The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, May 15, 1908, Page 7, Image 7
HIDDEN DANGEBS.
Nature Gives Timely Warnings That
No Orangeburg . Citizen Can *^
Afford to Ignore.
DANGER SIGNAL. NO. 1 CQjnes
from the kidney secretions. They
will warn you when the kidneys are
sick. Well kidneys excrete a clear,
amber fluid. Sick kidneys send out
a thin, pale .and foamy, or a thick
red, ill-smelling urine, full of sedi
ment and irregular of passage.
DANGER /SIGNAL NO. 2 comes
from the back. Back pains, dull and j
heavy, or sharp and acute tell you
of sick kidneys and warn you of the -
approach of dropsy, diabetes and
Bright's disease. Doan's , Kidney
Pills cure sick kidneys and cure
them permanently. v
E. Starton, well known in Flor
ence, S. C, says: "Doan's Kidney
Pills helped my back after every
thing else had failed, and after I
had thought that my back was worn
out. They made it stronger than it
had been for five or six years and
seemed to put a new backbone in me.
I have had a terrible time with back
ache which was greatly aggravated
by my work and at times I had to
lay off for''I could not work on ac
count of the acute pains across my
loins. I could not begin to toM you
all I have suffered. The secrei.-ous
from' ray kidneys also bothered me,
were very dark in color and con
tained sediment, being also too fre
quent in action and ? annoying me
during the day and preventing my
resting well at nights. I applied
plasters and rubbed my back with
liniments but nothing helped me un
; ?
en
' frequently suffer great pain and misery during the
change of life. It is at this time that the beneficial
effect of taking Cardui is most appreciated, by those
! who find that it relieves their distress.
It Will Help . You
Jas
Mrs. Lucinda C. Hill, of Freeland, 0., writes:
"Before I began to take Cardui, I suffered so badly
I was afraid to lie down at night. After I began to
take it I felt better in a week. Now my pains have
gone. I can sleep like a girl of 16 and the change
of life has nearly left me." Try Cardui
AT ALL DRUG STORES
J THE PEOPLE^ BA r^K
OR-^V^MGJE BURG, S. C.
"A Bank For All The People."
CAPITAL STOCK.$30,000.00
SURPLUS... 20,000.00
STOCKHOLDERS LIABI- \
LITY.30,000.00
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PROTECTION TO DE
POSITORS .$80,000.00
D. O. Herbert.President
B. F. Siuckenfuss.. . .Vice-President
H. C. Wannamaker.Cashier
W. M. Richardson.. .. Asst. Cashier
DIRECTORS.
W. C. Cr um ?. M. Sallej
Abial Lathrop W. L. Glaze
G. L. Sallcy Bobt. E. Copes
D. O. Herbert B. F. Muckenf uss
H. C. Wannamaker.
Interest paid in Savings Department.
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LOW RATE MILEAGE TICKETS ON SALE BY
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
4500 Mile State Family Tickets, $11.23.
Good over the Southern Railway in South Carolina for the headorde
pendent nembers of a family. Limited to one year from date of
sale
1000 Mile Interchangeable Individual Ticket, $20.00.
Good over the Southern Railway and 30 other lines in the Southeast
aggregating 30,000 miles Limited to one year from date of sale.
2000 Mile Interchangeable Firm Ticket, $40.00.
Good over the Southern Railway and 30 other lines In tile Southeast
aggregating 30,000 miles. For a manager or head of firm and em
ployes limitea to five, but good for only one, of such persons at a
time. Limited to one year from date of sale.
1000 Mile Southern Interchangeble Individual Ticket, $25.00.
Good over the Southern Railway and 75 other lines in the Southeast
aggregating 41,000 miles. Limited to one year from date of sale.
On and after April 1st, 1908, all mileage tickets will not be hon- ,
ored for passage on trains, nor in checking baggage, except
from non-agency stations not open for the sale of tickets, but must
be presented at ticket office and there exchanged for continuous
tickets.
Money saved in passage fare by purchasing tickets from Southern
Railway agents. Fares paid on trains will be at a higher rate.
Call on Southern Railway Tic ket Agents for mileage tickeis,
passage tickets and detail inform ation.
R. W. HUNT, , ,
Assistant General Passenger Agent,
ATLANTA, GA.
J. C. LUSK, ,
Division Passenger Agent,
CHARLESTON S. C.
til I read, about Doan's Kidney Pills
and procured a box. They were just
what I' needed and are the best back
ache remedy I ever used. I have not
had backache since I used, them, the
kidney secretions are all right, I
can sleep all night without having to
get up and my back is stronger than
It has been for a number of years."
Plenty more proof like this, from
Orangeb?rg people. Call at J. G.
Wannamaker's drug, store and ask
what customers report.
For sale by all dealers. Price 50c.
Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, New
York, sole agent for United States.
Remember the name?Doan's?
and take no other.
Time will tell; but gossipers man
age to tell' it first.
Human Filters.
The function of the kidneys is to
strain out the impurities of the blood
which is constantly passing througn
them. Foley's Kidney Remedy makes
the kidneys healthy so they will
strain out all waste matter from the
blood. Take Foley's Kidney Remedy
at once and it will make you well. A
C. Dukes. Lowman Drug Co.
I When you see a man advertising
his virtues it is to keep your attention
off his real character.
/
Tired mothers, worn out by the
peevish, cross baby have found Cas
taswtet a boon and a blessing Cas
casweet is for babies and children
is especially good" for the ills so
common in cold weather. Look for
the ingredients printed on the bottle.
Contains no harmful drugs. Sold by
A. C. Dukes, and A. C. Doyle & Co.
Beware the geese when the fox
preeches.
Tired nerves, with that "no ambi
tion" feeling that is commonly felt
in spring or early summer, can be
easily and quickly altered by taking
what is known to druggists every
where as Dr. Shoop's Restorative. One
will absolutely note a changed feeling
within 4S hours after beginning to
take, the Restorative. The bowels get
sluggish in the winter-time, the cir
culation often slows uy, the Kidneys
are inactive, and even the Heart in
many cases grows decidedly weaker.
Dr. Shoop's Restorative is recotcni/od
everywhere as a genuine tonic to
these vital organs. It build? up and
strengthens the worii-cut wea-cencd
nerves; it sharpers the failing nope-'
cite., and universally aids digestion.
It always quicklv brings renewed
strength, life, vigor, and ambition
Try it and be convinced. Sold by Or.
|j. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.
Don't be afraid to do more than
is required of you.
Serious Results Feared.
You may well fear serious results
from a cough or cold, as, pneumonia
and consumption start with a cold.
Foley's Honey and Tar cures the
most obstinate coughs or colds and i
prevents serous results. Refuse sub
stitutes. Lowman Drug Co., A. C.
Dukes.
Don't be afraid to change a man's
opinion, but beb careful how you do
it.
Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup?
the cough syrup that tastes nearly as
good as maple sugar and which chil-,
dren like to take so well. Unlike1
nearly all other remedies, it does not |
constipate, but on the other hand it
acts promptly yet gently on the bow
els, through which the cold is forced \
out of the system, and at the same |
time it allays inflamation. Always use
Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup.
Sold by A. C. Dukes, A. C. Doyle &
Co. '
A green winter makes a fat church
yard.
"Health Coffee" is rea:!y the clos
est Coffee Imitation ever yet produc
ed. This cfever Coffee Substituts was
recently purchased by Dr. Shoop of j
Racine, Wis. Not a grain of real cof
fee in it either. Dr. Shoop's Health j
Coffee is made from pure toasted
grains, with malt, nuts, etc. Really it
would fool an exeprt; who might
drink it for coffee. No 20 or 30 min-,
utes tedious boiling. "Made in a min
ute" says the doctor. Sold by A. L.
Dukes.
It is not a disgrace to fail, but it
is a sin not to try again.
Colds That Hang On.
Colds that uang on in the spring
deplete the system ,y exhaust the
nerves, and open the way for serious
illness. Take Foley's Honey and Tar
It quickly stops the cough and ex
pels the cold. It is safe and certain
in results. Lowman Drug Co., A. C.
Dukes.
NOT A HORSELESS AGE.
Facta Seem to Indicate That It Is
Farther Away Than Ever.
The horseless age that has been so
persistently predicted is not merely
slow in coming; the facts seem to in
dicate that it is farther away than
ever and perhaps may never cpme.
People must be riding a great deal
more than they ever rode before.
The automobile industry in this'
country has quadrupled In value In
the last three years and has devel
oped at even a greater rate in the
number, of machines manufactured.
But the statistics of horseflesh keep
on expanding. There were more
than fourteen million horses In this
country in 1897, but according to
the figures for the year just closed
there are 19,746,000 horses in the
United States at the present time.
This is a gain of nearly 40 percent,
in a decade, a much larger one than
the human element can show in spite
of our large and continuous importa
tions. As mechanical rivals multi
ply he rises in the scale of dignified
personality. The last horse will
probably lake his leave at about the
same time as the last man.-i-Boston
Transcript.
Squeaky Si iocs in Demand. '?
Small. automatic pumps, very in
geniously contrived, spirited air In
Detween the layers of the soles of
each finished pair of shoes.
"That beats me,'? said the visitor.
"I never, saw air put in shoe soles
before. Pneumatic like that, are
they very springy?"
"No, they're noisy," answered the
foreman of the Lynn factory.
"These shoes are for the export
trade. They go to Africa. A native
African judges the white mans shoes
by their squeak. The louder the
squeak, the finer the article. In
fact, the native won't wear a non
squeaking, silent shoe. It is wind
between the soles that make shoes
squeak. Put in- enough- and your
footgear will be as noisy as two
pigs under a fence."
A Flreles3 House.
To demonstrate his 'alto in the
practicability of electricity for all
domesti; purposes, an offich.l of an
Illinois electrical company has re
cently built a houG*1 at Carrollton.
Hi., without a chimney or any other
means of making ust of fire. The
uouse Is heated by steam and the
cooking done by electricity, both
supplied by the heat, light and pow
er company with which the gentle
man is connected. This construc
tion marks the beginning of an ef
fort to obtain customers for current
to be used in the kitchen, and a
special rate has been fix id for that
kind of service.
x A Bit of Forestry.'
"Do you know how to tell a hard
wood tree from a soft wood tree?"
said a forester. "I'll tell you how to
do it, and the rule holds good not
only here among our familiar pines
and walnuts, but in the Antipodes,
among the strangest banyans, bao
babs and what-nots. Soft wood trees
have needle leaves, slim, narrow, al
most uniform in breadth. If you
don't believe me, consult the pine,
the spruce or the fir. Hard wood
trees nave broad leaves of various
shape?the oak, the ebony, the wal
nut, the mahogany and so on."
Every Bird a Weathercock.
"Where's the wind?" scoffed the
sailor. "Why, look atj the birds?
they'll tell you. Don't you know
that every bird's a weathercock?
Stop moistenlm your finger and
holdin' It up," he went on, In a tone
of disgust. "The practice ain't hardly
cleanly. Look \ at the birds is all
you got to do, for ewry bird sets
with" its head always straight at the
wind. Every live bird in a tree is
as reliable a weathercock as them
dead birds on the spires what is so
much considered in this here Lenten
season.' >
Why Go to Bed?
It seems to me we make a mistake
in prescribing special hours for go
ing o bed and getting up. Why
should we thus gorgt. ourseives with
r.lumber? Why should we not fol
low the example of the dog and take
an occasional nap when we have noth
ing better to do? Why should we
go to bed when we don't feel sleepy?
Why shduld we not take forty winks
when inclined thereto? It strikes
me there is too much method and
regularity about our somniferous ar
rangements.?London Graphic.
Noiseless Europe.
Railway whistles inflict torture on
so many people *hat the efforts
abroad to check th plague have won
approval from the people. Austria
has introduced a system of dumb sig
naling to start and stop the trains.
Belgium Is trying compressed air
whl3tles instead of steam, and Ger
many experiments with Horns.
|tq\ A Sprain or Strain
IJySL/ musr have immediate arrenHon IfjSv
f?' Sloans Lmin\er\t?x
is invaluable in an emergency of this kind. J^W^ /lE^\^
ll quickly relieves the soreness and conge5fion,J^> fi&^^H
I reduces the swelling and strengthens the g&ifi n\ \
weak muscles. ^ t%fl^^ym-'^-^^g
Because of \\s antiseprtc and healing hip JSi^tiH^i ?Jk
I properties, Sloan's Liniment is the J ^mmF^, ?] W?lm
remedy known for cu^s,woundstbru^ses^^*^^f ( i? W^?iJM
sfinqs,burns and scalds. JStm^M \w fiJF? WfM
PRICE 25* 50* & $1.00* ^^^ySBK^tU Wffli
1 Dr.Earl S.Sloan, Boston, Mass.
UJJi.NT SLGAK AN ANTISEPTIC.
Destroys Microbes of Disease?Ef
fect Upon Disagreeable Odors.
The custom of burning sugar in a
dekroom is very current among all
?lnsses In France, but up to the
present has been regarded by scien
tists as one of those harmless and
iseless practices which are rather
olerated than insisted upon by the
nedical profession. But M. Trillat
of the Pasteur Institute now assures
us that formic aldehyde Is given off
by burning sugar and Is one of the
no3t antiseptic gases known. Five
grains of sugar having been burned
uuder a ten liter bell glass, the vap
or was alloyed to cool. Vials con
taining tne baccilli of typhoid, tuber
culosis, carbon, &c, were then in
troduced. Within half an hour
every microbe had succumbed. Ag;ain,
if sugar be burned In a closed ves
sel containing rotten eggs or'putrid
meat, the disagreeable smell disap
pears. M. Trillat affirms that the
formic aldehyde combines with the
gases given off by the putrid animal
matter and renders them inodorous.
?Practical Druggist.
Murket for Old Horse Shoes.
Old horseshoes find a ready mar
ket in China. One steamer alone
brought 300 tons of this iron from
Hamburg. Chinese iron dealers buy
the horseshoes and sell them to knife
and tool manufacturers all over the
province of Shantung. It is claim
ed by the Chinese that the temper of
this class of iron makes it the best
obtainable for knives and cutlery and
also good for other tools. The rea
son ascribed for this is that, the con
stant beating the shoes have received
under the feet of horses has given
them a peculiar temper absolutely
unobtainable in any other way, and
that tools made from them are su
perior to all others.
Petroleum Butter.
One of the very late by-products
o'f petroleum is butter. It is far
superior to most of the cheap so-call
ed butter that Is sold in corner groc
eries, and a good deal better than
oleomargarine. I had the experience
of eating some the other day with
out knowing what it was and thought
it was excellent. I assume it is
vaseline prepared in a buttery way.
Nothing simpler or easier. What
next? Will wonders never
cease? If olive oil were made into
solid cakes and served as butter It
wo".id be in great demand as food.
People In general believe it is made
crh for salads. A few cook vith it.
?N. Y. Press. .
) Inventor of Envelopes.
It Is somewhat curious that such
a simple contrivance as the envelope
should be a comparatively modern
Invention. As a matter of fact, It is
Just a hundred years since a paper
manufacturer of Brighton named
Brewes invented envelopes for letters
in their preseut form. Even then It
was some considerable time before
their use became at all general, not,
In fact, until somwhere in the year
LS50. Before this date, (as many
who are living now will remember)
a letter, written only on one side,
was folded in two, then in three,
sealed with a wafer or sealing wax,
and addressed on one of the blank
sides.?The Gaulois.
A Town Without Taxes.,
Orson, in Sweden, has no taxes.
During the last thirty years the au
thorities of this place have sold over
one million pounds' worth of trees,
and by means of judicious replanting
have provided for a similar income
every thirty or forty years. In con
sequence of this source of commer
cial wealth thtre are no taxes, and
Ipcal railways and telephones are
free, as are education and many
other tilings.?Tit-Bits.
A Diving Sponge Hont.
A submarine l">as been built by a
company at Bizerta, France, for
sponge fishing. When sunk it can
travei on a short of wheel along the
bottom or the sea, being worked by
two submarine oars from the Inside.
It collects sponges by moans of a me
chanical gripper, aid has electrical
sjirchligbts, a telephone, ind a
speaking tube by which it can com
municate with a box:, on the surface.
The subniftvuie ba-t already been
down to a depth of 330 feet.
At the Dry Inn. ?
"No use to ask mc. Colonel," said
the landlord. "I'd like to oblige you,
but you know as well as I do that
GeorglL Is dry. Howsomever, If you
step upstairs while I .put cut the
light you may stumble over some
thin'?but even if you fall down
stairs and br rak your leg?mind now
?-I don't know what done It!"?At
lanta Constitution.
Military Scnools in U. S.
Of strictly military schools there
are 17b throughout the land New
York has 32. New Jersey 9, Pennsyl
vania 11, North Carolina 7, Texas 9,
Wisconsin 4, California 9 and Illinois
5.
A Bcasonable Vrecautlon.
"In order to be a regular optim
ist," said Uncle Eben, "it's a good
idea to staht out wif you arrange
ments all made foh. three square
meals a day an' de payment of de
rent."?Washington Star.
The Paying Teller Admonished.
The Farmer?See here, young
man, none o' your monkey business.
Them ain't the same bills I deposited
here last month.?Brooklyn Life.
There Is a Pink Plain Tablet made
by Dr. Shoop, that will positively stop
any pain, anywhere, in 30 minutes.
Druggists everywhere sell them as Dr.
Sboop's Headache Tablets, but they
stop other pains as easily as Head
ache. Dr. Snoops Pink Pain Tablets
simply coax blood pressure away from
pain centers: that is all. Pain conies
from blood pressure; congestion. Stop
that pressure with Dr. Shoop's Head
ache Tablets and pain is instantly
gone. 20 Tablet 25c. Sold by Dr. J,
G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.
CORES
?SKIN DISEASES
There is an evaporation from the body going on continually, day and
night, through the pores and glands of the skin. This is nature's way of
maintaining the proper temperature of our systems and preserving the soft
ness and flexibility of the skin, and so long as the blood is free from impur
ities no trouble will result. When, however, the blood from any cause
becomes infected with humors and acids, these too must be er.pelled, and
coming in contact with the delicate fibres and tissues with which the skin is
so'abundantly supplied they produce irritation and inflammation, and the
effect is shown by Eczema, Acne, Tetter, and skin affections of varioas kinds.
These impurities and humors get into the blood through a deranged or
inactive condition of the system; the members whose duty it is to carry off
the waste and refuse matter of the body fail to properly perform their work,
and this impure, fermefiting matter is left in the system to be absorbed by,
the blood. The skin is not only affected by poisons generated within tfcef
system, but poisons from without,
I have used your S. S. S., spring and fah,
for the past two years, with the result that it
entirely relieved me of a form of Eczema
which my doctor was unable to cure. Sly
arms, lower limbs, and, in fact, the biggest
portion of my whole body was affected, and
when I first began S. S. S. the itching, etc,
was worse, but I continued the Remedy with
the result that the dry, itching eruption en
tirely disappeared. I think a great deal of
your medicine, and have recommended it to
others with good results. It i* the best blood
medicine made, and I can conscientiously
recommend it for the cure of all blood and
skin affections. CHAS. HORSTMArt.
Wheeling, W. Va.
such as Poison Oak, Poison Ivy,
Nettle Rash, etc., enter through the
open pores and glands, and (so thor
oughly do they become rooted in the
blood that they are ever present,
or return at certain seasons of each
year to torment the sufferer.. Salves,
washes, lotions, etc., cannot cure skin
diseases. True, such treatment re
lieves some.of the itching and dis
comfort, and aids in keeping the skin
clean, but it does not reach the real
cause, and at best can be only palli
ating and soothing. A thorough
cleansing of the blood is the o'nlj' certain cure for skin diseases. S. S. S.?
a gentle acting, safe blood purifier, made entirely of vegetable ingredients
of the forest and field, is the proper treatment. S. S. S. goes down into the
circulation, and neutralizes the acids and humors, thoroughly cleansing and
purifying the biood, and curing skin affections of every kind. It supplies
to the blood the fresh, nutritive qualities necessary to sustain the skin and
all other parts of the body, and rids the blood of any and all poisons. S. S. S. <
cures Eczema, Tetteri Acne^Salt Rheum, Poison Oak and Ivy, Nettle Rash, >
and all other skin troubles, and cures them permanently by removing every
trace of the cause from the blood. Special book on Skin Diseases and any
medical advice desired furnished free to all who write. ^
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA,.GXJ
GLOVER'S
WE'RE WAITING FOR. YOU
You may >be one of the many who find it hard to decide which Clothier
to buy from. We admit t's a hard -hing 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 arc no gool. We don't ask you to read our ad, and
then rush in and buy blindly.\ All wc want is a chance to show you. It
wont be bard for you to,make up your mind after one visit here. We
know What's What in Clothes and can teach you. We are willing to prove
any minute of any business day, beyond any doubt 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'H get
Satisfaction or your money back. Wont you come in and take a peep ft
the many new, distinctive Suits, we have ready for you to Slip in and Wear
Off? Seeing does not oblige you to buy.
GLOVER'S
CLOTHING, SHOES AND MEN'S FINE FURNISHINGS.
%
%
%
%
FIRE, LIFE,
BUROLRAV, TORNADO
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ALSO
INSURANCE!!
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{ SURETY BONDS
"Written by
t H. C. Wannamaker, $
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I represent companies tha know to be goo .
A (jive me some of your business.
WHICH IS MORE URGENT?
FHRE INSURANCE. I LD7E INSURANCE.
Important? You fully realize it.
You would not allow your house to
remain uninsured overnight.
Your house may never burn. Com
paratively few buildings ever do.
If your house does burn, your prop
erty is destroyed, but you can still
provide for your loved ones. Your
ncome remains unaffected, your earn
ing capacity unimpaired.
If your house is not Insured at all,
or for an insufficient amount.
YOU CARRY TnE RISK.
Important? Oh yes, you intend t&
insure after awhile when "a little
better able to do so."
You will surely die. All men do.
You are more likely to die within &
week or a year, than your house is
to burn.
Death destroys at once and irre
vocably, In wjiole or in part the in
come that provided for the daily
wants of those you love, the income
that was counted on to feed and
clothe and educate your chldren.
If your life is not insured at all?
or for an '.u^u Jlcient amount,
Your Wife and Babies Carry the Risk.
Your friend has had his home In-' Your frend has had his life In
sured these 30 years and is now an
sured these 30 years, and has had old man H(J ls fortunate in having
no lire. He has been fortunate In| lived,' and he has something now to
, , ... . I show for the money paid out. His
that though he has nothing nov, to ln vaIue affords a comfortable sup
show for the money paid out. | port for his own declining years.
WHICH IS MORE URGENT?
JOHN GELZER
18 E. Russell St., Onmgebnrg, S. C.
Agent for SOUTHEASTERN LLFE INSURANCE CO., Spartaaburg, S. Gt