The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, August 07, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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If digestion is weak, don't diet? Don't Starve When the stomach cannot digest all foods, some people eat only ioods that it can digest. That means partial starvation. The various parts of the body re quire different food elements. And ?when some are omitted, some parts are robbed of nourishment. Food will do more than medi cine when we arc dealing with ?weakness. Those with weak digestions need it more than the strong. The right way is to eat what you ?need an* want, thtn let Kodol di gest it For Kodol digests everything. It doesn't rely solely on pepsin, as other digesters do. Pepsin di gests albumen only. Kodol digests starch, fats and phosphates just as well as albu men. It also does what the bowels do toward digestion. It supplies pan creatic juice. Kodol alone does all that the stomach does and all that the bowels do. No other digester completely di gests all foods. . Kodol stops the irritation of un digested food. All pains cease in stantly. It gives the weak stomach rest, A weak stomach is like a lame ankle. Nature alone can cure it The best you can do is to give Na ture a chance." That is what Kodol does. Let it, for a little time, do all the stomach's work. Let it stop the irritation, stop the pain. You will be surprised to see how quickly the weak stomach recovers. Our Guarantee On the first dollar bottle of Kodol your druggist gives a signed guar antee. If it fails to do all we claim, your druggist returns your money. You take no risk whatever. This $1.00 bottle contains 2l/2 times as much as the 50c bottle. Made by E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. Fifteenth Year 220 Students Orangeburg, ?. C A high grade boarding schoo 1 for boys and girls. Healthful loca . tiou. Comfortable buildings. Broad course of study. Thirteen teachers. A safe home school for your sons and daughters. Rates reasonable. Beautiful Catalog free. Session opens-September 17th, 1908. Address PRESIDEENT WW ? *J ? PETERSON, ORANGEBURG, S. C CURES CO N ST I PAT IC D YSP E PS I A, RH EU MAT IS SW, !t fi take one \ ii*t.?>'/1 to1 night ? WijP?ri fre i you'll feel f/f w^: BETTER ? VT R in the morning '??^m.-KM Better Than Pills I For Liver Ills. I vGet a 25d. Box I Sold Everywhere. AH.LEWIS MEDICINE Ca.ST.LOUIS^j DR. A. C. DOYLE, & CO. Have You Seen the New Local Views SIMS' BOOK STORE. The Edisto Savings Bank, i 1 s ORANGEBURG, S. O. Capital.?100,000.00. Surplus. 130,000.00. ? H- 4 ?**. cV'iiijii tf. ju#*f, Vio3 Pr S Di oh, Via l: ? . i. j. > .? }fc ? DIRECTORS M O. Dantzler J.M.Oliver . R. jivau W F. rFa'ey B. H. MOSS T. C. Doyle Sol Kohn J. W. Smoak M-sier is mi;/ mi;, ui vi/, ? uraUfc iojsib Vo? money in the savings department and draw interest on the fi-st iav? January, April, July anr> Octooer at the rate of four per centi oe> ???* This bank's absolute safety is best attested by its capital tock, it surplus and by the character and standing of its officers and board of directors. Money loaned on good security. Sewing Machines. NEW DROP-HEAD MACHINES sold on >asy payments. Good prices allowed for old Machines in exehat. *. Socond-hand Machines *rom $5.00 to $15.00. Alse parts a ad attachments furnished * \ll standard makes. Prompi attention to mail orders. New Bicycles ^siFd . n Easy Payments. Al-o Bicycle parts and sr ,ri^ furnished for all standard make*. General Repair Shop for c-ewing Machines, Bicycl&s, Ouns. Clock d Watches. ?nGive me your work. Satisfaction guaranteed. J. H. SMITH. Market Street - - Opposite New Postofficc Post Cards at Sims' Book Store. A. e Fuzzier No. 231.?Jinolc ChzrT.dz. My fits: is b-.v.i on many ' :>.ad. Vet may be on a gun lus.flftj. My next, a word that's very small It is a pronoun; that i:; all. My third is not a merry crew. It is, dear reader, only you. My last shows something far behind; A very common thing, I find. My whole is a word that is used far and wide When an army surrenders to tho other side. No. 232.?Hidden Hardware. 1. The doctor saw Edwin ailing, yet gave hiin no medicine. 2. The ship's crew gave an entertain ment in the saloon. 3. The captain's courtesy to the crew was sham?merely sham. 4. Under the weeping willow I re mained until the storm was over. 5. Jessabol taught night school for a living. 6. The wren chased the butterfly through the daisy field. No. 233.?Geographical Tangle. From our homo of liberty I journeyed far o'er land and sea. From ?A'A^A, that northern land. To A?A*A*A's wide domain: Thence onward to "A^A'A's strand. The group that own far Britain's reign. ?A*A*A next on island shore Raised its fair portal to our view. At *A*A*A we paused once more. Which separates the ocean blue; We see ?A'A'A* capital, And *AmA*A, desert land. Wo thread the banks of the ?A*A*A Till on Atlantic's shore we stand. We hie us o'er the ocean wide. When 'A'AA', Holy Land, we see; We gaze r.t A*A*A''s rugged side, So famed in sacred history. V.'e visit *A?A tropic isle. And far east kingdom of *A*A*. We gr^ct our home land with a smile; We're glnd wo are American. No. 234.?Acrostic. ? ?' ft iq ? ? ? a ? *##3*7# ###!#?## #??#?12*** ? ????#*# #**#g#*? * 10 * * * 4 5 * , ? * ? * 11 * * * Cross words: L A city of West Vir ginia. 2. A m-:;;>ort of Peru. 3. A city of New York i ..tte, named after a very ancient city of Ortygia. 4. A city of Connecticut ?"> One of the United States. G. Ai other of the United States. 7. A river of Colorado. 8. A city of Franey 9. One of the United States. 10. A i iry of Connecticut When the siliove names' have been rightly guessfi!: the initials will spell one of the Uni.nl States, and the let ters represeute.; by the figures from 1 to 0 and from 7 to 13 will each spell a city in that state ?St. Nicholas. No. 235.?7Alpl.abctical Subtraction. I am a word of live letters. Take away my first ami I am the name that adorns the estate of many of the no bility of England. - :ike away my first and second, and I am the name of a structure.In which all the world was once congregated. Take away my last, and I am the name of a beautiful min eral. Take away my two last, and I am the name of a fashionable place of resort. I am small, but capable of do ing a good deal of mischief, as I did in London in the year 1GUG. No. 236.?Word Square. My first is part of a ship. My sec ond is inclosed space. My third is made by sewing two edges together. My fourth is not wild. No. 237.?Enigma. My first is in aversion, but not in like. My Becond is in road, but not in pike. My third Is in court, but not in prison. My fourth is in raise, but not in risen. My fifth is in waltz, but not In dance. My sixth is in Spain, but not in France. My seventh is in book, but not In page. My eighth i3 in net, but not in cage. Combined my whole is a time of joy For every man, woman, girl and boy. Key to the Puzzler. No. 22?. ? Diagonal. Hieronymus. Cross words: 1. Ileliolatry. 2. Miscel lany. 3. Inexplicit. 4. Hierophant 5. Heliograph. G. Convenient 7. Couu trynmu. 8. Pntmnymli' 0. Tn?nn?ndnus. 1> I., tr.ilo::. No. i?T. .\i i.? i'uss Mill's Garden: All that Mistress Mary needs do is this: She should measure from A to B, fold her tape In four and mark off the point E, which is thus one-quarter of the side. Then in the same way mark off the point F, one-fourth of the side A D. Now, If she makes E G equal to A F, and G H equal to E F, then A II is the required width for the path In order that the bed shall be ex actly half the area of the garden. An exact numerical measurement can only be obtained when the sum of the squares of the two sides is a square number. Thus, If the garden meas ured 12 poles by 5 poles (where the squares of 12 and 5, 144 and 25, sum to 1G9, the square of 13), then 12 added to 5, less 13, would equal four, and a quarter of this, 1 pole, would be the width of the path. No. 22S.?Enigma in Verse: Rail. No. 220.?Anagram: Humanity. No. 230.?Acrostic: Hamlet Cross words: 1. Horatio. 2. Antonio. 3. Mac beth. 4. Lorenzo. 5. Escalus. U. The seus. Bucklen's Arnica Salve Wins. Tom Moore, of Rural Route 1, Cochran. Ga.. writes: "I had a bad sore come on the instep of my foot and could find nothing that would heal it until I applied Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Less than half of a :'"> cent box won the day for nie by affecting a perfect cure." Sold un der guarantee at Dr. .T. G. Wanna maker, Mfg. Co., drug store. What's the matter with a weddiug ring as an exclusive circle. WHY THE BROOK SINGl Hew the Nightingale Lost Its Once Brilliant Plumage. Long, long ago, thousands of years before man came on the earth, the nightingales wore the most splendid plr.majjp of ;>n;- bird. As tbe.v were aI.-:o .!:;? sweetest Kl?ger?, as now, yon may imagine that none was their su perior in the bird world. Of course the nightingales were very proud. This was natural. One young fellow, however, became so vain as to be almost unbearable. "Who is so fine a singer as I? Who has so handsome a dress as I?" This was the burden of his song day after day. But the time came when the young nightingale warbled no more in the moonlight. A fairy, tired of listening to his boasting, came to him. "Idle braggart." said she, "this night will you cease your trilling. Hereafter you will sing and sing and sing, but not the notes of the nightingale. And your relations will wear a less brilliant garb from this time." All at once the nightingale became a little brook. The brooks, which heretofore were silent, now murmured softly and musically, but the vain nightingale no longer burst into glori ous melody of song. As for the other nightingales, al though they continued to sing as sweetly as ever, their plumage became a modest reddish brown color Instead of having its former radiant hues. So were they punished. MEASURING A TREE. Ingenious Method Pursued by the Maine Woodsmen. If you were a woodcutter and some body told you to cut down a pine tree that would give a sixty foot mast for a vessel, how would you go about se lecting a tree? You could not spare the time to measure it with a tape line even if that method were prac ticable. Besides, being a woodcutter you should be able to select a tree of a certain height readily, not by merely looking at it, for this at best is noth ing but guesswork. Now, the woodcutters of Maine have a quick and simple way of taking the measure, and it is worth telling. As suming that a mast sixty feet in height is wanted, the cutter selects a tree that he thinks will furnish it and then measures off on the ground from the trunk sixty feet less his own height. If he is six feet tall, therefore, he would measure off on the ground fifty four feet. At this point he puts up right in the ground a pole exactly his own height. Then he lies down on the ground with his feet to the pole, so that his head is just sixty feet from the tree. Lying thus, face upward, of course, he sights over the top of the pole, and the point on the tree trunk on a line with the top of the pole is pretty sure to be sixty feet from the! ground.?Chicago News. A Chance to Cry. The pot dog Las Just overturned Har ry's house of blocks and Helen's tin kitchen, which act made both children so angry that they immediately began to cry as hard as they could. Harry. feeling the importance of being a boy and a year older than his sister Helen, ordered her to instantly stop crying and give him a chance to bawl. The picture shows how he succeeded. The Twelve Labors of Hercules. To slay the Nemean Hon. to kill the Lernean hydra, to catch and hold the Arcadian stag, to destroy the Eryman thiau boar, to cleanse the stables of King Augeas, to destroy the cannibal birds of lake Stymphalus, to capture the Cretan bull, to catch the horses of Diomedes, to get possession of the gir dle of Hippolyte, queen of the Ama zons; to capture the oxen of the mon ster Geryon, to get possession of the apples of the Ilesperides and to bring up from the infernal regions the three In-.I (In? rorlif.-i: The Impudent Jay. The Jay is a jovial bird?heigh-ho' He chatters "all day In a frolicsome way With the murmuring breezes that blow? heigh-ho! Oh, impudent jay, with your plumage so gay. And your manners so Jaunty and free? heigh-ho! How little you guessed When you robbed the wren's nest That any stray fellow would see?heigh ho! A Maze, or Labyrinth. This maze is a correct ground plan of one in the gardens of the palace of Hampton Court, near London. No leg endary tale is attached to It of which we are aware, but its labyrinthine walks occasion much amusement to the numerous holiday parties who frequent the palace grounds. The puzzle is to get into the center, where scats are placed under two lofty trees, and many are the disappointments experienced before the end is attained, and even then the trouble is not over, it being quite as difficult to get out as to get in. Served as coffee, the new coffee substitute known to grocer's every where as Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee,' will trick even a coffee expert. Not! a grain of real coffee in it either.. Pure healthful toasted grains, malt., nuts, etc., have been .so cleverly blended as to give a wonderfully satisfying coffee taste and flavor.! And it is "made in ;i minute", too. No tedious 20 to I'.'J minutes boil-, ing. A. L. Dukes. Marrying a girl with money is the surest get-rich-quick scheme. DOING THEIR DUTY. Scores of Orangeburg Readers Are Learning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kidneys' duty. When they full to do this the kid neys are sick. Backache and many kidney ills follow; Urinary troubles, diabetes. . Doan's Kidney Pills euro them all. Orangeburg people endorse our claim. ! J. L. Phillips, Farmer, S5 Sellers Ave., Orangeburg. S. C, says: "On several occasions I have used Doan's Kidney Pills procured from Dr. J. i G. Wannamaker's drug store and they have always given entire satis-: faction." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the Unit ed States. Remember the name?Doan's? and take no other. It takes only self-control to toler ate your relatives; it takes will pow er to be nice to them. ? Some people's charity is confined to the distribution of lemons. 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 good. The Judge will now always use L. & M. because he knows IT any de- j feet exists in L. & M. Paint, the i house will be repainted for nothing. The L. &. M. Zinc hardens the L. j & M. White Lead and makes L. & M. Paint wear like iron for 10 to 15 years. Actual cost of L. & M. about $1.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. made to churches. Sold by .1 G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. Orangeburg. Heavenly pedestrians probably won't have to dodge automobiles. Thinks it Saved Hjs Life. Lester M. Nelson, of Naples, Maine, says in a recent letter: " have used Dr. .King's New Discov ery many years, for coughs aud colds, and I think it saved my life. I have found it a re..able remedy for throat and lung complaints, and would no more be witohut a bottle than I would be without food." For [ nearly forty years New Discovery has stood at the head of throat and; lung remedies. As a preventive of pneumonia, and healer of weak lungs it has no equal. Sold under guarantee at Dr. J. G. Wannamalters' Mfg. Co.,. drug store. 50c. and j $1.00. Trial bottle free. Af the seashore there is a lot more to see than the shore. A Grand Family Medicine. "It gives me pleasure to speak a good word for Electric Bitters," writes Mr. Frank Conlan of ->o. 46 Houston St., New York. "It's a grand family medicine for dyspep sia and liver complications; while I for lame back and weak kidneys it cannot, be too'highly recommended." Electric Bitters regulate the diges tive functions, purify the blood, and impart renewed vigor and vitality to the weak and debilitated of both sexes. Sold under guarantee at Dr. J. G. Wannamaker, Mfg. Co., drug store. 50c. Some people wouldn't want to be happy if everybody else was. August time, tells on the nerves. But that spirit less, no ambition feel ing can be easily and quickly altered by takingwhat is known by druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Restora tive. Within 48 hours after begin ning to?use the Restorative improve ment will be noticed. Of course, full health will not immediately re turn. The gain, however, will sure ly follow. And best of all. you will realize and feel your strength pnd rVi.'Mhn h rotsmhT 0'?tVi-T>! fiiOuencee ue;:re;s ,; t t'le "in3f*> nerves" then tbc stomach, Heart, and Kidneys will usually fail. Strength en these failing nerves with Dr. Shoop's Restorative and see how quickly health will be yours again. Sold by Dr. J. G. Wannamaker, Mfg. Co. Many an aggressive man strikes an attitude and lets it go at that. Cured Hay Fever and Aumnier Cold A. S. Nusbaum, Batesville, India na, writes: "Last year I suffered for three months with a summer clod so distressing that it interfered with my business. I had many of the symptoms of hay fever, and a doc tor's prescription did not reach my case, and I took several medicines which seemed only to aggravate it. Fortunately I insisted upon having Poley's Honey and Tar. It quickly cured me. My wife has since used Foley's Honey and Tar with the same success." Dr. A. C. Dukes, Lowman Drug Co. Physicians are about the only men who really enjoy ill-health. Summer complaints and other serious ailments common in hot weather can be traced to the sto mach nine times out of ten. Keep the stomach in good order right now by keeping a bottle of Kodol handy in the house all the time, but es pecially during this month. Take Kodol whenever you feel that you need it. That is the only time you need to take Kodol. .lust when you need it; then you will nor. he trou bled with sour stomach, belcning, gas on the stomach, bloating, dys pepsia and Tndigestion. Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., A. C. uoyle & Co. Don't overstep yourself in an at tempt to put your best foot forward. A Simple Remedy Cardni is a pui'sly vegetable extract a simple, non-iiitoxicating remedy, recommended to girls and women, of all ages, for womanly pains, irregularity, falling feelings, nervousness, weakness, and any other form of sickness, peculiar to females. It Will Help You JS9 Mrs. 3l C. Beaver, of Unicoi, Route No* 1, Mar bleton, Tenn., writes: "I suffered with bearing down pains, feet swelled, pain in right side, headache, pains in shoulders, nervous palpitation, and other troubles I cannot mention, but I took "Wine of Cardui and have found it the best medicir.e I ever used, for female troubles." Try Cardui. AT ALL DRUG STORES ?9? I* o O I* ?8? THE PEOPLE S BA N K ORANGEBURG, S. ?j. i 'A Hank For All The People." CAPITAL STOCK.. $30,000.00 SURPLUS... 20.000.00 STOCKHOLDERS LIABI LITY. ..30,000.00 I \ . ? % THE PEOPLE S BANK T ft * ft <?> ft <& 4? COD ft ft PROTECTION TO DE POSITORS. . $80,000.00 I). (). Herbert.President IL F. Siuckenfuss. . .. Vice-President H. C. IVannamaker.Cashier IV. M. Richardson.. . . AssL Cashier DIRECTORS. W. C. Cram - A. M. Sallej \bial Luthrop W. L. Glaze (i. L. Salky Hobt. E. Copes i>r (). Herbert B. F. Muckenfuss H. C. Wannainaker. Interest paid in Savings Department. 4 (TORE STORE J _? 'HEYWARD-WAKEFIELD" Go-Carts Roll So Easy And Are So Stylish That Babies Who Know Will Not . Be Satisfied With Any Other Kind. We Have Them From $2. Up. I) # ? I I Wannamaker, Smoak & Co. SUMMER TERM will begin soon. Great reduction in price is offered. The work in either course may be completed in three months. You will be able to pay for course out of first month's salary. Write for Particulars ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Orangeburg, S. C.