University of South Carolina Libraries
V i* .1 r Chamberlain's Celie Cholera & Diarrhea Remedvl Almost every Family b?s need of a reliable remedy for colic or diarrhea at some Lime during the year. This remedy is recommended fey dealers who have sold it for many years and know its value. It has received thousands of testimoni?is from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy? sicians with the most satisfactory results. It has often saved life before medicine could have been sent for or a physician summoned. It only costs a quarter. Can you afford to risk so much for so little? BUY ?T NOW. i Indigestion Causes Catarrh of ti*e Stomach. For many years it has been supposed that Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion And dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re? peated attacks of Indigestion inflames the mucous membranes li ning the stomach and ?exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus? ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. r Kodol Dyspepsia Cure relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What Y ou Eat Make the Stomach Sweet. Bottles orly. Regular size. S1.00. holding 2i4 times the trial size, which sells for 50 cents, prepared by E. C De WITT & CO.. Chicago, I IL _For Sale by all Druggists._ Cores Colds! Prevents Pneumonia I ^ We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign Send model, sketch or photo of invention for 1 free report on patentahiJiiy. lor free book, < ^SATRAPE-MARKS v'fei G?5N0 Opposite U" & Patent Office WASHINGTON D.C. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may ?la?CKiy ascertain our opinion free whether an invention xs probably patentable. Corr.mnnien tions strictly conddential. Handbook on Patents seat froe. Oldest acency for securing patents. Patents taken thronen Munn & Co. receive tpec>aL notice* without charge, In the Scientific Bnerican. A handsomely illustrated weekly. I.ireest cir Eolation of any scientific lourxi&L ? Terms, SC a year : four months, SL Sold byall newsdealers. MM ? Ca.ss,3ro^- P?8W Yoit for childrenr safe, maro? Mo oalatm? ' Garden Seed. This is the gardening season. We have a full supply of the best test I ed garden seeds. For years LANDBETH'S SEEDS Have been recognized as the best. Let us sup? ply you. DeLorme's Pharmacy. Drugs and Medicines. HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Buy Medicina far Busy People. Brians Golden Health and Benewed Vigor. A specific for Constipation, Indigestion, Live and Kidney Troubles. Pimples, Eczema, Impure Blood, Bad Breath, Sluggish Bowels, Headache and Backache. It's Rocky Mountain Tea in tab? let form, 35 cents a box. Genuine made by HOLLISTER DRDO COMPANY, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR RAI.I OW opnoi c THE "BOSS" COTTON PRESS ! SIMPLEST, STR0N6EST, BEST THE MURRAY GINNING SYSTEM Gins, Feeders, Condensers. Etc. 1 GIBBES MACHINERY CO. Columbia? S. C. FOl?T$H0!iEMM stops the coxxgix and Heals lungs GORMAN'S FUNERAL. He Left a Sealed Letter Giving Direc lions That the Exercises Be Simple and Private. Washington, D. C., June 6.-In ac? cordance with the terms of a sealed letter intrusted to his son and not to be opened until after his death, the funeral of late Senator Gorman will be as simple and private as possible. The exercises will be held at the Gor? man home on K street and will be attended only by the mest intimate personal and political friends of the deceased statesman, members of the family, government officials and the committee appointed by the senate and house. The senators and repre? sentatives on. this committee will meet at the Hotel Arlington and march in a body to the residence. After the services, which will begin at ll o'clock, they will accompany the remains to Oakhill cemetery, where interment takes place. The funeral will be conducted by Dr. Wallace Radcliffe, pastor of the Xew York Avenue Presbyterian church, which Senator Gorman at? tended, assisted by Rev. Frederick D. Powers, pastor of the Vermont Avenue Presbyterian church; Rev. A. R. Bird, pastor of the Presbyterian church at Laurel, Md., and Dr. Edward Everett Hale, chaplain of the senate. JUDGE BARRETT DEAD. Famous Trial Judge Dies at Sara toga, X. Y. Saratoga, X. Y., June T.:-Former Supreme Court Justice George Bar? rett died here today. He was one of the most famous trial judges in this country. He retired last win? ter. An Alarming Situation ?Frequently results from neglect of clogged bowels and torpid liver, until constipation becomes chronic. This condition is unknown to those who use Dr. King's New Life Pills, the best and gentlest regulators of stomach and bowels. Guaranteed by Sibert's Drug Store. Price 25 c. Juvenile Beasts of Burden. There is no proper punishment for \ the Wisconsin farmer who hitched four of his children to a plow and made them to do the woik of a horse. This man belongs to a special class of criminals. Yet his case cannot be treated with necessary severity. To send him to jail for his cruelty would impose an even greater punishment upon his family. The court authori? ties of thfc county have compromised by compelling the man to send his children to school and to pledge him? self never again to hitch the young? sters to do the work of animals. Over in the European countries we? men and children are oi *n tc be seen doing duty as beasts of burden, and occasionally some of th?> immigrants have mistakenly thought they could pursue the sam? metaciti on coming "here. Tl.* pub'.ij sj.fn?OD is strongly ! set against tVi form of l?r*:ta*?ty ana will ne~er condone sunh offenses what? ever the circumstances. If a man is too poor to own a horse he ought him? self to hear- the br'int of the ha? i labor necessary to break up the soil. This Wisconsin farmer might easily have done alone as much as the four children he harnessed to the plow. The demand of the day is for the education of the children, and every child that is kept in harness, wheth? er on the farm in actual straps and task, is being defrauded of that which belongs to it by right. Child labor of any sort which interferes with the full moral and mental development of the individual io vicious and demor? alizing not only to the child but to a\ large circle in each community. A child kept out of school in order to toil at some pittance-earing work is a less to the social organization. It can? not become a productive member or hope to rise above a certain low level. The case of the Wisconsin farmer should serve to stimulate congress to the early passage of a bill which reg? ulates child labor in the district. There are many youngsters hitched to the plows right here in the capital of the United States.-Washington Star. CASTOR I A JOT Infants and Children. Tne Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of Jim Jackson shot and killed Dave Chapman in Saluda county Monday afternoon. Both were white mee. ?You cannot induce a lower animal t> eat heartily when not feeling well. A sick dog starves himself, and gets well. The stomach, once overworked, must have rest the same as your feet or eyes. You don't have to starve to rest your stomach. Kodol for dyspep? sia tak-i* up the work for your stom ch. digests what you eat and gives it a : rest. Puts it back in condition again. You can't feel good with a disordered j stomach. Try Kodol. Sold by all druggists. ? j if! REPUBLICAN PLATFORM. Pennsylvania Republicans . Endorse Everything That Is Likely to Find Public Favor and Make Votes. Harrisburg, Pa., June 6.-The prin? cipal features of the Republican plat? form read at the state convention to? day were: Endorsement of the administration ri President Roosevelt, giving full credit to the managers of the great industrial enterprises for their splendid achievements, but condemning those who have misused their powers by un? fair methods of competition, publicity of corporate affairs, approves railroad i rate bill, commends legislation pend? ing in congress providing for the rigid examination of meat products, de? clares devotion to Republican doctrine of protection of American industries, urges farther amendment of immigra? tion laws, so that undesirable foreign element may be excluded from Amer? ican citizenship, and acknowledges debt of gratitude to sailors and soldiers who fought in the war of country and commends pensions granted them. Republican N ominee. Harrisburg, Pa., June 6.-Edward S. Stuart, of Philadelphia, was nomi? nated for governor on the first bal? lot. ?The sworn statement of the manu? facturers protects you from opiates i.i Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar the cough syrup that drives the cold out of your system. Sold by all drug? gists, The Farm for Boys. A prominent Georgia citizen, in a speech delivered to a body cf traveling men of the State, directed attention to the prosperity of the people of Geor? gia, and emphasized the fact that '"the farmer is more independent than a ki::?." He said: "The boys of the farmers are content to remain at home and learn to till the soil. They have quit rushing off to the towns in search of clerical positions. They are staying at home helping to develop the greatest country on earth." This is indeed an encouraging report from Georgia. Commenting upon what has been quoted above, the Savannah Press says: "The farmers' boys who are far wiser than those who are hunting easy jobs ir. the town. With cotton bring? ing ll cents a pound there is more money to be had in the country than in the cities. All of the young farm? ers who are at all thrifty are becom? ing financially independent. If the presen-: good times continue they will be classed as rich men in their re? spective communities by the time they are 40 years of age." This condition of the farmer's boy is not confined to any one State, but prevails all over the south. The boy who leaves the farm nowadays for work Li the city should consider well before changing his environments. The paper already quoted inquires about the boys who have already gone to the cities, asking this question: "And how has it J'ared with the boys who have Fought jobs in the cities?" This answer is given: ( "Now and then one of exceptional ability has made a success . The vast majority, however, are no better off than w.ien they left their homes on the farms. They are still earning small salaries and find it difficult to meet all the demands on their purses. And the future doesn't hold out a promise of prosperity. If they have married they are having a hard struggle for the necessaries of life. Doubtless the most ol them have wished a thousand times they had stayed on the farm. Indeed, it is not uncommon to hear young men in this city who left the farm a dozen or half a dozen years ago say that if cotton continues to com? mand tie present price they will go back to the country and to farming. "It is a difficult matter to get a foot? hold in the cities. Opportunities for advancement are few and far between. A boy leaving the farm for a clerical position, or, in fact, any other posi? tion in the city, thinks at first that he has mace a change for the better. He believes he will not have to work so hard an I that the road to fortune is easier. In a very few months he changes his opinion. The worry and annoyances he has to endure and the difficulty of earning sufficient to enable him to secure a social position to which he feels he is entitled make him realize that he left contentment and independence behind him when he left the farm." This is a subject which interests hundred?, even thousands, of young men. The times have undergone a great, change. The farm is not the uninviting, unattractive field for am? bitious, thrifty young men that it was ten. or even five years ago. Stimulation Without Irritation. ?In case of stomach and liver trouble the proper treatment is to stimulate these organs without irritating them. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup aids diges? tion and stimulates the liver and bow? els without irritating these organs like pills or ordinary cathartics. It does j not nauseate or gripe and is mild and j pleasant to take. Durant's Pharma- ! CV- ri. I SHORTER HOURS IX MILLS. 3Iill Presidents, Representing More Than Two-Thirds of the Spindles in This State, Resolve to Shorten Hours Gradually to Ten Hours a Day. Greenville, S. C., June 5.-A confer? ence most important in its bearings on the industrial progress of South Carolina was held today in Greenville at the room of the board of trade. There were present 73 cotton mill presidents. representing 2.335.000 spindles in operation in South Caro? lina, or more than two-thirds of the spindles of the state. J. A. Brock, of Anderson, was made chairman, and J. L "Westervelt, of Greenville, secretary. Capt. E. A. Smyth, ot Greenville, introduced a series of resolutions, which were re? ferred to a committee, consisting of Capt. E. A. Smyth, chairman, Messrs. L. W. Parker, of Greenville; V. L Montgomery, of Spartanburg; Thomas Barrett Jr., of Augusta, Ga., who is president of the Langley mill in South Carolina, and Z. T. Wright, of New? berry. The conference then adjourned for an hour, while a collation was served by the mill'officials of Green? ville and theil* lady friends. At the second session of the confer? ence this resolution was offered by the committee and unanimously adopted, and the committee was appointed: That' a permanent organization be effected, and a committee to nominate officers be appointed for that purpose to report at a meeting to be held on June 28, at some point to be decided upon later. The following important resolutions were also adopted without opposition: Resolved, That it is the sense of this conference that the running time of the cotton mills in South Carolina be voluntarily reduced by the mill man? agers on July 1, 1906, to 64 hours per week, and on July 1, 1910, to 60 hours per week. The mill managers recog? nize that for many reasons it is best both for the employes and the corpo? ration that this reduction to 60 hours should be gradual and extended over a period of years. Resolved, That this conference urge upon ali the cotton manufacturers in South Carolina to continue to carefully observe the age law limiting the em? ployment of children to those of 12 years of age and older, and forbidding the employment, except under lawful conditions, of children under 12 years of age. - Resolved, That the conference of mill manufacturers earnestly approve the passage of the compulsory school J law in South Carolina to apply to all children under twelve years of age, and also recommend the enactment of a law requiring the registration of all births in South Carolina, and also a law requiring marriage certificate be? fore any ceremony can be performed in South Carolina. Resolved, That the chapman of this conference appoint a committee of seven, who shall prepare a circular letter to be printed and placed on the (?esk of each senator and memher of the house of representatives of the South Carolina legislature, urging upo:, them the enactment of these laws. Relived, That it is the judgment of this meeting that there should be no change made in the wages of the era poyes at this time consequent upon the change of hours so passed. Enabling thereby such operatives as work by the day to secure the same amount of wages for the shortened day as they would have secured for a longer day, it being the belief of the manufacturers here assembled that piece workers will be able to secure, through increased energy consequent upon the shortened hours of labor, the same amount of wages during the shorter time that they have previous? ly earned. The name of the organ? ization is the Cotton Manufacturers' Association of South Carolina. A Thousand Dollars' Worth of Good. *"I have been afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble for years, passing graver or stones with excruciating pain," says A. H. Thurnes, a well known coal operator of Buffalo, O. "I got no relief from medicine until I be? gan taking Foley's Kidney Cure, then ? the result was surprising. A fe;v doses started the brick-dust-like substance and now I have no pain across my kid? neys and I feel like a new man. It has done me $1,000 wort!; t.f good." Fo-. ley's Kidney Cure will cure every form of kidney or bladder disease. Durant's Pharmacy. ? The stores of Cobb & Seal and W. W. Adams, of Edgefield, were burned Thursday night. Loss, $16,000. *There is no need worrying along in discomfort because of a disordered di? gestion. Get a bottle of Kodol for dyspepsia, and see what it will do for you. Kodol not only digests what you eat, but is a corrective of the greatest efficiency. Kodol relieves indigestion, dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, flatulence and sour stomach. Kodol will make your stomach young and healthy again. You will worry just i:i the proportion that your stomach worries you. Worry means the loss of ability to do your best. Worry is to be avoided at all times. Kodol will tatae {he worry out of your stomach. Sold by all druggists. nu The only form of food made from wheat that is all nutri? ment is the soda cracker, and yet-the only soda cracker of which this is really true is Uneeda Biscuit The The The The only soda cracker scientifically baked. only soda cracker effectually protected, only soda cracker ever fresh, crisp and clean. only soda cracker good at all times. f?& In a dust tight, fLf moisture proof package. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Horses arid 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, 8S and 9. South Harvin Street. FOR SALE===LAND. Tract i,ooo acres, 300 cleared, balance in timber, 8Settlements, $ 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, 100 cleared, bal. timber wood land, 3 settlem'ts, 5,280 Tract 1,250 acres, 20 cleared, bal. timber wood land, o settlem'ts, 12,500 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 ditching and building and the enhancement jg in value will be clear profit. If yon have got land that is not paying an income on its value and you canso improve same, it will pay you to sell it. It is my business to do the selling. ATTORNhY-AT-LAW r> D DCf CCD REAL ESTATE BROKER H ARB Y BLGjCOURT SQ K. D* DCWCK, PHONE NO. 309. Few people give enough thought to the earning capacity of a dollar. When you look at a dollar don't think how much it will buy, but HOW MUCH IT WILL EARN. When yon form the habit of tak? ing this view of your dollars you find yourself starting on the only straight and sure road to wealth. Idle dollars are of no more use to the world than idle men. Everyjdollar yon make, over the cost of your actual necessities, should immediately be placed under the safeguard of a strong bank and kept busily at work earning other dollars for you. We pay four per cent, on Savings Accounts and figure the interest EVERY SIX MONTHS. THE BANK OF SUMTER. Jlttaniie Corni Line. Time Table No. 4-Effective May 27, 1906. Passenger Trains arriving and leaving ?Sumter, Train 35 Florence to Augusts '* 54 Columbia to Wilmington " * 1 Lucknow to Sumter u *57 Gibson to Sumter " 52 Charleston to Greenville " *46 Orangeburg to Charleston 79 Elrod, N. C., to Columbia " * 2 Sumter to Lucknow u * 3 Lucknow to Sumter " 78 Columbia to Elrod, N.C" ** 53 Greenville and Columbia to Charles ton"; " 32 Augusta to Florence " * 4 Sumter to Lucknow " *56 Sumter to Gibson " *?7 Charleston to Orangeburg " 55 Wilmington to Columbia Arrives 5 35 sa " 8 10 am " 8 30 ai? " 9 20 am Leaves 9 SI SK " 9 35 am " ll 05 am " ll 10 am Arrives 6 00 pm Leaves 6 05 pm " 6 30 pa M 6 40 pm w 6 35 pm 44 6 50 pm " 8 20 pm ** 9 35 pm Freight Trains carrying Passengers. Train *24 Sumter to Darlington " *19 Sumter to Robbins 11 *20 Bobbies to Sumter " *25 Darlington to Sumter Leaves 8 j Leaves 10 Arrives 7 Arrives 9 30 am 00 am 30 am 10 pm ] Northwestern Railway. Train *70 Camden to Sumter Arrives 9 00 aa " *71 Sumter to Camden Leaves 9 36 am " *68 Camden to Sumter " 5 45 pm " *72 Wildon Mili to Sumter Arrives 12 30 pm " *73 Sumter to Wilson Mill Leaves 3 30 pm " *69 Sumter to Camden " 6 31 pm Train? marked * daily except Sunday ; all other train?? daily. For further information, apply to J. T. CHINA, Ticket Agent A. C. L.