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(Accidents] Wiil Happen Use SLOAN 5 LINIMENT |ForSprains,Bnrises Sore Muscles,Cuts Burns ?. Scalds AUB ?fa\ersPrice2JfJCf?f?00 Dr. Earl S Sloan Boston MassU.S.A. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous? ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kedol cures indigestion. This hew discov? ery represents the natural juices of diges? tion as they exist iu a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dys? pepsia Cure does not only core indigestion and dyspepsia? but this famous remedv cures ali stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S. S. Batt, of Ravenswood, W. Va., say? " I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cored me and we are now using it in milk iorbaby." Kodol Digests mat Yon Eat. Bottles cobr. $ 1.00 Size holding 2% times the trial size, wnfch sells for 50 cents. Prepared by E. C. DeWiTT & 00.. CHICAGO. _For Sale by all Druggists._ Oar- CaMsiPratanU Pneumonia ty*obcahvU?? and ?oreign^vl ^?$?<^^^y^oz WARKS OrsiGNs . COPYRIGHTS &C. .Aivo-i" erndinji u ?ketch and description mn . tin: i]v .-i?<vrt.-iui our oj>iuiou free wiieiber a.. Invent"*.--", is probnb'y patentante. Communie:? t?ons st i icily ?..? >TUMOJIU-;L Handbook on Patents senr. fre-?. Oldk^t agency Sor securing patents. Patem.s kiken tbrunch >?unu & Co. receive t?tcfai H'-tice, without chnrce, in the Scientific Mm ' ?. asndsoTTiely Hirt ?tra tpd weekly. I unrest cir ^nTatloa o? any s.Memui'? Journal. Tenus, $3 a rear: four months, %L Sold by all newsdealers. far chOdrmnt .af*9 turm Jjo mpttUmm Garden Seed. This is the gardening season. We have a full supply ot the best test? ed garden seeds. For years Linn's SEEDS Have been recognized AS the best. Let us sup? ply you. DeLorme's Pharmacy. DiHgs and Medicine. HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Busy Medicine for Busy People. Brings Ooldea Health and Renewed Vigor. A specific for Constipation, Indigestion, Live -and Kidney Troubles. Pimples. Eczema, Impure Blood, Bad Breath, Sluggish Bowels, Head ac I ie and Backache. It's Rocky Mountain Tea in tab? let form, 85 cents a box. Genuine made by HOLLISTER DR co COMPANY, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE TH? "BOSS- COTTON PRESS ! SIMPLEST, STRONGEST. BEST THC MURRAY GINNING SYSTEM Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Etc. I GE 3?S F. M A C H 2 *v E3R i > C - BK VAX FOI; PRESIDENT. Josephus Daniels Thinks He Will Be Democratic Choice in 190S. Josephus Daniels, editor of the Ral? eigh News and Obesrver, one of the ieadinj papers of North Carolina, was seen at the Raleigh last evening. Mr. Daniels is now serving his fourth term as a member of the Democratic Na? tional committee, and no man is more thoroughly in touch with the Demo? cratic masses of the South. In con? versation with a Post reporter in Washington. Mr. Daniels said: "I believe that W. J. Bryan will be the nominee of a united Democracy in 190S. There is no shade of doubt that our State will be for him. The whole drift of public sentiment, as shown in the railway rate bill and the insurance investigation, is a vindication of Mr. Bryan's position in 1896, when the big insurance companies were pouring out money for the Republican nominees. Bryan made the charge then that they were doing it, but he did not, at that time, impress the public, because the scandals had not been uncovered. The agitation for railroad rate legislation, now championed by the president, is exactly along the line Bryan advocated in 1896. "In North Carolina the people look to see Mr. Bryan lead a winning fight in 1908, and he would undoubtedly lead the ticket were the convention to be held this year. No other man in the party has grown as much as the Ne? braskan in the confidence of the thoughtful people of America. "The chief source of Roosevelt's popularity grows out of his advocacy of doctrines which he condemned Bryan for preaching, and the presi? dent must himself realize that his only hope of securing the legislation he fa? vors is in Democratic cooperation. In describing the true paternity of the railway rate bill it should be called the Bryan-Roosevelt measures." Just a Word for Mother. Nobody earns his or her livelihood ;more . honorably or more directly than the wife and mother of a fami.y who does he? duly. She is her hus? band's business partner in a phase of his life which is at least as vital to his interests ?s th? outside one by which he makes Ms money anucr the eye of the world. If the couple are partners in a poor and struggling concern, the wife contributes as much to the gen? eral success by the work of her nandi ! as the man does by his; if they are more fortunate, and prosperous, the woman's busy brain contriving ana ruling in the household is earning by earnest, eager, expert and honorable exertion as good a livelihood as the husband is able to provide her with. The law holds good in the realms of wealth and luxury. The woman who creates and maintains an eminent so? cial position for her family is likely to be her husband's most important ally, Vnd her share of all the bene? fits that they enjoy in common is not a mere gratuity it does not come to her from her husband's bounty; it is her compensation for the services she does in advancing the interests of the alliance.-New York Sun. ?Mothers everywhere praise One Minute Cough Cure for the sufferings it has relieved and the lives of their little ones it has saved. A certain cure for coughs, croup and whooping cough. Makes breathing easy, cuts out phlegm, and draws out the inflamma? tion. It should be kept on hand for immediate use. Sold by all druggists. A curious case has recently been decided in the supreme court of North Carolina. A dispensary has been es? tablished in a town in the State and the act under which it was operated provided that all profits therefrom should go into the town treasury. But in response to popular demand from the county the act was so amended as to provide that one-half of the profits of all such dispensaries should be paid over to the county treasurer to be used in improving the public roads. The citizens of the town in question were up in arms against the amendment and the authorities for? bade the town treasurer to pay any money received from the dispensary to the county treasurer. The case finally went to the supreme court and j was decided in favor of the county, j I The county paper in commenting on j the decision says that it is reason? able to presume that the people of the county purchase half the liquor sold by the dispensary, and that as the whole county has to bear the ex? pense of criminal prosecutions result? ing from the sale of liquor it is but fair that the county should receive half the profits. That seems to be good logic, if it is not good law. Richmond Times-Dispatch. *One would think the laxative idea in a cough syiup should have been ad? vanced long before it was. It seems the only rational remedy for coughs and colds would be to m. ve the bow? els and clean the mucous membranes of the throat and ;ua^s ot the same tim?. Kennedy's f axative Honey and Tar does this. It is the original laxa? tive cough syrup, the best kr ?wr y*m r Lx?E.?S AUDITOR REPORTED Por Violating Law as to Request Blanks-Said Old Custom Was Good Enough. Columbia, March 20.-The state board of dispensary directors held an important regular meeting today, the work to be continued at another ses? sion to be held this afternoon. The most important action taken this morning was against the auditor of Lee county, the county board of dis? pensary control there reporting the auditor to the state board as refusing to carry out the demands of the state board with regard to request blanks. According to the county board the auditor did not complain that he did not have sufficient office force, but simply took the stand that the old way vvas as good as any, the new state board to the contrary*. The clerk was instructed to report the auditor to the governor for violating the law. The board has not yet reached the matter of the legality of the purchase of the $600,000 worth of stock inherit? ed from the former board, which it re? solved at the previous meeting to have an attorney investigate. No attorney has been employed yet and radical ac? tion cannot be taken at the presem meeting. What a Newspaper Does. Speaking of what a newspaper does for a community, United States Sena ator David Davis, of Illinois, made.an address that remains ever green in the memory of newspaper men. He said: "Every year each local paper gives from 500 to 5,000 free lines for the benefit of the community in which it is located. No other agency can or will do this. The editor in proportion to his means does more for his own town than any other man. He ought to be supported not because you hap? pen to like him or admire his writing, but because a local paper is the best investment a community can have. It may not be crowded with great thought, but financially, it is of more benefit than both preacher and teach? er; Today editors do more for less pay than any other men on earth. Pat? ronize your home paper not as a char? ity, but as an investment.-Exchange. Mr. Roosevelt's Candidacy. Washington dispatches go so far in referring to the possibility that Pres? ident Roosevelt will be a candidate to succeed himself as to say that Gen. Charles Grosvenor openly proclaims hat such would be the case, imme? diately following a prolonged confer? ence at the White House. As a result, the question of whether or not Mr. Roosevelt will head the I Republican ticket at the next Presi? dential election, has taken hold upon the public interest and the consensus of opinion seems to be that he will. In support of this idea it is pointed out that he has by degrees gotten , rid of all McKinley office holders in the South; has by degrees obtained con? trol of various state "machines," those of New York and Pennsylvania among the number; that as Secretary Taft would he his most formidable oppo? nent, it would be asking too great a sacrifice of that geneleman to permit himself merely to be "shelved" on the supreme bench, and thatr therefore, he will be made Chief Justice; and that finally a whirlwind movement will be inaugurated for his nomination, "throwing George Washington's fare? well address and precedent to the winds."-Augusta Chronicle. ?Indigestion is much of a habit. Don't get the hai-.it. Take a little Ko dol Dyspepsia Cure after eating and you will quit belching, buffing, palpi? tating and frowning. Kodol digests what you eat and makes the stomach sweet. Sold by all druggists. Does Advertising Pay? Well, we guess it does or a great deal of money is being thrown away each day, each week, each month and each year. The wise merchant, no matter how small a business he is conducting, in? creases his business each year by ad? vertising in local papers. Advertising is a wonderful thing, and the more a person studies it the more they be? come puzzled as to the wonderful re? sults is accomplishes year in and year out. Keep your goods and your name be? fore the eye of the public and if you cannot sell the goods its not the news? paper's fault. Xo, the fault is bound to "lie" in the goods or In the sales? man. A newspaper advertisement will not sell the goods for the merchant, but we will guarantee that it will bring the people to his store which gives him a chance to sell to them the goods advertised. Torture by Savages. ?"Speaking of the torture to which some of the savage tribes in the Philippines subject their captives, re? minds nn- of the intense suffering i endured foi- three months from in? flammation nf the kidneys." says W. M. Sherman, <?f Gushing, Me. "Noth? ing helped inc until I tried Electric Hitters, three bottles of which com? pletely cured me." Cures liver com plaint. dyspepsia, blood disorders and WHITE SERVANT PROBLEM. Commissioner Watson's Efforts Have Not Been Successful So Far. But Kc is Working; on Another Plan Now. Columbia, March 19.-Mr. P. Jor? gensen of the North German Lloyds, who was here today on a trip through the South appointing local agents for his steamship company expressed the opinion to this correspondent that the solution of both the immigration and the servant problem in the South lies in giving the proper encouragement to a good class of immigrants to come in? to the cities and towns and work as servants. He denied that the experiments tried at several points in North Caro? lina and at the winter resorts in South Carolina had proved failures, and said that his long experience in dealing with immigrants to the Northwest had demonstrated the necessity of this way of handling the newcomers, and he accounted for the fact that the work of bringing immigrants into the South was meeting with slow and oti? erwise poor success by pointing to the way the immigrants are handled after they get here: He said that the immi? grants had no objection to working in the same community where negroes are employed as servants. After Mr. Jergensen had seen Im? migration Commissioner Watson, however, he changed his view in many respects. Mr. Watson went over the situation wih him carefully and show? ed him that the only way to bring im? migrants into the South so they will stay is by the colonization plan, in? stancing a number of cases in which the newcomers had become dissatis? fied and gone away, and pointing out the wonderful possibilities of trucking in this section so favored over the Northwest by climate. The demands upon Mr. Watson's of? fice from every part of the State for servants .has been steadily growing, but so far he has not been able to meet it in any adequate manner, though he has placed a few servants here and there. "We think we will have much of this servant evil cured in six months though," Commissioner Watson said, "through a scheme we have blocked out and are about to put into opera? tion. Mr. Herbert sails from New York on the 24th for Glascow and will work in the north of Ireland section where the people have not been used to high wages. These immigrants, in families, as far as possible, will be passed at Ellis Island and put right aboard a Clyde steamer for Charleston being ticketed straight through to Co? lumbia, where they will be distributed near the towns so that the girls who will work in the families will be safe? guarded and will be more acceptable in the homes. If those New York labor agents get hold of them even ove? night it's all off so far as this section is concerned. "On a recent trip to New York I heard women immigrants just off the boat offered as high as $45 a month and home to cook. We simply can't meet these sort of prices, and while the people here are willing to pay a little more than they are paying ne? groes it imposssible to supply this section with white servants in any other way than that I have suggested." McCaw. BIG FERTILIZER TRADE. Columbia, March 20.-The fertili izer tag tax receipts will beat all rec? ords in 1906. To date the receipts for the year 1906 total $132,686.54, as against $92,711 up to the same date last year. Already the total so far this year is greater than the tax for all of last year, which was a record breaker itself. Last year the tax amounted to $130,439.53. All of this money goes to Clemson College for its support. *The best safeguard against head? ache, constipation and liver troubles is Dewitt's Little Early Risers. Keep a vial of these famous little pills in the house and take a dose at bed time when you feel that the stomach and bowels need cleansing. They don't gripe. Sold by all druggists. NEW BREEDS OF COTTON. Washington, March 20.-It was made known today at the bureau of plant industry, department of agricul? ture, that following a series of experi? ments extending over several years, the bureau's experts had developed a r:i rober of new breeds of cc:u n, the seed of which are ready :-J vc sent ou', t >r ne.Nt mason's planting, which premise t<> almost double '.he alue of the cotton crop wherever they are used. These new cottons have been bred from native and short staple upland variety and are from a half to three quarters of an inch longer in fiber than cotton grown from the parent seeds. Eczema, Totter, Salt Rheum, Itch, liing Worm, Herpes, Barbers' Iitoh. * A11 of these diseases are attended by intense it oiling, which is almost in? st;! nt ly relieved by applying Chamber? lain's Salve and by its continued use a permanent cure may be effected, lt has. in fact, cured many cases that The soda cracker is an ideal food. Uneeda Biscuit are the ideal soda crackers. Indeed, tba soda crackers rightly made in the first place, rightly protected first, last and all the time. J%? In a dust tight, ^J? moisture proof package. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY DEVOE. The Faint that covers and wears-and iff therefore the cheapest. The whitest, white PAINT made. Strictly Pure Lead and Zinc and Pure Linseed Oil. Ten lo twenty per cent cheaper than other paint and STRICTLY GUARANTEED. Half a million dollars behind chis guarantee. Buy some for your next job and be convinced forever. The Durant Hardware Co. Gardeners Both amateur and progressive will find GARDEN, BARN and STABLE TOOLS and IMPLEMENTS as complete in assortment and satisfactory in quality as can be found anywhere. Farmers Who really farm, and those who have it done, will find here the best selected stock of HARDWARE and IMPLEMENTS from which to make a selection. Prices Reasonable. Straight Goods On the Square On These Principles We Do Business. CAROLINA HARDWARE CO, FOR SALE-LAND. Tract 1,000 acres, 300 cleared, balance in timber, 8 settlements, $ 7,50a Tract 577 acres, 350 cleared, balance in timber and wood land, building worth $4,500, 9 settlements, 17,500^ Tract 400 acres, 225 cleared, balance timber and wood land, 6 settlements, 8,000 Tract 264 acres, 100 cleared, bal. timber wood land, 3 settlem'ts, 5,280 Tract 1,250 acres, 20 cleared, bal. timber wood land, o settlem'ts, 12,50p For particulars call on or write to me. Any of the above property will pay a good income on the entire investment, if yon will put a little additional money in ditching and building and the enhancement in value will be clear profit. If you have got land that is not paying an income on ita value and yon cannot improve same, it will pay yon to sell it. It is my business to dc the selling. ATTORNLY-AT-LAW pw r> OCICHD REAL ESTATE BROKER KARBY BLG COURT SQ K. 13. DCL^CK, PHONE NO. 309. Southern Railway The South's Greatest System Unexcelled Dining Car Service. Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on all through trains. Convenient schedules on all local trains. Winter Tourist Rates are now7 in eifect to all Florida points. For full information as to rates, routes, etc., consult nearest Southern Railway Ticket Agent, or R. W. Hunt Division Passenger Agent, Charleston, S. C. _ _ i_ en. i. tss Agc Atlanta