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Cardiii is a purely vegetable extract, a simple, non-intoxicating 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 Mrs. "X. C. Beaver, of Unicoi, Route No. 1, Mar-1 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 medicine I ever used, for female troubles.'' Try Cardui. s AT ALL DRUG STORES 4 ? 0 c FIRE, LIFE. BUROLRAY, TORNADO 0 ! ALSO ? VVritren by f H. C. Waiinamaker, f mm I represent companies that's know to be good. A . Give me some of your business. ? WHICH IS MORE URGENT? FIRE INSURANCE. LIFE INSURANCE. Important? You fully realize ?it. | Important? Oh yes, you intend tt You would not allow your house to lns"re after ?w&ile when "a littl? .I better able to do ?>o." remain, uninsured overnight. Your house may never burn. Com paratively few buildings ever do. If your house does burn, your prop You will surely die. All men do You are more likely to die within i week or a year, than your house 1? to burn. Death destroys at once and irr? erty is destroyed, but you can still ivocably, in whole or in part the in provide for your loved ones. Your j come that provided for the dailj ncome remains unaffected, your earn- wants of those you love, the incom? . ? .?M?|*- I that was counted on to feed anr lng capacity unimpaired. I .? , . . , ,. . !clothe and educate your chldren. If your house is not insured at all, or for an Insufficient amount. YOU CARRY THE RISK. Your friend has had his home in sured these 30 years, and nas had no fire. He has been fortunate in that though he has nothing now to show for the money paid out. \ If your life is not insured at all or for an insufficient amount, Your Wife and Babies Carry the Risk Your frend has had his life in sured these 30 years and Is now at old man. He Is fortunate In having lived, and he has somelhing now t< show for the money paid out. Hb cosh value affords a comfortable sup port for his own declining years. WHICH IS MORE URGENT? LZEB 18 E. Russell St., Agent for SOUTHEASTERN LIFE IN Orangcburg, S. C. SURANCE CO., SparUnbnrg, S. G 9 c We are the home for little folks. We carry a full line of every thing in Toys and Dolls, such as Furniture, Lids, Trunks, Pianos, Stoves, Tables and everything that will please the children. DOLLS We carry everything in Dolls, dressed, undressed, china, kids, sleeping. Your want in the doll line from 5c up to $3.00: T-* g rv Hi TOBACCO PHILOSOPHY. Observations on Plain Human Na (ure by the Cigar Dealer. "I understand," said the cigar deal as he took advantage of a leisure -.ent !o pass a word with one his customers "that the, wise peo .vho write books about various es speak a good deal of rever io type. I can't give the scien riednltion of that term, but I've i thought that a man in my busi es a practical application of it jil many times a day. Ob, no, not running any university ex i: course la here?it's ebserva <r, plain human nature that i and the basis of my remarks is aci that ninety-nine men out of idred, though they may be will i cxperiment.in the tobacco line, ? counteu on to come back to , .rst loves?aevert to 'em, per 1 should say. Take the devotees ti certan brand of cigars?a 1 'hat is kept up, of course. :t jnce in sc often he'll get side ked on. to something else, quite ly a cheaper kindu which he'll I to persuade himself Is just as ;d. "It's funny,' he'll say to his ends, 'that I never discovered i.- cigar before.' He'll talk about i. and smoke it, and then, in about week, he'll drift in and ask in a ay a bit shame-faced for some of lie old kind. No, I don't say any .[?r.jg; I'm not anxious to lose trane; I put the familiar box before him And watch the i.ffectionate touch that he gives the cigars. I might give instance after instance of the pipe smoker, for example, who decides he has used one variety of tobacco long enough, but who finds that nothing tastes quite the same as the 'riend of years. But the story would be too long a one. "There'- an exception, hewevor tnd i suppose the exception proves '.he .ule. Your cigarette smoker is apt to te looking for some pew thing nretty much all the time, and that's one thing that convinces me that Mgarettes really don't give lasting riausfaction." Some Tails and Their Uses. A cat never actually wags its tail. Why should ii when it can purr? ?ut, nevertheless, it seems to serve th> tame purrjse in permitting a temporary expenditure of excess ner * ous oner-?/ when the animal is uu J:er groat strrin. For instance. vv.Vii carefully stalking a bird or a man, as in the case of a kitten or i lion, the Up of the tail is never still for a moment?ever curling and '.ucurling. ? We may" compare this to the ner vo?s tapping of the foot or fingers :n a man. When an angry lion is roaring its loudest, his tail will fre quently lash from side to side, giv ing rise among the ancients to. the oeliof that he scourged his body with a hook or thorn which grew from the end of the teil. When a jaguar walks along a slender bough or a house cat peram bulates the top of a board fence, we l^rceive another important function ?A the tall?that of an aid in balanc ing. As a tight-rope performer sways his pole.so the feiine shifts its tail to preserve the centre cf grav ity. The ;ail of a sheep sterns to be of little use to its owner, although in the breed wuich is found in Asia Minor and on the tablelands of Tar tary this organ functions ar. a store house of fat, and sometimes reaches a weight of * f ty poundB. When viewed from behind the animal seems all tail and when its anpeuuage reaches full size it is either fasten 3d between two sticks which drag on the ground, or it is suspended on two small wheels.? Outing Magazine. dinner*' Ik'afnosR. A British writer quoted by the Army and Nary Journal, ?oclares that 50 par cent of the men in the British navy are more or less deaf as a result of heavy air sh< cks to which their ears are subjected by firing of the big guns. Strang? to say, how ever, this disastrous effect on the ears, is sometimes greatest in the rase of small guns. Por instance, it has been found that the gun crews of tho Dreadnought's twelve-inch guns suffer less from tbe "ring" than men handling three-poundera. This is explained by the protection re sulting from the barbetje U whicb tbe former is ?ncioeed, and which is not as a rule used for the three i/ounder. aad further by the fact that the men operating the twelve ineh gun are about nine iOS as far away Prom the muzzle as those of :r.e threo-pounder crew. To avoid the worst effects of these gun dis charges on the ears it is recommend ed that a piece of rubber be kept be tween the tejth so that tne mouth ?-'ill be held open, and clay fibre I nigs be uaed in the eare. Where Law Doesn't Reach. About sixty feet under thu sur face of tbe water, six milos off the eoast oi Florida, two Greek divers fought desperately for the posses sion of a big sponge. When one of I them attempted to prosecute tho oilier fur injuries he sustained in ,1 i> fight lie found that no court had 'jurisdiction over the bottom of the ocean. A Floating City. The r.ew Holiand-American steam ship Rotterdam, just launched, will have a palm garden, a terrace gar den, a shopper's arcade with flower shops, book stalls, hair dressers, manicures, photographers, stenogra pher and candy store. Pleasant, sure, easy, safe little liver Pills, are DeWitt's Little Early Ris ers. They arc easy to take and act gently. We sell and recommend them. For sale by A. C. Dukes, M. I)., and A. C. Doyle & Co. Some people will take anything in reach except good advice. "Had dyspepsia or indig' stion for years. No appetite, and when I did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me."?J. tot. Walker, Sunbury, Ohio. ?AN'S PASSION TOB* POCKETS. _ e As Most Men Have Eighteen er More Sin;;!] Wonder They Lose Things. The great fundamental difference hptween the modern woman aLd the tnoderr man is this: that, whereas the raiment of the modern woman has no pockets at all, the raiment of tue modern man has nothing else. Indeed, a man may be defined as nn animal with a passiop for pockets. It you wtre asked to say off hand how many pockets you possess at a .given moment you would be stump ed. It would be necessary to make out an inventory. In the first place, there are at least five in your over coat. There are at least flvo more in your lounge jacket, four In your waistcoat, and four In your trousera. ?> i' Therefore, at least eigh I'ts. - '-? absurd to say that any ' - em.itpen pockets. Why, n "et of pigeon holes! nt. t;> be numbered or iet 1. '?"en a man loses his lall v ? : !<?.. ami after paying excess fare he finds it hHdeij .11 one of hla jozen and a half pockets. There are tew of us who do not surfer from ac cumulations of old letters, paid and unpaid bills, 'bus and tram tickets, theatre vouchers anJ miscellaneous on's and enis. We change our flotsam and jetsam from one suit of clothes to another, for we are not happy without unnec essary tragments of paper. As a rule, a smoker carries sever al boxes of matches in his pockets, it i? easier to put a penny in a slot at a railway station and extract a new rox than to hunt through layers of rr>( kets for an old one. I once knew a man who carried an amazing assortment of useless things . In his pockets. He always bad a lump oi chalk, a piece of string, a small ivory inch rule, a penknife, a pencil ;.nd a pair of compasses. In his pocket book he carried stamps, sticking plaster, telegraph ?orms and pins. Another man I know always carries half a dozen silver cigar cases shaped like torpe* ooes. with one cigar in each. Some men have a mania for car rying enormous bunches of keys. They do not use more than two of tnem every day but they are not happy unless they have a key for everything they have ever owned. When they lose their keys It is a tragedy. I sometimes wonder why the chan cellor of the exchequer does not im j cse a pocket-tax. It would bring ir enough revenue to pay for old age pensions. It would be much more profitable than the ancient window-tax, for men could live with out windows, but they could not pos sibly exist without pockets. A pocketless man would be mls erable. Try to imagine yourselves lu clothes without pocitets. The Imagination boggles at the thought. A coat without pockets wou'd be a monstrosity, before which a man would recoil in terror. js suspect that the tailor is the first cause of pocketitls. He it is who forces us to submit to the plague of pockets. I appeal to my fellow men to revoPt againBt this sar torial tyranny. Let us establish a pocket limit. Fourteea pockete ought to be enough for any saa? man.?James Douglas in M. A. P. Maine Man Up on Turnips. The lobby of the Saco court rooai has its usual number of story tellers. A venerable member of the bar told the following story recently: A young lawyer of the village of Marshfield once came to Daniel Weoster und asked him what he had belter study to build himself up in his profession. "Turnip seed,'* was the laconic reply. The disciple of Plackstone followed his advice. He studied up everything that bore upon the su jjoct of turnips, until be b?- i came a master of the principles of thai vegetable. A year or two af terward a neighboring farmer origi nated a new turnip, from the sale of whose seed he expected to make a fortune. Another neighbor began te raise an'd sell the same seed and a lawsuit resulted. The originator of the seed came to retain Webster, to prosecute the case. Webster re plied: "I am not as well booked up on turnips as I ought to be, but there Is a young fellow over at the village who knows all about them. Go and get hlra. He will win your case." 'i'he farmer posted oft and engaged him. When the trial came off the lawyer, astonished the Judge, jury, and audience, by his profoune" learn ing on the subject of turnips. The case was triumphantly won, and the young lawyer started on the road to lame and fortune.?Lewis'.ju (Me.) Jourual. Thumb Bells. The thimble was originally called s. thumb bell by trt English, be cause worn on the thumb, then a thumble, and finally its present name. It was a Du'ch invention, and was first glass and pearl. In' China beautiful carved nei.rl thlm fclfs a'e seen, brought to England In 169?. 'ihi in tiles were formerly made out of iron and brass, but in compara tively lr,te years, they h?ve been made of gold, silver, steel, horn, ivory, and even glass and pearl thim bles are seen, bound with gold and with the end of gold. The first thimble introduced into Siam was a bridal gift from the king to tbe Queen; it is shaped liked a lotus bud, mail* of gold and thickly studded with diamonds arranged to xroil Mie Queen's name. A Sure-enough Knocker. J. C. Goodwin, ot Roidsvilie, X. CV, says: "Bucklen's Arnica Salve is a sure-enough knocker for ulcer'-. A bad one came on my leg last sum mer, but that wonderful salve knock ed it. out in a few rounds. Not even a scar remained." Guaranteed for piles, sores, burns, etc. 2."c at J. (\. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.'s drug store. The rule that works both ways is the exception. Fine City Lots. Dr. D. J. Hydrick has opened up a suburb which he very appropriately has named Fairview. It is located in the North-eastern portion of the city, as shown in cut In ad. in another column. The lots are about 5-8 miles from the Cour' louse, and about 10 minutes walk to the business center. They are high, overlooking the city and beautifully situated in a first class section. This looks like a fine chance to build a home, particularly so when you con sider that labor, lumber and other material are cheaper now than they have been in several years past. We understand that these lots can be bought on easy terms. Star gazers may be looking up in the world, but never In the financial sense of the word. A Paying Investment. Mr. John White, of 2S Highland nvehue, Houlton, Maine, says: "Have been troubled with a cough every winter and spring. Last winter I tried many advertised remedies, but the cough, continued until I bough?: a 50c hottle of Dr. Kings New Dis covery; before that was half gone, the cough was all gone. This winter the same happy result has followed: a few doses once more banished the annual cough. J am now convinced that Dr. King's New Discovery is the best of all cough and lung reme dies." Sold under . guarantee at J. G. Wannamaker M*fg. Co.'s drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. You'll do the right thlrg if you stop growling about an imaginary wrong. How to Get Strong. P. J. Daley, of 1247 W. Congress St., Chicago, tells of a way to bu come strong: He says: "My moth er, who is old and was very feeble, is deriving so much benefit from Electric Bitters, that I feel it's my duty to tell those who need a tonic and strengthening medicine about It. In my mother's case a marked gain in flesh has resulted, insomnia ha.; been overcome, and she is steadily growing stronger." ^Electric Bitters quickly remedy stomach, liver and kidney complaints. Sold under guar antee at J. G. Wannamaker Mfg. Co.'s drug store. 50c. The woman with one child ha. more theories concerning children than the mother of ten. If you suffer from constipation and liver trouble Foley's Laxativ) will cure you permanently by stimulating the digestive organs so they will act naturally, roley's Orino Laxative does not gripe, is pleasant to take and you do not have to take laxa tive continually after taking Orino. Why continue to be the slave jf pHis and tablets? A. C. Dukes, Lowmaa Drug Co. The woman trying to control he. age always reminds me of an ostri:h hiding its head in the sand. When a girl speaks of a fellow a?* a man after her own heart sha should be quite sur^e that he isn't after her money. v TBE DRUG STORE 16 the one place on earth where it i? unsafe to look for "Bargains." If you are satisfied with hefting the worth of your money, the best Medicine it is possible to compound from the highest grade drugs, ' d the services of an experienced Pharma cist you will send jour Doctor's Prescription to J. G. Wannamaker MTg. Co. FIRE ' I INSURANCE Not. cheap insurance but in surance that insures you agoiust nil loss by fire or lightning. I do not represent small mu <mils with no capital, who have to assess Clie policy holdivrs to cover each loss, but ten of the oldest and strongest companies doing busine ss, worth more than $100,000.000 and who have paid more than SI.000,000,000 in losses. Country dwellings, barns and outbuildings, together with their contents all written, and I have satisfied customers in every sec tion of the county. Improved gins insured and al so cotton on plantations. Office with WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO., next door to Dr. JrG. Wannamaker Mfg. Co., where you will find me from 8 a. in., to 8. p. in. Office l"ii pi < ne No- 21. Residence Nr 1812. W. K. SEASE You want of the food you need Kodol will digest it. You need a sufficient amount of good wholesome food and more than this you need to fully digest it. Else you can't gain strength, nor can you strengthen your stomach if it is weak. You must eat in order to live and maintain strength. You must not diet, because the body requires that you eat a suffic ient amount of food-regularly. But this food must be digested, and it must be digested thoroughly. When the stomach can't do it, you must take something that will hclp'the stomach. The proper way to do is to eat what you want., end let Kodol di gest \lre food. Nothing else can do this. When the stomach is weak it needs help; you must help It" by giving it rest, and Kodol will do that. Our Guarantee Go to your druggist today, and purchase a dollar bottle, and if you can honestly say, that you did not receive any benefits from it, after using the entire bottle, the drug gist will refund j-our money .to you without question or delay. . "We will pay the druggist the price of the bottle purchased by you. This offer applies to the large bottle only and to but one in a family. We could not afford to make such an offer, unless we positively knew what Kodol will do for 3-041. It would bankrupt us. The dollar bottle contains 25? times as much as the fifty cent bottle.. TCocl^l Is made at the laboratories of E. G. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. The New Vertical Lift Deeriwr The lightest running and most durable mower made. Made in 4y and 5 feet cut. When you buy a Deering you will not have to waite on repairs carry full stock. Come in and look at this machine and find out the difference. THE MONITOR SELF-HEATING SAD . 1 IRON. The Monitor is a perfect Self-Heat ing S<id Iron. .Generates its own heat in the body of the iron. Always hot and you can regulate it to any tem perature desired. Xo firing up the range ?you heat the house. Nb walking from the ironing table to the hot range to change irons and back again, therefore saving labor, work that is most disagoroublc on a hot summer day. \ '\\\ can do an iron ing for the cost of about one rent for fuel, saving many dollars in a year; can take your ironing to any room in the bouse or out on the porch if you choose?that which every woman has sighed for many times. . Can iron all day without the least uneomfor tabtencss from the heat of the iron. Can put it in your suit case or trunk and take it along when traveling to press -the muss and wrinkles out of clothing, ribbons, etc. raageburg Hard^a*^ & Furniture Co. i The Edisto Savings Bank, 0 ORAXGEBUKG. S. C. 0 Capital.3100,000 00. Surplus. $30.000.00, 0 B. H. Moss, President. J. M. Oliver, Vicc-President, 1 F. S. Dibble, Vice-President. Win. L. Glover, Cashier. DIRECTOBS I M. O. Dantzler, J. M. Oliver, W. R. Lowman, W. F. Fairev, 1 B. H. Muss, T. C. Doyle, Sul. Kohn, J. W. Smoak. ? Money saved Is money nr.de, and the way to save is to deposit your ? coney 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 2 annum. 3 This bank's absolute safety is best attested by its capital stock, its a surplus and by the character and standing of its officers and board 9 of directors. Money loaned on good security. mats nnin* cRcH!if raits! gSBm YjL-.?t.~.? ?-*.?*.??. ftwaa mffl N ?m i ill ??ife^SHtT m 1 I ?iilB W& fgS "a Rook 'tore in your home." Iii? f :rf Li ?ir,l vin v^lry frre- w-? ????<?> *<? . ?'?-'?> ??xi??'- f 1 r-'> 4 .'J Viit^ Our pnet> ihe <??? c<ial tr h ?? !>???. U.ii ( ? j/ 0?, lv<?| mail ontw B.hi! in the ??W W ye?r?.?buiine*.. Uspt TD71 IHt FKrtSNLlN-I?n^tri 00., 63-71 Ivy St., Atlanta? Ga.