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If digestion is weak, don't diet? Don't Starve When the stomach cannot digest ?II foods, some people cat only foods that it can digest. That means partial starvation* The various parts of the body re quire different food elements. And when some arc omitted, some parts are robbed of nourishment. Food will do more than medi cine when we are dealing with weakness. Those with weak digestion's need it more than the strong. The right waj' is to eat what you reed and want, then let Kodol di gest it. For Kodol digests everything. It doesn't rely solely on pepsin, r.s 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 docs and all that the bowels do. No other digester completely di gests all foods. Kodol stops the irritation of un digested food. AH 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 Onvthc first dollar bottle of Kodol your druggist gives a signed guar antee. If it fails to do all wc claim, your druggist returns your money. You take no risk whatever. This ?1.00 bottle contains 2J? times as much as the 50c bottle. Made by E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. Fifteenth Year 220 Students Orangeburg, O A high grade boarding schoo 1 for boys and girls. Healthful loca tion. 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 W. S. PETERSON, ORANGEBURG, S. C> i I #HIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIWtlllllllllllllllllH I Toe Edisto Savings Bank, ORANGEBURG. S. C Capital..._?00,000.00. Surplus.?30,000.00. B. H. Moss, President. J. M. Oliver, Vice-President, R S. Dibble, Vice-president. Wm. L. Glover, Cashier. DIBECTORS M. 0. Dantzler, J. M. Oliver, W. R. Lowman, W. F. Fairey, B. H. Moss, T.C.Doyle, Sol. Kohn, J. W. Smoak. Money saved is money made, and the way to save is to deposit your money in the savings department and draw interest on the first days of January, April, July and October at the rate of four per cent per annum. ~1 ( This bank's absolute safety is best attested by its capital stock, its. surplus and by the character and standing of its officers and board i of directors. Money loaned on good security. I FEELING BAD? Sto.nacb eel ot order, tlvei ilujjlih. Bewcti (II cloggci up. and you tuvi ihn iB-fOM^nwi-euMtdfet? Take an NR Tablet to-night You Vtfl fcijfn io feel belter U ooee. Thtlr action a different from Olh:r Liver and Stcmjch nwdedaa-m ?rlfi?f. no lickcnjnj or weakening sensations. They make yoj feel food. Better Than Pills For Liver Als. ) "Nature's Retaady" (NR Tibltfs) ii iha very test prescription (or Sour Stonudi. Sick HeadjchvLors oi Appetite. SeJlow Complexion. Constipation. Lhnr Complaint. Skin Docks. Chili?. Malaria. Bllloujcerj. dropsy. Pimples ind Rheusutism. AU ef these diuusn are eausad by itcppices and tmtquut decay and lc?men!jtion in tome or all (I the iL ??live ?rjara._ Get | J5?. Beau Sold Iverj-whsre.' -" pat. office: N?-TABLETS-N? DR. A. C. DOYLE, & CO. THE MONITOR SELF-HEATING SAD IRON. The Monitor is a perfect Self-Keat ing Sad Iron. . Generates its own heat in the body of the iron. Always hot and you can regnlute it to any tem perature desired. Xo tiring up the r.^ige ?you heat the house. Xo bilking from the iiXKiing table to the hot range to change ii-on* and back *gain, therefore saving labor, work fhrit is most (lisagci'cable on a hot summer day. Viu can do an iron iug for the cost of about one cent for fuel, saving many clollurc in ,-t year; can take your ironing to any room in the house or out on the porch if yon rboose?that which every woman has sighed For many times. .Can iron aH day without the least uueomfor tahleness from the heat of the iron. ( an put it in your suit case or trunk arid take it along when traveling to press the muss and wrinkles out of clothing, ribbons, etc. Orangeburg Hardware & Furniture Co. "Help!" The unnerving, harrow ing screams of a strong man, whose strength and manhood have collap sed beneath the sudden strain of Bome deadly fear, some overpowering agony. ?? The river rooked placidly beautiful A growing circle of wavelets swept slowly over its calm surface?swept away as though shrinking in horror from the grewsome bubbles that came sputtering up where the shim mer had sunk like lead. A minute before Vernon Dale had stopped to admbre the solitary swim mer's strength and grace as he cut through the water like Home fabu lous sea creature, with a beautiful ?ide stroke. "Help!" Dale started and looked back. The swimmer hRd disappeared, but a tiny whirlpool on the peaceful face of tfco river showed where the young man had been forced to yidd. "Cramp!u muttered Dale. y* v,p. Dale was a strong ewimmer him self. He flung off his coat and vest and was tearing madly at his heavy walking boots, when he stopped and seemed suddenly as if turned to stone. He had thought of Nina! "I can't do it!" he said hoarsely, as if to the man whose life had been choked and stilled out of him some where down among the dark loath some weeds and slime. "I can't do It I daren't ri?k it. I might kill the woman I love!" ? * * Mechanically Dale put on his .-oat and vest again. No one would ever know!' "We will keep our secret we'l?we two!" be satd in a horrible whisper, looking down as if he could see some thing at the bottom of the dark riv er. Then h* glanced hastily left and r ght. Fomeone might have been watching after all. An hour after when Vernon Dale arrived faint, sick and pallid, at the parsonage, he knew that he dared not keep h?? terrible secret. Until^ that dar his life had be^n.clean and he had been accounted an honorable man. He must tell Borne one, and that very soon. "Is you brother In?" he asked her soon. * "No. Vernon, he is out walking, but Be will be in soon. I am so sure you and Claude will be real friends? oh. Vernon, something is the matter with you?tell me what 11 if!" He burled his face in his hands. He was undergoing torture, for be knew he could not keep silenc much longer. Nina was on her knees besiJe him. He felt her soft face touch his arms Mid .her, arum x twine around his. "Vernon', if there is anything on your mind tell me. No or* can help yon ?s I can, for no one loveis you as I do!" "You ar? right, Nina," he answer ad in a ooaree broken voice. "1 will tell you?I must." She waited. Her eye ?wer? fixed ob him in mute agony. "As I was coming along the bank on my way here, there wae a man ?wlmming. I parsed him, and when I was about a hundred yards from him, he gave a cry and tank." "How horrible!" she murmured with a shudder. "But?buv. that it not all?" "No, iJlna. I ran back to the place uhere he sank, but I did not try to save him for your sake. I was just on the point of plunging in when I thought of you, and of all I am to you?and then I couldn't. God forgive me if I did wrong, but fc seemed to me at the time that it wafe right." ? ? ? She rose to her feet and staggered to a chair, white as death. "If you had diej'" she said, clenching her hands and looking at him wildly. "If you had died * * I could have borne it. I should have known I loved a brave man!" "Have mercy on nie. Nina!" he gasped, loosing his hold of her. She rose and stood before him, looking at him with eyes that neither reproached, pitied, nor pardoned him. He stretched out his hands to her in an agony of appeal. "And I will try to love you again." She flung herself down upon a sofa and gave way to an agony of weep ing. "Oh, Claude! Claude!" she wailed. "Very well," said Vernon grimly, "I will abide by your brother's de ^ion." A crunching of heavy feet on the gravel walk beneath the window. The subdued hum of hushed voices. Vernon sprang to the window hi an agony of vague fear. "What is that? Who are they?" screamed Nina in an agony of horror. He did not answer. He was look ing out at something a couple of men were slowly carrying up to the house. Something covered with a tarpaulin that they bore on a stretch er. "Something has happened?-I must go and see. He moved forward to restrain her. but she went out or tiie j room. He stood there by himself, tremb- ! ling violently in every nerve, a cold ! perspiration htirstlnj; from every j pore. In his agony be cried aloud.' And Vernon Dale learned the ver dict. The lifeless body of Nina's brother proclaimed him guilty. Will Interest Many. Every person should know tba*t good healtii is impossible if th<> kid neys are deranged. Poley's Kidney Remedy will cure kidney and blad der disease in every form, and will build up and strengthen these organs so they will perform their functions properly. No dan?,?r of Krigbt's dis ease or diabetes if Foley*s Kidney Remedy is taken in time. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. Women frequently jump at conclu-l sions 'hat are anything but alarmiug. I ZCNI INDIAN CORN PLANTER. Primitive Implement Still In Use by Red Men of '.lie Southwest. The Zuni Indians of New Mexico are a self-supporting people who re tain many of the interesting customs of prohistoric ancestors. The accom panying drawing represents the im plement which they use for planting corn. It is hewn from a piece of hard cedar and is practically a wood en spade, the projecting horizontal piece near the base being for the foot of the digger to press upon. In early spring, when the oak, leaves are the size of squirrels' ears, the Zuni far mer fills a basket with seed corn oi as many colors as Joseph's coat; at.d slinging it and his corn planter ac ross his burro's hack, he mounts the patient little beast himself and ^o-es jogging out on the plain to hiss sandy corn ground, which may Ix many miles from his home. .Mois ture in that arid land lies deep, so ie must make witli nis wooden plant? c a much deeper bole than an Eastern farmer would think of making. Then he drops into it a Tew grains oi corn, draws the sandy loam carefully over them with ? the blade or the planter, and proceeds to dig anothei hole six of eight feet away. Aud so on until the seed is all planted. Monster and Rattler. Dr. James B. Builitt, or Lou is vll I ?, writes of a Gila monster and a rat tle-snake: "A two years' residence in Arizona made me quite familiar with hol? of these reptiles; for good part ?l the time 1 had one of the former tied to the leg of my office table bj a string. In his native habitat the monster is credited with being the enemy of the rattlesnake, and I? said to -kill - him'. "Chancing to have both reptile* on hand at the same time. 1 put them in a larg* box together au-\ awaited results. "The rattler coiled in one end of the box; the monster would wtd; dle np to him, root under his coifs with his nose and finally nip down on a coil near the tall. "The rattler would then spring to the other end of the box and recoil. After this had happened a number, of times the monster Anally suc ceeded in seizing the snake by the neck just back of the heed. "He held a Jirm grip until the snake' was choken to death. The monster sickened and died a couple of days afterward. On removing his skin I found two punctured wounds on his back, evidently the result ol the snake's having struck him once."i ?Chicago News. ' A Mussulman at Prayer. When saying Iiis prayers the ?nie Mussulman Is not easily disturbed. Hans Doeriug, in his account of nis travels in Chinese Turkestan, writes "It is an interesting sight to s?-e a Mussulman perform his devotions. Through the piece of glass in my paper window I <aw the iuterpretei spread his carpet hi front of .us house just opposite the one in whicc I was living. His wife-and child sai quite close to him talking loualj with some visitors, but this did not in the least disturb the old man ui his devotions. "In spite of the noise the melodious chanting of the korau was quite aud ible. The worshiper kowtowed ?.ev eral times and cried 'Allah! Allah! Allah!' Then for a while stood rev erentially clasping bis hands cross wise upon his breast, alter which !)e joined in the conversation. Mis wife then went through the same perfor niance, doing exactly the same as her husband. This they do every morning and evening whether (here . re friends with them or not." C nage Wrought by Rats. It is estimated that the rat does $50.000,omv worth of damage a year in England. In a ?.-laughter house near Paris rats in fi single ui^h! picked to the bone the carcasses oi :!."? horses. There Is very little thai they will not eat. Eggs, young birds and animals are among the dainties which they snap up in the ordinary course of business, but when pressed by l unger they will e:it anthing through which they can drive their terrible teeth. Rat will ? ;it rat. The idea that a trapped rat will bite on an imprisoned I OS nr?J so esc-apd is now said to be wrong: if i:= the other rats which do the biting. They eat the captive. Never ? au tell when you'll mash a linger or suffer a cut, bruise, burn or scald. lb' prepared. Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil instantly relieves the pain quickly cures the wound. We hunt a lawyer when we want to get the best of a neighbor; a doc tor when we want to get the best of ourselves. DeWitt's Little Early Risers, safe, easy, pleasant, sure, little liver pills. Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., A. C Doyle & Co. DOEN'G THEIR DUTY. Scores of Oraugeburg Readers Art Learning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kidnevs duty. When they fail to do this the kid neys are sick. Backache and many kidney ill follow; Urinary troubles, diabetes. Doan's Kidney Pills cure them all. Oraugeburg people endorse our claim. J. L. Phillips. Farmer, So Sellers Ave., Orangeburg, S. C, says: "On several occasions I have, used Doan's Kidney Pills procured from Dr. J. G. Wanna maker'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. I A trained conscience heeds no ac cuser. Pain anywhere stopped in 20 minu tes sure with one of Dr. Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets. The formula is on the 25-cent box. Ask your Doc tor or Druggist about this formula: Stops womanly pains, headache, pains anywhere. Write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., for free trial, to prove value of his Headache, or Pink Pain Tablets. Sold by Dr. J. G. Wanna maker, Mfg. Cc. / The poorest man usually has sonic thing that a rich man would give half his wealth to own. * Weak women should read my ?'Hook No. 4 for .Women." It teils of Dr. Shoop's Night Cure. Tells how these soothing, healing, antisep tic suppositories, bring quick and certain help. The Book is free. Ad dress Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Dr. J. G. Wanamaker, Mfg Co. ft would be unfair to judge wo mankind by the woman's page of the average Sunday newspaper. Just Exactly Right. "Knave used Dr. King's New Life Pills for several years, and find them just exactly right," says Mr. A. A. Felton, of Harrisville, N. Y. New Life Pills relieve without the least discomfort. Best remedy lor consti pation, biliousness ad malaria. 25c. at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co., drug store. The man who objects to a noisy Fourth ought to hie himself to the deep, dark woods and forget it. August time, tells on the nerves. But that spirit less, no ambition feel ing can be easily and quickly altered by staking what is known by-druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Restora tive. Within 48 hours after begin ning Jo 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 and ambition as it is returning. Outside influences depress first the "inside nerves" then the stomach, Heart, and Kidneys will usually fail. Strength en these failing nerves with Dr. Shoop's Restorative and sec how quickly health Will be yours again. Sold by Dr. J. G. Wannamaker, Mfg. Co. When a man spends all his odd hours puttering arouud his house the neighbor women are apt to envy his wife. Served as coffee, the new coffee substitute kuown 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. I Pure healthful toasted grains, malt, 'nuts, .etc., have been so cleverly blended as to give a wondorfuliy satisfying coffee taste and flavor. And it is "made in a minute", too. No tedious 20 to 30 minutes boil ing. A. L. Dukes. ___ The man who invented the lawn mower was doubtless a genius, but he created a fot of trouble for Iiis fellows. The Judge Uses Forcible Langnage. Judge W. B. Simmons of Fiucas tle, Va., told the reporter that L. & M. Paint was usuea on his residence in 1S82, 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 if any de fect exists in L. & M. Paint, the house v.-i 11 be repainted for nothing. The Ii. &. 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. & 31. about $1.20 per gallon. Donations of L. &. M. made to churchea. Sold by J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co. Crangeburg. After all. <>ur bread doesn't fall "butter side down" more tlian half the time. There are many imitations of De Witt's CarboIIzed Witch Hazel Salve but. just one original. Nothing else is just as good. Iusist ou DeWitt'S. It is cleansing, cooling and soothing. Sold by A. C. Duke?, M. D.. A. C. Doyle ? Co. Women frequently jump at con clusions that are anything hut alarm ing. Foley's Orino Laxative is a new remedy, an improfement on the lax ative.- of former yearn, as it does no: gripe or nauseate and Is pleasant to It is guaranteed. Lowinan Drug Co.. A. ('. Dukes. Gray hairs need not he honored only when they adorn honest heads. I* THE PEOPLES BANK * o f * * ORANGEBURG, S. C "A ^Bauk For AH The People." CAPITAL STOCK. . . . . . $30,000.00 SURPLUS. 20,000.00 STOCKHOLDERS LIABI LITY. ..30,000.00 PROTECTION TO DE POSITORS. .?.$80,000.00 D. O. Herbert.President B. F. Jiuckenfuss.. .. Vice-President H. C. Wannamnkcr.Cashier W. M. Richardson.. . . Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS. t - * W. C. Cram A. 32. Salley Abial Latin-op W. L. Glaze G. L. Sallcy Robt. E. Copes D. O. Herbert B. F. Mnckenfnss H. C. Wannamaker. Interest paid in Savings Department. # ? <?> # * Ol I THE FURNITURE STURE * 4 f per cent. Discount. We offer our Present Stock of 1 Iron Beds at 20 0 4 This means a big saving to you. Beds with the Discount off from - - $3.20 to $16.00 $3.00 Mosquito Nets and Frames Complete now $2.40 $2.00 Nets and Frames now $1.60 Many oilier Special] Inducements to Make Room for (tor Big Fall Stock. Terms Cash on Beds and Mosquito Nets. A few Slightly Damaged BEDS at and below cost. See them. ? Wannamaker, Smoak & Co. !? % 0 ft # # ? ? Saint Angela's Academy Aiken, S. C. "KLKCrr "DAY AXD BOARDING SCHOOL tut' YOUNG LAWKS and GIRLS. This well-kuovni institmion affords Facilities ror perfection iu Music. ?xcHlent opportunities tor a thorough Painting, Needlework :uid Domestic iractieal anil* refined etiHcation. Science. The c<uu si>%> ;trc I'rimar.v, Grammar, The ota* :iT?i in every <<>urse is to 'ommercial and Academic, with ad- equip the stodentphysically, mcatally litioit'il i,J"' mora^y ,or *ne pctfornuUMSe of life's duties. THE LOCATION IS [DEAL IN BEAUTY AND H E A LT H KU I .X ESS. academy Opens Sopt. 14, 100?. For Information Apply Direcpress, P. 0. Box 342