The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, April 17, 1908, Page 7, Image 7
The Judge Uses Forcible Language.
Judge W. B. Simmons of Fincas
tle, Va., told the reporter that L. &
M. Paint was usuea on his residence
in 1882, and held its color well for
21 years; he furthermore said that S
years ago he was induced to use
another paint and is sorry he did,
because the other paint didn't make j
'good. The Judge will now always use
L. & M. because he knows if any de
fect exists in L. & M. Paint, the
house will be repainted for nothing.
The L. &. M. Zinc hardens the L,
& M. White Lead and makes L. & M.
Paint wear like iron for 10 to 15
years.
Actual cost of L. & M. abont $1.20
per gallon. Donations of L. &. M.
made to churches. Sold by J. G.
Wannamaker Mfg. Co, Orangeburg.
Salt Water Induced Confession
New jersey Man Tries Odd Trick on Sleeping Wife and Says She
- Told Him Awful Things.
Vice Chancellor Waiker of New Jer
sey was*'asked" to decide a divorce
case based on a woman's conversation
and alleged confession said to have
been made in her sleep.
Richard Tague-of South Am boy was
being sued by his wife, Mary, on the
statutory grounds for divorce. He
filed a cross petition, naming a core
spondent, and appeared as his own
counsel. He said that he had proof
positive of his wife's infidelity. Asked
by the vice chancellor what his evi
dence was. he said:
"An old sea captain once told me
that .if, you put the hand of a person
who is asleep in salt water and asked
him questions he would answer you
and never He. I suspected my wife,
so one night when she was sleep
ing soundly I got a basin of water and
put plently of salt in iL Then I put
her hand In it and questioned her about
her conduct. She answered all my
questions and gave me the proof that
I needed to establish my, case"
Vice Chancellor Walker was Jr doubt
about the salt water process of gain
ing confessions and reserved decision
until he could make further inquiries.
Bigger
Cotton Yields Per Acre
The value of commercial fertilizers has
been demonstrated over and over again by
both government and private comparative
tests. We stand ready to- demonstrate to
you at any time that the surest way to "in
crease your yields per acre" is to use
ViiyMa-Carolina
Fertilizers
Hon. R. J. Redding, former Director of the Geor
gia Exp. Station, is authority for the statement that
"experiments made at this station show that well
balanced commercial fertilizer applied to one acre
of land, and well cultivated, may be reasonably ex
pected to produce an increase of yield of seed
cotton. At the present price of cotton this would
mean a large extra profit (for both lint and seed),
after deducting the price for fertilizer."
YouH find reports of many other comparative
tests, together with much valuable information con
cerningland culture in the new Virginia-Carolina
Year Book or Almanac. Ask you local fertilizer
dealer for a copy?or we'll send you one
free, if you write our nearest sales office.
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co.
? A Card.
This is to certify that all druggists
are authorized to refund your money
if Foley^s Honey and Tar fails to cure
your cough or cold. \ It stops the
cough, heals the lungs'and prevents
bad results from a cold. Cures grippe
coughs and prevents pneumonia and
consumption. Contains no opiates.
The genuine is in a yellow package.
Refuse substitutes. A. C. Dukes.
The fellow whose work is grinding |
soon wears away.
Richmond. Va.
Norfolk. Va.
Colombia, S. C
Atlanta, Ga.
Savannah, Ga..
Memphi*, Tenn.
Shreveport, La.
Durham, N. C.
Charleston, S. C.
Baltimore, Md.
Columbus,' Ga.
Montgomery, Ala.
At times when you don t feel just |
right, when you have a bad stomach,
take something right away that will
assist digestion; not something that
will stimulate for a time but some
thing that will positively do the very
work that the stomach performs un
der ordinary and normal conditions
that will make the food digest. To do
this you must take a natural diges
tant like Kodol for Dyspepsia. Kodol
is a scientific preparation of vegeta
ble acids wiih natural digestants and
contains the same juices found in a
healthy stomach. Each dose will di
gest more than 3,000 grains of good
food. It is sure to afford prompt
relief; it digests what you eat and is
pleasant to take. , So'd by A. C.
Dukes; A. C. Doyle & Co. .
A man who whines is worse than
an owl screech.
Irsrinia-Carnlina'
When the Stomach, Heart or Kid
ney nerves get weak, then these or
gans alwaj's fail. . Don't drug the
Stomach, nor stimulate the Heart or
Kidneys. That Is simply a makeshift.
Get a prescription known to drug
gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Re
storative is prepared expressly for
these inside nerves, build them up
with Dr. Shoop's Restorative?tab
lets or liquid?rand see how qiuckly
help will come. Free sample test sent j
on request by Dr. Shoop, Racine,
Wis. Your health is surely worth
this simple test. J. G. Wannamaker
Mfg. Co.
Cures Backache
Corrects
I.TCfctilarities
Do not risk having
Will c?re"any case"oTvKidney or Bladder Disease not Bright'5 Disease,
beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. or Diabetes
DR* A. C. DUKES.
Quality ?KSP
A WELLbred
?iA horse is al
ways a beautiful
sight. Admiration
grows as we note one point after another.
But then this wonderful horse did not
just happen to be so beautiful and useful.
It's the result of years of careful
breeding.
And. so it is with everything that has
merit
Theoretically?on
paper?it alwaj^s seems
so eas}r to reach per
fection with a few years
experience. But it always
lengthens from io to 20,
30 to 40 years before per
fection is attained.
And that's just the rea
son that Lowe Brothers
"High Standard" Liquid Paint
reached the point of leadership.
has
The well bred horse has more than head
and body and legs?he has the strong
spirit. And that is "High Standard"
Paint?it has in it more than plain mater
ials, even though they are the best. . It
has behind it the determination to make
the best product in the land.
' The "Little Blue Flag " means the win
ner?quality, speed, endurance, value?
and that is "High Standard."
Eliminate the chance
of getting poor paint by
asking for and insisting
upon Lowe Brothers
"High Standard" Paint.
Remember also that the
"Little Blue Flag" means
that every can contains ab
solutely full quantity and
full weight?U. S. Govern
ment Standard?of Paint.
Just as dependable as "High Stand
ard" Liquid Paint are Lowe Brothers
d
}amt
It has taken 35 years; of careful pains" Varnishes and Enamels, for exterior or
:mg effort to make it the best paint
lat can,be procured today at the cost of
Jz'me and money.
Extreme care has been taken to get
only the best ingredients that could be
obtained.
It is a well bred paint. Bred to a degree
of sound idealism.
It's a #zt?rzV-paint.
And the "Little Blue Flag" is the mark
that signifies merit in paint.
interior finish, and Vernicol, a stain and
finish for floors and woodwork*
They are
the best values
: Little.
to be had. Let
us make sugges
tions for your
color combination.
Ask for color cards.
See sample panels.
FOR SALE BY
John McNamara,
38 W. Russell, Street. Phone 43.
jux xj xjjumi uv tinx X'xijLi/wax? nui ? 11
4 <4 \ J.KVUI
Made Dim Into a Living Picture
Art Students Wreak Artistic Vengeance on Peeping Chauffeur
Who Tried to Study the Human Form Divine
Through Their Art. School's . Skylight,.
There is war to the palette knife and
the tire irons between the art students
of, the New York School of Art and the
chauffeurs on the block in Eightieth
street, just west of Broadway. The
feeling between the representatives of
the oil and gasoline arts' has never
been too fraternal.
The chauffeurs, who mostly congre
gate about a garage In the northwest
ern part of the Broadway studios, in
which the art school is housed, can
look across an ah? shaft from then* top
floor into the top floor of the art school.
It has been told by several of the fe
male art students that when they went
to sit in the windows of their own top
floor they got electric shocks, which
were followed by laughter from the
chauffeurs across the way. who from
an automobile had rigged up an elec
tric apparatus.
That was the first inning for the
chauffeurs. The other day, however,
the chauffeurs were willing to concede
that their foes had won a point. One
of their number, said to be a well
known actress* chauffeur, was in deep
seclusion trying to remove from his
anatomy certain numerous decorative
panels, friezes and small landscapes.
"Dutch Henry" had been caught at
the skylight on the previous night
studying the female model of the men's
night class as intently as any student
there. His punishment, which, natural
ly enough, was picturesque, followed,
and the chauffeurs now vow thatsom
/ "Platform!" shouted the students,
and Henny was forced to the stand, va
cated by the model. For a moment
Henny seemed to think that be was
taking part in a joke. He struck a
heroic attitude, which the students la
beled "Man Cranking a Machine."
"In the altogether!" shouted a dozen
voices.
Henny didn't understand that until
student hands enforced comprehension.
Before Henny knew it he was shrink
ing back bashfully under the limelight,
while student after student passed
around impressionistic sketches of "A
Man Without His Togs," "Chauffeur
Without His Goggles," "A Punctured
Tire" and "Sketches In Gasoline."
But, alas for Henny, student inven
tion tiring of one phase of art turned
to another. A long student with a
lean and hungry face approached him
with a sharp pointed brush and divided
Henny's outer surface by black lines
into sections, each of which was as
signed to a different student. Then
began competition. From six to eight
students worked upon Henny at once,
while others awaited their turn.
On various sections of Henny'3 im
provised canvas appeared a landscape,
a stretch of meadow and a peasant's
hut. Upon one arm an elongated copy
of Burne-Jones' "Vampire" stretched
its length, while a tiny miniature of
Martha Washington adorned his fore
head. About his ankles were folded
e^a wl
EIGHT STUDENTS WORKED UPON HENNY.
member of the art class is to be spirit
ed away and made to drink a caa of
gasoline.
It appears from the unblushing state
ment of one of those who accompanied
Henry that chauffeurs have been in
the habit of getting out of the top floor
window of the garage, climbing across
the air shaft and mounting an iron lad
der to the roof of the art school. The
skylight, which is made of ground
glas^, is impervijus, but on either side
of the skylight are ventilators. When
the ventilators are open there is noth
ing to obstruct the view of the large
studio in which the evening section of
the men's life class meets.
The models had complained of the
ventilators and the peeping faces which
they sometimes framed, and the stu
dents determined upon action. It was
dark night when they heard somebody
on the roof. In accord with a plan of
strategy already devised the students
swarmed up an outside ladder and also
up one in the studio. Two of the chauf
feurs were able to escape, but Dutch
Hen?y was corraled and carried strug
gling down the ladder into the studio.
The model who had been posing was
dismissed.
wings. A center section contained a
frieze a la Boston library.
Ultimately the historical student
painters demanded a share, and a se
ries of Dutch scenes, beginning with
"The Night Watch," spread over Hen
ny's back, and caricatures In oil em
bodying such homely advice as "It's,
never too late to mend" completed the
living picture.
Then Henny was permitted :o array
himself and go, still retaining his
souvenirs.
"Call again any time, and we'll give
you $2 an hour," they told hlra.
Henny thought that other engage
ments would prevent, but said he was
deeply grateful that a final suggestion
of one of the students to throw his
clothes out of the window hadn't been
carried out.
Henny was permitted to go to his
jeering associates. They laug.aed over
him for a time, then took him into a
garage and bathed him in gasoline, for
art, like dirt, Is soluble in gasoline.
Then the chauffeurs planned the next
move.
"Yes, they did make Henny look like
a car run by its owner," they said,
"but just wait."
Called Down at Wife's Funeral
Berks County (Pa.) Man Has Pastor Arrested For Berating Him
In Obituary Remarks.
The Rev. Marvin H. Stettler. one of
the best known clergymen in the
Pennsylvania Lutheran mlnlsterium,
was recently arrested on charges pre
ferred by Jeremiah Werner of Mohrs
ville, Pa. This ^s the sequel to the
funeral of Mrs. Werner in St. John's
Lutheran church, In that borough.
Mr. Stettler preached the funeral ser
mon, during which, Werner charges,
he mhde remarks In the pulpit berat
ing him and referring to him as "a
man with a heart of stone, showing
no signs of grief." Mr. Werner al
leges that the pastor followed this up
with such remarks as these, pointing
his finger at him:
"This man knocked his wife down,
so that she fell to the floor, the week
before she was taken 111.
"He did not furnish her with cloth
ing and shoes fit to wear to church,
and for that reason she did not fre
quent the house of the Lord as regular
ly and as often as the other sisters of
the congregation.
"See him, as he sits unmoved, with
no feeling, in the presence of the
corpse of his helpmeet"
He concluded by saying that there
were other men in the congregation
no better. Magistrate Miller Issued
the warrant for the pastor's arrest,
and he gave S300 bail for a hearing
on Easter Monday.
Mr. Stettler Is pastor of St. Paul's
Lutheran church and St. John's
church, where the funeral sermon was
delivered.
Werner is twenty-five years of age
and his wife was twenty-three. lie
said that he wrinted the case given
the widest publicity, as h* feels thai
he was unjustly abused.
Engraved Visiting Cards.
FOR ALL THE LATEST STYLES AT THE VERY BEST PRICES K
SIMS' BOOK STORE,
49 E, RnsseU Street.
Orangeburg, S. C.
FOB,
?BAD BLOOD
The most important part of the human system is the blood. Every mus
cle, nerve, tissue, bone and sinew is dependent on this vital fluid for nour
ishment and strength necessary to maintain them in health and enable each,
to perform the; different duties nature requires. Even the heart, "the very
" engine " of life, receives its vigor and motive power from the blood. Since
' so much is dependent on this vital fluid it can very readily be s^.en how
necessary it is to have it pure and uncontaminated if we would <mjoy the
blessing of good health. Bad blood is responsible for most of the ailments
of mankind; when from any cause it becomes infected with impurities,
'humors or poisons, disease in some form is sure to follow. Muddy, sallow
complexions, eruptions, pimples, etc., show that the blood is infected witli
unhealthy humors which have changed it from a pure, fresh stream to a
sour, acrid fluid, which forces out its impurities through the pores and
glands of the skin. A very common evidence of bad blood is sores or ulcers,
which break out on the flesh, often
Tour S. S. S., In my opinion, is as good a
medicine as can bo had; it simply cannot bo
i mproved upon as a remedy to purify and enrich
the blood and to invigorate and tone up the
system. This spring my blood was bad and I
was run down in health, and having seen your
medicine highly advertised I commenced Its use.
Today my blood is in fine condition and my
general health is of the best Am filling posi
tion as fireman for a large concern here, and
if I was net in good physical condition It would
be impossible for me to fill tic place. Tour
S. S. S. has been of great service to me and I do
not hesitate to give it the credit it deserves.
WM. F. VANDYKE.
815 Fifth Street, Beaver Falls, Penn.
from a very insignificant bruise or
even scatch or abrasion. If the blood
was pure and healthy the place would
heal at once, but being loaded with
impurities, which are discharged into
the wound, irritation and inflamma
tion are set up and the sore continues.
Bad blood is also responsible for
Anaemia, Boils, Malaria, etc.; the
weak, polluted circulation cannot fur
nish the nourishment and strength
required to sustain the body, and a
general run-down condition of health
results. S. S. S. is nature's blood
purifier and tonic; made entirely of
healing, cleansing roots and herbs.
It goes down into the circulation and removes every particle of impurity,
humor or poison that may be there, restores lost vitality, and steadily tones
up the entire system. It adds to the blood the healthful properties it is in
need of, and in every' way assists in the cure of disease. S. S. S. neutral
izes any excess of acid in the blood, making it fresh and pure, and perma
nently cures Eczema, Acne, Tetter, and all other skin diseases and eruptions.
S. S. S. cures Rheumatism, Catarrh, Sores and Ulcers, Malaria, and all
other diseases or disordtrs arising from bad blood. Book on the blood and
any medical advice desired free to all who write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, QJL
GLOVER'S
WE'RE WAITING FOR YOU
Yon may ./be one of the many who find it hard to decide which Clothier
to buy from. We admit t's a hard thing to decide when each one is
shouting or claiming in the biggest type he can find, that his store is the
best, and the others are no gool. We don't ask you to read our \?, and
then rush in and buy blindly. All we want is a chance to show you. It
wont be hard for you to make up your mind after one visit here. We
know What's What in Clothes and can teach you. We are wiUing to prove
any minute of any business day, beyond any donbt that :in values for the
price, in Style Advantages, in quality of goods it will pay you to wear our
Clothes. You'll get more here than just something to wear. You'll get
Satisfaction or your money back. Wont you come in and take a peep * at
the many new, distinctive Suits we have ready for yon to Slip in and Wear
Off? Seeing does not oblige you to buy.
GLOVER'S
FIRE, LIFE,
Q BURQLRAY, TORNADO
I INSURANCE!! 5
is
?
5
#
?
0
ALSO
SURETY BONDS
Written toy
ft
4
?
I H. C. Wannamaker, f
I
^ I represent companies tha know to be goo
& Give me some of your business.
?a
Truth is stranger than fiction!!!
We have about
40 good second
hand Pianos and
Organs, that we
are going to sell at
about one third of
their real value,
Come quick and get a bargain.
The Merchant Music Go,
No. 53 East Russell Street,
Orangeburg, S. C.