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I 1 j Most Effective i Mother r?r. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin lie: lleves ltnhv When Other >ledit' i clnes Failed. There is nothing so necessary to ? child's health and comfort as regularity of the bowels. All children are especially susceptible to Stomach S trouble and any overstrain of the sensitive orirans has a tendency tn I obstruct elimination. This condition is responsible for much of the illness of childhood. To relieve constipation a mild lexative should be employed. Cathartics and purgatives are \iolent in their action and should be avoided. Airs. Alfred DuBois, Mt. Holly. X. J., .says Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is without doubt the most effective remedy for constipation she has ever used and that it is the only remedy alie could find for her baby. Little Karl was badly constipated during his first year and nothing she tried aeeaied to help him until she got a I bottle of I)r. Caldwell's Syrup Pepwin. Now he is a fine, strong, healthy boy, and she thanks Dr. Caldwell tor it. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a I -comb'nation of simple laxative herbs "with pepsin, free from opiates of narcotic drugs: it acts gently without CONVICT CHESHIRE IX FEDERAL COURT Jurors Return Verdict of Guilty With Recommendation to Mercy in Anderson Editor's Case. Greenwood. Nov. 11.?At 12 o'clock last night the jury in the case i of V. B. Cheshire of Anderson. I charged with sending "filthy" matter through the mails in the columns of ^tais newspaper, returned a verdict of jsuilty with recommendation to the jm For W t\ I J V V\ You need a real ( Mi J y\ the trouble. Let that ?m { it catarrhal condition*, a jm i 1 acute catarrh; It ma # B qucntly become* systei B; M tlnal tract a* well aa I PERUNA 5 ^^41 It clears away th I ^vjaVU and tones up the syst. iylmyi in catorrh t>y thousa ^S " ??! tsstu Clival* | 4 ~ ^ r^a?? new' ( ,.??* ? J MONEYToToIfT ?__ I am now prepared to negotiate loans i of ninney on inproved cotton farms ' 1 | in l.&nRjsier ronnly in sums of S.'IIK). and upwards at 7 per rent interest, ! repayable in suitable installments, in periods of five, seven or ten years. ! K. i:. wyi.II:, Attorney at Law < ............ i _ _i. a. . r 5 look uut rot ^ Look out for you ^ rio one else will, f ^ Here is where you < A have not advanced tl a rior will I advance it i ^ * Now see where you ^ has advanced in price pay the advanced pric ** Come look at my w Knamel Ware and Oh 9 very full line for you ^ the old price. ^ Don't you want an 4f^ the morning chill off ai ?* A bathroom. P a Come see a Bicycle ^ people walk and pay 2 Don't forget the sih 2 with every dollar's w 2 from now until Chris w spoons as they are yoi { *W forget. ^ I will have lots of I f ^ and don't you forget i1 i right hand man. | J. B. MAC ? L Remedy Had Ever Used griping or other discomfort, and appeals to children because of its j pleasant taste. Druggists everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bottle, land every mother should have it in j the house for use whenever occasion arises. I To avoid imitations and ineuective substitutes always be sure to ask for Dr. Caldweii s Syrup I'epsin. See that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell's signature and his portrait appear on (the | yellow carton in which the bottle is racked. A trial bottle. tree of (charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 4 55 Washington I St.. Monticello, Illinois. mercy of the court. Judge Johnson has not yet pronounced sentence. On a motion by attorneys for the defendant for a new trial. Judge Johnson stated that he wouiu hear arguments on this motion Monday. Arguments in this case were concluded at 10 o'clock last night and the case was given to the jury. They were out two hours. The penalty undei the statute is a fine of $5,000 or five years' imprisonment or both. inter Colds I bnatic- Strength b required to overcome tonic be one that is specially valuable in md you can conquer the cold. A cold is y become chronic. Chronic catarrh frenic, involving the stomach and the inteethe nose or throat. It means stagnation. I IS INVIGORATION i* waste matter, dispels the Inflammation ?ns. For forty-five years it has been used nds of grateful sufferers, who willingly relief. Peruna's long history of helpfulness is the best evidence that it is what you should take. Liquid or tablet form for your convenience. Manalin is the Ideal laxative and liver tonic. In tablet form it is delictus to take, mild and effective, without unpleasant effects, nnd will not form a habit. Liquid, 3&c and $1.00; tablets, 10c and 26c. THE PERUNA CO., Columbug.O. ('hunting Seasons llring Colds. "StuflTed-up head," ologged-up nose, tight chest, sore throat are sure signs of cold, and Dr. King's New Discovery is sure relief. A dose of this combination of antiseptic balsams-soothes the irritated membrane, clears the herd, loosens the phlegm, you breathe easier and realize your cold is broken up. Treat a cold persistently; half-way measu es leave a lingering cough. Take Dr. King's New Discovery until your cold is gone. For 4 7 years the fa\orite remedy for young and old. At your druggist, 50c.?Adv. Your Dollar ========= # r dollar, if you don't Q <111 lll<II\.f It I'IMllll. 1 ie price on anything A intil after January. a i come in, everything ^ but I did not have to ^ e as I bought early. ^ China, Aluminum, ? iss Ware, as I have a w to select from and at 9 Oil Heater to knock Q t breakfast or for that ? and ride while other a while you ride. a rer that we give away ^ orth of goods bought itrnas. Call for the J irs and sometimes we J Santa Clans for you t for I am Old Santa's 0 :korell : THE ILANCASTER NK Earliest 40 a First Improved Ciin bjr (Jen. Wwlt Hampton, Father of South t"art>lina Governor and Senator Sea Island Development. The earliest mention of the cotton plant was 400 B. C.. when Herodo uih wrues or rne wua trees or inaia which "bear fleece as their fruit, surpassing those of sheep for beauts and excellence, and the Indians use cloth made from these trees." Xearchus, an admiral of the fleel of Alexander the Great, describes a machine used by the Hindoos foi separating the seed from the lint thus showing the even in those eat* days the progress which had beeii made in preparing the raw material for weaving into cloth. The Romans used cloth made ol cotton very extensively, and its use was well known in China in remote 1 periods. It was found in use among the Indians in Central America and Mexico I when the Spaniards came. Spinning and weaving were practiced by the women of the West Indies when Columbus landed in those islands Their suspended beds were made o! I the cloth, and called "humacs.' where we have the modern name ol hammock. Its early discoveries of the Mesjchacehe, or Mississippi, saw cottor growing in 1726. It was the staple j product of Hipaniola, and in 175.3 [Jamaica exported two thousand ' bags. It was stated in Carroll's Historl cal Collections that experiments wer'made on the Ashley river as early a< 1670 in the growing of cotton, and it was found to thrive well, but foi some reason it was given up. prob ably because of the difficulty in sep arating the seed. The earliest attempt to plant cot ton in South Carolina as a crop was [made in 1748, when seven bags wer? | exported to England, bringing threi pounds, seven shillings and sixpenr< per bag; again in 1751 cotton was ex ported in small quantities; this die not pay, however, and it was not un til 1788-1)0 that it was planted as : market crop to any great extent. 1770 there were shipped to Kn rope three bags of cotton from Nev I York, four from Virginia, two frou l Maryland, and three from Xort! Carolina. | In 1785 these exports amounted i< fourteen bags; 1786, six; 1787, om hundred and nine; 1788. three hun | dred and eighty-nine; 1780, eigh hundred and forty-two, and 1700 eighty-one. The first bags ot cotton sold ii South Carolina in 1784 were pur chased by John Teasdale fron Flryan Cope. In 1787, small quantities were sol< in Charleston, brought from Orange burg; principally purchased by la dies for lining bed quilts. In 1704 an American vessel ar lived at Liverpool from South Caro lina. As part of her crago were eighi bales of cotton, which were seized oi the ground that so much cotton coulf not be raised in the United States. The invention of the cotton gin bj Eli Whitney gave great impetus tc the growing of cotton in 1 704. A1 first this invention was carefullj guarded and exhibited to ladies only A man disguised as a woman saw th< working model, made certain im provements, and so introduced it tc the public. The State of South Carolina paid Whitney the sum of fifty thousand dollars for the privilege of the fret use of his gin in the State. The first improved gin was uset hy (Jen. Wade Hampton, the fathei of our late Governor and senator. In 1793 Gen. William Moultri< planted one hundred and fifty acre: of cotton on Northhampton planta tion, but the crop failed because o! a lack of knowledge as to the culti vatlon. Capt. Peter Sinker, of St. Johns Berkelely, planted his cotton in hills four feet square, leaving two stalk: to each hill after thinning. In 179f he planted three hundred acres or Belvidere plantation in St. Johns which yielded an average productior of two hundred and sixteen poundper acre. He sold most of this crop for 7; cents per pound, some of it for 50 Four workings were deemed suf : flclent for a crop. The seed was planted in drills, and thinned and se lected by hand The daily task of a man being three and a half acres foi the first thinning per day, and four for the second. ! No manuring of fields or attempt at fertilizing was made; as one field showed signs of failing, another was selected. ; WS TUESDAY. NOV. 14. 191< m Of Cotton I rs Before Christ ? ? Before the introduction of machin j ery the seed was separated from the lint by hand; the average yield was I one pound of lime to three pounds of j seed. Verv little rare was inkon 001 quantity and not quality was the object. The first gin was a clumsy affair. 1 and was worked by the foot. Thei greater part of the ginning was donei at night or in the early morning. A hand doing four or five pounds each time. 1787, two bags of cotton were 1 sent to .England as samples. It was reported back that it was not worth producing because of the difficulty in separating the seed. This, how1 ever was before the invention of the! ' gin. , Cotton planting advanced rapidly! after 1794, and finauy entirely sup planted the culture of indigo, which! previous to that time was the staple' crop of this section of the country. Col. William Thomson of Orange : burg county, was the first extensive ^planter of that section in 1794. John I Mayrant, in 1797, was the first to, I plant cotton in Sumter. Gen. Wade M Hampton introduced it into Richland county in 1801. He was the first to f! use water power for propelling the machinery of the gin. He gathered a I crop of six hundred bags from six "!hundred acres. ' j Weaving the cotton cloth was done t'entirely by the hand loom until 1813. The power loom %as not successful until 182 J. The first sea island cotton was i planted on St. Simon's Island. GeorJgla, in 1788, from seed brought from I the West Indies. Mr. Kinsey Burden lootained some seed and was the first ( ! to introduce it into South Carolina. His first experiment failed, but he persisted in his etlorts in the face or difficulties. Mr. William Elliott planted a < I ^ small crop on Hilton Head anu met j with success. Mr. Burden continued j his efforts, and by a careful selection of seeds mlin? l? I ed. Anally Improved the staple, andj developed the sea island cotton asj we now know it. For many years i he kept the secret of his success. In 1825 he sold sixty hairs for one dolla. and sixteen cents per pound, and in 1828 for two dollars. Mr. Burden * was the tirst planter to use Hessian | *|cloth for packing his cotton. So (carefully was this precious product! II put up that for a time the outer bags 81were lined with cotton cloth to pro-j Ittct the cotton from dust and dirt. | 1 At first some of the Knglish spin-' ners complained that the staple was too long, and used to cut it shorter.! 1. The cultivation of sea island cot"| ton increased enormously, and the; ' sea coast planters grew rich. Many! 'are the tales told of the wealth and ' hospitality of these ante-bellum cot-; [ton growers. So well well known were their brands that often the crop was soldi |by that, rather than by sample. t | Of course the civil war brought 'ruin and desolation to this industry. I | .'The seed deteriorated to such an e\-1 1 , tent that after the war the only pure . seed known was contained in an or ; ^ dlnarv envelope, which wtis given I I by ('apt. Cleorge ('. Heyward to Mr. . Joseph T. Dill. Mr. Dill planted this seed, and it is said that all the pres, ent sea island cotton came from this small remnant. J The value of cotton seed was almost unknown, and thousands of I'tons were annually thrown out into I the fields and allowed to rot as a J fertilizer for the next crop. For many years both the short and long I staple cotton was packed only in I . bags. The cotton bales came later,i 1 : mm infii me rnniprcss. Following are some of the prices . obtained for short cotton in the early days of its cultivation: f 1790 14 1-2 .1791 26 i 1792 29 1793 32 ! 1794 33 1795 36 1-2 | , ' 1796 36 1-2 1 I i 1797 37 1798 39 ['1799 44 , 1814 15 ;1818 34 i 1824 15 Pine-Tar Relieves a Cold. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey con1 tains all the soothing elements of the pine forest. It heals the Irritated i membrane, and by Its antiseptic pro. parties loosens the phlegm, you | , breathe easier, and what promised to be a severe cold has been broken up. For that stuffed-up feeling, tight ; chest or sore throat take a dose I of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey and prevent a weaHng, hacking cough dragging through the winter. At your druggist, 25c.?Adv. . k New Treatment for Bronchitis, 'V* . Asthma, Catarrh and Head Colds . . the lunge. In addition, Viok's is absorbed Vkk*s "Vap-O-Rub" Sale* Relieves bj through the skin, relieving the tightnw aiw| Absorptioo. Md lOWBMfc oon UQ Aowqiww. Yiok's can be applied over the throat and No Dosing. ohest and oovered with a warm flannel Ko need to take internal medicines or oloth?or a little pot up the nostrils?or habit forming drugs for these troubles, melt a little in a spoon and inhale the wa"When Yiok's "Vap-O-Rub** Salve is applied pore arising. Also for Asthma and Haw to the heat of the body, soothing, medi- Fever, rob Vick's well over the spinal ooU eated vapors are released that are inhaled omn to relax the nervous tension. He, all night long through the airpaasages to 50c, or fl.00. VICK'S'W^m^SALVE 1 f.nnn awn fdecu I j uuvv nnu hyluJU OUR GROCERIES Canned Goods, Oaf Flakes, Creain of Wheat, Fruits and Vegetables. CALL AND GET THEM QUICK Just Received Red Oats, Seed Rye, Barley, Clover and Mixed Grasses Onion Sets. Now is the time to protect vonr home. You will need protection this winter, 'and why not begin now by painting your home. We sell nothinglbut the best paints, oilsandjstains. CALL US FOR PRICES. Bennett-Terry Co. j "The Pure Food Store/' ?? ' | ATTENTION | ~~ ft ft READ THIS AD WITHOUT FAIL. ft A We want von to know wu ha?o ^ _ " ?? V atuw pui Lliaacu Hp m the J. M. Ferguson Stock of Goods at Midway and A ? will run a first class, up-to-date GROCERY and a Z MARKET, Z ^ We will pay top prices for all kinds of coun^ try produce such as Chickens, Eggs, Butter, etc. 2 WE WILL BUY YOUR HOGS, CATTLE ? ANI) HIDES. " See us before you sell. w We will certainly appreciate your patronage. w J GIVE US A TRIAL. S Clyburn & Small * ? Telephone 248 ? ? ? ? Midway. ? UgMMWi ...........I II FRESH SHIPMENT I II OF ? !| || GARDENER'S CAKES II ____________ !! CITRON CAKE j| POUND CAKE !! MARBLE CAKE =ZZZ====r=Z=Z j | | We Slice This Cake In Any Quantity, ii ; Give Us An Order For Melrose Flour. ]! | EDWARDS & HORTON jj Lot* Fes,AMitt, IftectivaUxatirfA liver Tonic UA AAA Am Does Not ttrtpe nor Disturb the Stomach. IlOe WWW la addition to other properties, La*-Poa contains Caacara in acceptable form, a a prescription prapmd SSpsciaHy atiinulating Laxative and Tonic. Lax-Fos ? MALARIA or CHILLS A FEVER, acta effect!rely and doea not gripe nor ,, * ?* ?* doaaa will break any case, and disturb stomach. At the same time, it aids " l,*en then as a toaic the Parer will not digestion, arouses the Ihrer and secretions J*'"'0- " on the Hear better tbaa and restores the healthy functions. 50c. Calomel and does not fripe or sicken. 2Se