University of South Carolina Libraries
i SLOAN'S LINIMENT A Necessity When Traveling for ^^y^ Toothache^ J \j Neural^ i&y^^B Rhcum?tismT^ ? Weak Hearts r r Are due to indigestion. Ninety-nine of every ?ne hundred people who have heart trouble eas remember when it was simple indiges? tion. It is a scientific fact that all cases of heart disease, not organic, are not only traceable to, but are the direct result of indi? gestion. All food taken into the stomach -which faUs of perfect digestion ferments and swells the stomach, puffing it up against the heart. This interferes with the action of the heart, and in the course of time that delicate but vital organ becomes diseased. Mr. D. Krcble, cf Nevada, O , says: I had stomach trouble and was io a bad state as ! had heart trouble with it 1 took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure for about four ?month? aud it cured cae, Kodol Digests What Yon Eat and relieves the stomach of all nervous 4Strain and the heart of all pressure. Catties only. SI .00 Size holdise 2% times the trial Size, which sells for 50c Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO., CHICAGO. _For Sale by all Druggists._ BIUETSHO?OMAR Cures Coles; Prevents Pneemonia ^ W<> promptly obtai^D^andibreipr^ [Seed model, sketch or photo o? in ven ti OD for* ! free report oa patentability, lor free book,f ?^rTRADE-MABKS *?te iWiSB ! Opposite U. S. Patent Office WASHINGTON D.C. 50 YEARS* EXPERIENCE r TRADE MARKS DESIGNS . COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may ?tuteur ascertain our opinion tree whether au invention ia probably patentable. Communica? tions strictly confl dentiaL Handbook on Patenta ?eat free. Oldest asency for securing patents. Patents taken tn rous h Munn ? Co. receive special notice, without charge, ic tho Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir. eolation of any scientific Journal. Terms. $3 a year : tour months, (L Sold by all newsdealers. WM & Co.3618T^ New York Branch Office. <W? V" St? W?nh\nrrtr<rt y?. C. Carden Seed. This is the gardening season. We have a full supply ot the best test? ed garden seeds. For years UIDBETB'S SEEDS Have been recognized as the best. Let us sup? ply you. DeLorme's Pharmacy. Drugs and Medicines. HOLLISTER'S Hooky H?Hurtam Tea Nuggets A Bnj lUd&Bo fer Busy People. Brings Ooldea Health sud Beaswed Vigor. A specific for Constipation, Indigestion. Live ?ad Kidney Troubles, Pimples. Eczema, Impure Blood, Bad Breath, Sluggish Bowels, Headache and Backache. It's Rocky Mountain Tea in tab let form, SR cesta a box. Genuine made by Hotuvrra ORDO COJEAN Y. Mad ?.son, Wis. GOLDEN WGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE THE "BOSS" COTTON PRESS ! SIMPLEST. STRONGEST. BEST THE MURRAY GINNING SYSTEM 6ins, Feeders. Condensers, Etc. GIBBES MACHINERY CO. Columbia, S. C. STATE SUMMER SCHOOL. Columbia, May 9.-Hon. O. B. Mar? tin, State superintendent of education yesterday made announcements with reference to the State Summer School for teachers, which will be held at Rock Hill this year from June 20th to July 18th inclusive. Mr. Martin will be superintendent of the Sum? mer School with Dr. D. B. Johnson as associate and Mr. W. H. Barton as? sistant. The lecturers on pedagogy and edu? cation will be Dr. Preston Search of Ohio and Dr. C. B. Gilbert of New York. The instructors in the different de? partments will be as follows: Prof. Patterson Wardlaw, Univer? sity of South Carolina, pedagogy. Supt. E. L. Hughes, Greenville City schools, illustrative geography; assist? ant, Miss Agn?s Deal. Dr. James P. Kinard, Winthrop col? lege, grammar. Prof. E. E. Utterack, Atlanta city schools, drawing. Dr. A. L. Manchester, Converse col? lege, music. Prof. A. G. Rembert, Wofford col? lege, Latin. Prof. M. D. Earle, Furman univer? sity, algebra and geometry. Supt. S. H. Edmunds, Sumter city schools,, composition and rhetoric. Prof. Bt W. Nance, Clemson college, English and American literature. Prof. C. B. Waller, Wofford college, arithmetic and trigonometry. Prof. J. S. Jennings, Greenville Fe? male college, nature- study and agri? culture. Prof. W. H. Morton, Converse col? lege, physics. Prof.vW. S. Morrison, Clemson col? lege, history. Miss Mary F. Wickliffe, Winthrop college, manual training. ? Miss Margaret H. Fury ear, Augusta city schools, primary methods. Miss Catherine Mulligan, Winthrop coHege, domestic science. Miss Minnie Macfeat, Winthrop col? lege, kindergarten. Miss Martha G. PoweD, Winthrop college, reading and expression. Miss Ida Dacus, Winthrop college, library methods. AH of the conveniences of Winthrop college will be at the disposal of the Summer School. The dormintories will accommodate 500 tea^hors. There are gymnasiums, baths, infirmary and oth? er accessories necessary to the helath, comfort and convenience of a large population. The associated railways of Virginia and the Carolinas have granted a rate of one fare, plus 25 cents, for the round trip from all points in South Carolina. Teachers who "purchase their tickets in small towns are advis? ed to speak to ticket agent in advance, so that he may communicate with headquarters and be sure to have a reduced rate ticket on hand. Tickets will be on sale June ?9, 20, 21 and June 25 and July 3 and 4. Board and Lodging. The dormitories and boarding de? partment of Winthrop college will be at the service o*f the Summer school. Five hundred teachers will be accom? modated. The dormitories are sup? plied with everything necessary. Each one who wishes a room in the college will so state in the proper place in the application blanks. President Johnson will notify applicants of the number of their room, and will send them trunk tags which will ensure the prompt delivery of their baggage at small cost. The dormitories will be open for the Summer School students the morning of. June 19th, and dinner will be served on that day, and on the 19th of July, the day after the close of the school. Late supper will be served on the evening of the 20th of June for the accommodation of students arriving on the evening northbound trains of the Southern. Board for the session, single beds, two in a room, will be $16.00. Wr~m students are forced to leave before the end, a refund will be made, the charge for the shorter time being, however, ? at the rate of $1.00 a day or $5.00 a week. Visitors who come to inspect the school will be boarded at the same rate, if there is room for them, or will be aided to find pleasant accommoda? tions near the college. Students are expected to -provide their own towels, combs, brushes and soap. No meals will be served in the dor? mitories, but the regular college in? firmary, with its diet kitchen, dining room and other conveniences for the care of the sick, will be kept open. To meet this expense, afc infiramry fee of 25 cents will be charged. This fee wiir cover nursing, care and diet, but not medicine or the visits of a physician. The infirmary is connected with the dormitories by a covered way. For those who wish to have their laundry done at the college, the col? lege steam laundry will be in opera? tion. Laundry will be paid for by the piece, upon delivery, according t<> a printed laundry list, which will be furnished upon application. .Why take a dozen thincrs to cure that cough? Kennedy's Laxative Hon? ey and Tar allays the congestion, stops that tickling, drives the cold out through y.mr bowels. Sold by all drug? gists. A SHOCKING ACCIDENT. Anderson, May S.-Richard Alexan? der, a 13-year-old-boy, was instantly accidentally killed in the the Orr Mills at 7 o'clock this morning. The acci? dent occurred in the card room, on the thrid floor of the mill. The ele? vator is operated by means of heavy weights. The weights run in a shaft by the side of the elevator, and the run-way in which the weights move is boxed' up for eight or ten feet above the floor. Above this it is open. The boy climbed up on the outer side of this boxing and was looking down the shaft, watching the elevator ascend. The weight was descending at the same time, and caught the boy on. the back of the neck and pinned him down to the edge of the planks. His neck was broken, his skull crush? ed and he was otherwise bruised. Death was almost instantaneous. The elevator was stopped by the impact and had to be lowered before the boy's body could be removed from its posi? tion. , The accident was due entirely to the boy's carelessness. He had been climbing up on the very same' place yesterday, watching the elevator, and had been warned against doing so. Coroner Pruitt empannelled a jury and held an inquest. The verdict was in accordance with the facts. Deaths From Appendicitis * Decrease in the same ratio that the use of Dr. King's New Life Pills in? creases. They save you from danger and bring quick and painless release from constipation and the Ills growing out of it. Strength and vigor always follow their use. Guaranteed by Si bert's Drug Store. 25c. Try them. COAL MIXES RESTJ>IE. Wilkesbarre, May 10.-The attempt was made to resume operations at most of the mines this morning in this region, but only 70 per cent, of the miners responded. The mines, in many instances, are not ready for full re? sumption and the normal output may not be reached until next week. .All the old employes are being taken back. Two Italians Kill Each Other While Girl They Loved Looked On. New York. May 10.-Paschali Mon price is dead and Rocco Sazzolari is dying as the outcome of a duel with knives in Brooklyn this morning over a girl that both Italians loved. The girl witnessed the fight. *A torpid, inactive liver can produce more bodily ills than almost anything else. It is good to clean the system out occasionally. Stir the liver up. and get into shape generally. The best results are derived from the use of Dewitt's Little Early Risers. . Re? liable, effective, pleasant pills with a reputation. Xever gripe. Sold by all druggists. Italians Brutally Killed and Their Roam Robbed. Xew York, May 10.-James Cuccio and wife, Gelesti, who were prosperous Italians, were found murdered this morning in their room in Brooklyn. The murderers first crushed their skulls with a hatchet and then to make sure that both were dead sever? ed their jugular veins. An Italian, who boarded with the couple, is miss? ing. The police believe that burglary was the motive for the crime. ?For a painful burn there is nothing like Dewitt's Witch Hazel Salve. There are a host of imitations of Dewitt's Witch Hazel Salve on the market-see that you get the genuine. Ask for De Witt's. Gbod, too, for sunburn, cuts, bruises, and especially recommended for piles. The name E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, is on every box. Sold by ali druggists. A Remarkable Operation. Vincenza Colpinta, who is 15, was presented to the Xew York Medical Society last night as an example of the wonders of modern surgery. She is practically as well as ever, although supposed to have sustained a fatal in? jury by having been shot through the spine, abdomen and liver. The operation consisting of the re? moval of a part of the spine and a successful reunion of the processes ! was performed by Dr. Irving S. Haynes, of Xo. 1125 Madison avenue, two months ago, while she was near death at the Harlem Hospital. His method was unknown to surgery and was only attempted as a heroic meas? ure. Surgeons believe that similar treat? ment might have saved the lives of Mrs. W. C. Whitney, President Mc? Kinley and Marshall Field, Jr. The bullet that had penetrated the girl's spinal cord caused paralysis of the lower part of the body, but the treat? ment brought almost complete resto? ration.-New York American. Stomach Troubles. .Mrs. Sue Martin, an old ana highly respected resident of Faisonia, Miss., was sick with stomach trouble for mort than six months. Chamberlain's Stomach an<l Livor Tablets cured her. She says: '-I can now eat anything I want and nm the proudest woman in the world to find such a good medi? cine." For sale by all druggists. Drunkenness Cured. It will be gratifying to all lovers of temperance and a happy home to know that a simple and scientific cure for the whiskey and beer habit has been discovered. Orrine never fails to cure drunkenness if it is used in ac? cordance with the simple directions in the package, and the .discoverer has so much confidence in the treatment that we are authorized to sell it with an ab? solute guarantee, to effect a cure or the money will be refunded. It is in two forms: No. 1, to be given secretly, and No. 2 for those who wish to be cured, $1.00 each. Mothers and sisters have told us of husbands and brothers who since they were given Orrine, in many cases without their knowledge, have lost all desire for djink, and we are glad to recommend the remedy. Mail orders filled. The Orrine Co., Washington, D. C., ?r De Lorme's Pharmacy, No. 23 South Main street. . PROSECUTING DRUG TRUST. Petition Filed For an Injunction Against Certain Associations Charged With Violating the Sher? man Anti-Trust Law. Washington, May 9.-The attorney general today made public the follow? ing statement: "The government has today filed in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Indiana, a petition for an injunction against certain asso? ciations, corporations and individuals, comprising .vhat is commonly known as the drug trust of the United States. The parties defendant specifically named in the bill have voluntarily combined together to control the prices at which proprietary medicines and drugs shall be sold to the con? sumer through the retail druggists in violation of the Sherman anti-trust laws. The parties of the combination in? clude the Proprietary Association of America, the National Wholesale Druggists' and the National Retail Druggists' Association. "An injunction is prayed for pro? hibiting these associations from act? ing in consort for the purpose of maintaining prices and the individuals firms and corporations who are mem? bers of the respective associations from acting together for the purpose of maintaining uniform prices to the consumer throughout the United States. "The bill charges in substance that these associations, their officers, dele? gates and members are all engaged in a common undertaking, to-wit, the business of manufacturing, buying and selling patent medicines and drugs and proprietary articles throughout the United States; that these associa? tions and the members thereof have entered into a conspiracy to arbitrari? ly fix and regulate the price at which such articles shall be sold to the con? sumer, and that they have establish? ed rules and regulations to enforce such an unlawful agreement by re? stricting the ' purchase and sale of such commodities to those of the several associations who shall live up to and observe the rules and regula? tions thus arbitrarily prescribed by the respective associations. "There is but one ultimate object of the conspiracy, viz: to fix the price which shall be observed by all retail druggists in selling to-the consumer the various commodities manufactur? ed by the several members of the proprietary association. The plan by which such object is effected ls in brief as follows: No retail druggist can obtain goods from a wholesale druggist or a manufacturer of a pro? prietary medicine unless such retail druggist becomes a member of the National Association of Retail Drug? gists, and in order to become such member he must agree to observe the established price at which such pro? prietary medicines shall be sold to the consumer. "If such retail druggist, after be? coming a member of the National As? sociation of Retail Druggists, cuts prices in the sale of such articles to the consumer, he is immediately placed upon the list of what is known as aggressive cutters, and thereafter such retail druggist is unable to ob? tain from any manufacturer who is a member of the proprietary association, or from any other wholesale druggist who is a member of the Wholesale Druggists' association, any of the commodities which may be manufac? tured and sold by them or any of them. "Henry W. Loder of Philadelphia recently brought suit in the United States circuit court of the eastern dis? trict of Pennsylvania, under section 7 of the Sherman anti-trust act, against these three associations. "The plaintiff obtained a substantial verdict. The court pointed out that the evidence showed a conspiracy be? tween several manufactured articles to wholesalers, and a conspiracy among the wholesalers inter se and with the manufacturers to fix the price at which they should sell to retail deal? ers, and a conspiracy among the retail dealers inti-r se and with the whole? sale druggists and manufacturers to fix maintain prices which such retail dealers should observe in making sales to the general public-that is. to the consumer." To Be Frank you have really never eaten a true soda cracker until you have eaten Uneeda Biscuit The only soda cracker which is all good and always good, protected from strange hands by a dust tight, moisture JEtf proof package. Vr NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Horses and Mules All sizes and prices for cash or approved paper. Buggies, Wagons ? Harness Agent for DEERING HARVESTING MACHINERY and Repair Parts in abundance. Disc Harrows, Disc Cultivators, Stalk Cutters, Peg Tooth Harrows, Binders, Mowers, Rakes, &c. Agent for JOHNSTON HARVESTING MACHINERY and Repair Parts in abundance. S. M. PIERSON, 6, 8, and 9 South Harvin Street. FOR SALE-LAND! Tract i,ooo acres, 300 cleared, balance in timber, 8 settlements, $ 7,500 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, loo cleared, bal. timber wood land, 3 settlem'ts, 5,28a Tract 1,250 acres, 20 cleared, bal. timber wood land.osettlem't?, 12,500 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 ditohmg and building and the enhancement in value will be clear profit. Ii you have got land that ie not paying an income on its value and you canno improve same, it will pay you to sell it. It is my business to do the selling. ATTORNtY-AT.LAW F> O DC? CCD REAL ESTATE BRGKiEfT HARBY BL6 COURT Sd K. D. DCL-r^CK* PHONE NO. 309. .Mtantic Corni Line* -Effective August 6, 1906. Passenger Trains arriving and leaving Sumter. Train 35 Florence to Augusta Arrives 5 15 am u 54 Columbia to Wilmington " 6 10 am " *77 Florence to Sumter " 9 20 av u *57 Gibson to Sumter t u 9 20 am " 52 Charleston to Greenville Leaves 9 SI am " *46 Orangeburg to Charleston u 9 35 am " *78 Sumter to Lucknow Leaves 9 50 an? * *77 Lucknow to Sumter Arrives 6 00 pm " 53 Greenville and Columbia to Charlestoii " 6 30 pm ** 32 Augusta to Florence 44 6 30 pm " *56 Sumter to Gibson ?* 6 50 pm " *78 Sumter to Florence Leaves 7 10 pm " *47 Charleston to Orangeburg ?* 8 20 pm ' 55 Wilmington to Columbia ** 9 35 pm " 78 Sumter to Bishopville Leaves 9 50 am " 77 Bishopville to Sumter Arrives 6 00 pm Freight Trains carrying Passengers. Train *24 Sumter to Hartsville Leaves 8 15 am ?? *19 Sumter to Robbins Leaves 10 00 am " *20 Roo hms to Sumter Arrives 7 30 am " *25 Hartsville to Sumter Arrives 9 10 par Northwestern Railway. Train *70 Camden to Sumter Arrives 9 00 am " *71 Sumter to Camden Leaves 9 36 am " *68 Camden to Sumter " 5 45 pm ? *72 Wilson Mill to Sumter Arrives 12 30 pm " *73 Sumter to Wilson Mill Leaves 3 30 pm " *69 Sumter to .Camden " 6 31 pm Trains marked * daily except Sunday ; all other trains daily. For further information, apply to J. T. CHINA, Ticket A?ent A. C. L. HG Sewerage Question Is still up for discussion, but The Fly Question Is settled satisfactorily by using our The Durant Hardware Co.