.price 81 per bottle, straight. ; Reliable Laxatn Reli ; Child Was Badly Constipated until Mo; tber Tried Simple Remedy. ; In spite of every care and atten> tion to diet, children are very apt to become constipated, a condition responsible for many ills in after life unless promptly relieyed. Mrs C W Wilson of Shelbyviile, Tenn, had trouble with her baby boy.Woodrow, until she heard of Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Shewrites, "I can safely say Dr Caldwell's Syrun PeDsin is the best remedy of its kind on earth. It acts so gently and yet so surely. Little Wood row was very badly constipated and we could find nothing that gave relief until we tried your Syrup Pepsin,which gave immediate relief." Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a compound of simple laxative herbs, free from opiates or narcotic drugs, mild in action, positive in effect and pleasant to the taste. It has been prescribed by Dr Caldwell for more 5,000,000 FIGHTERS NOW IN PRISON, GERMANY HAS 1,750,000 OF THEM, RUSSIA 1,500,000, AND MORE POURING IN. More than 5,000,000 prisoners, double the number of men engaged in nnv nrpvinus war that the world ... ?J , _ has known, are now confined in pris- i on camps of the belligerent nations, | according to Dr John R Mott, general secretary of the Young Men's Christian association, who arrived : in New York several days ago on the Danish steamship Oscar II from Copenhagen. Dr Mott left New York in May for Russia and has vis ited the prison camps of nearly all . the countries at war. Dr Mott said that of the prison; ers, Germany has the greatest nuni[ ber, approximately 1,750,000. Russia, with about 1,500,000, comes i next, then Austria with 1,000,000, i followed in order by France, Italy, Rn'tnin nnH Tnrkev. Russia's , prisoners, he added, are rapidly in! creasing, more than 400,000 having ; been added to the camps since the : beginning of the last Russian drive. 1 In six weeks, Dr Mott added, 230, 000 passed through Kiev. "I found," Dr Mott said, "that reports as to the treatment of pris oners of war were receiving have i been greatly exaggerated. In all the countries the prisoners receive virtually the same food and care , that the armies of the respective i countries do. Everything possible j is done for their comfort and their : health. > "We have forty-five American > secretaries working among the variI ous armies, and I hope to increase ? this number shortly. The work is t the general army Y M C A work, ; looking after the men's mental and physical wants. We have been ac? corded all the co-operation and as sistance we could reasonably expect i by all the countries except Turkey, t where, as yet we have not been per. mitted to enter." , D A Davis, formerly of Washing. ton, D C. is in general charge of the American Y M C A worK on the ' western front, Dr Mott said, and A ' ^ T T *-? I" ' "> nU.ffQ r\n thi? onstprn ) Vy nuri.tr is 111 liku k*. vh ?.? >- ^ front. Mr Harte returned with Dr i Mott for a vacation. | NEEDFUL KNOWLEDGE. 1 Kinqstree People Should Learn to De| tect the Approach of Kidney Disease. 3 The symptoms of kidney trouble are many. Disordered kidneys often excrete a thick, cloudy, offensive , urine, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of r scalding. The back may ache, head i 1 *"v*o*r rt/mni'onh ! acnes anu ui/.&y spmia iumjt > the victim is often weighted down r by a feeling of languor ar?d fatigue. . Neglect these warnings and there is . danger. Delay often proves fatal. You can use no better endorsed . kidney remedy than Doan's Kidney i Pills. Here's Kingstree proof of l tneir merit. [ C R Thomas, photographer, Mill t it, Kingstree. says: "My kidneys i were disordered,and I suffered from i dull pains in my back. I was sore i. and la":-' :i he morning, and could r hardly stoop. I had headaches and > dizzy spells. The kidney secretions passed irregularly and caused me no 1 end of trouble. When I read about ; Doan's Kiuney Tills I got a supply at 1 Allen's drug store, and one box !1 r?f all jioms nf kidnev eomnlaint " i Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get ; Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr Thomas had. Foster-MilburnCo, i Props, Buffalo, N Y. The la I who sticks to the farm in youth will find the dollars clinging j to him in old age. ire eved this Baby. WOODROW WILSON than a quarter of a century and can now he had for fifty cents a bottle in any well-stocked drug store. To obtain a trial bottle, free of charge, write to Dr W B Caldwell, 454 Washington St, Monticello, 111. LAKE CITY HAPPENINGS. Sale of Newspaper?Ice Plant In Operation?Personal Items. Lake City, August 15:?Mr W T Askins has gone to see his daughter, Miss Violet, who is in a sanatorium in Asheville. Abovt ten days ago the son of Mr Fank Cockfield, who lives out near Lynches river, was bitten by a dog which acted in a manner exciting suspicion that it was mad. The dog was killed, and the child has been under the serum treatment several days. So far no alarming symptoms have appeared. Mr J H DuPre, of the engineering department, spent last Thursday and a portion of Friday here, looking into the condition wrought by the storm and arranging for distribution of the assistance authorized by Congress. Mrs Woodlev and daughter, Miss Mary, of Petersburg, Va, are visiting Mrs C D Rollins, daughter of the first named and sister of the second. The ice factory, its large artesian well having been completed, is now getting plenty of water and is running full time. Some folks think that there is no difference in ice, but that is entirely wrong. There is ice and ice, as comparison of the product of this factory with common ice will clearly show. Mr C C Daniel of Indiantown spent Monday in town on business. The recent disaster has not affected his cheerfulness to an appreciable extent. There are some cases of malarial and of typhoid fever in the community; and through the wide distribution of germs and filth by the recent rains it is feared that there may be numerous cases of these fevers before cold weather comes. Tobacco continues to come in at about the same rate as last week, and the good prices are keeping up well. One must not conclude from the great quantities of tobacco being sold here that the crops of the community were not damaged much. Such a conclusion would be erroneous. Of course some of it comes from this neighborhood, but only a part. It is coming from five or six counties and even Southwest Georgia. Lake City being the best market of the State, is selling a good part of the tobacco of the State and even drawing from a sister State. The Lake City News, so we underofartrt has hppn nnrphflspd hv Messrs M K Gravely and Mark Smith. Mrs W C Kelley was taken Tuesday to the McLeod infirmary, Florence, for an operation. She was accompanied by Dr C D Rollins. France to Pay for Babies. France is considering paying mothers for bearing children. Men will be needed to take the place of the millions killed in this war and to fight the wars of tne future. With the terrible destruction now going on in Europe, it seems that there would not be much incentive to mothers to bear children, just to furnish targets for cannon and rifles. Gemar.y has a!s< taken steps to insure men for future wars, by legitimatizing chilr* f unmarried women and lowerio? the marriageable age to 15 years. A bill is before the French cham Der to estaonsn a system or Dirtn bounties after January the first. The State is to pay, under this proposed scheme, $10r? for each of the first two childron, $200 for fee third. $400 for the fourth and $200 for each one thereafter. This bounty goes to the mother Fathers who support four living "ildren are entitled to a bounty of $400. The funds for these bounties are to be obtained by taxing those of either sot who for any re??<\n are childless or have only one child. 5 J