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Feel Bad (; To Day? ; How's your stomach? Sour?weak?nervous?shaky? [ Bad taste? Last night's dinner didn't agree? Well, just step over to the drug store and get a bottle of || Kodol For Indigestion and Dyspepsia Take a good, liberal*dose, and you will be surprised how good it will make you feeL Kodol makes weak stomachs strong. Kodol is pleasant and palatable. Kodol digests all the food you eat. Keeps the Stomach Sweet A. C. DUKES, M. D. : A: : : : A. C. DOYLE & CO. PIKES Santa Claus is Coming!! In fact he has already arrived at Pikes. We have a full line of toys such as Dolls, Go-carts, Wagons, Doll Furniture, Books, Blocks, Iron Toys and everything to amuse, the little folks. Also just received a full line of Ladies' Gibson collars from 15c to 75c. We have just in the latest novel ties in handerchiefs and children's bats. See our show window. Special prices on all Millinery Goods. F J KE'S New Iron ONLY is used in Stoves and Ranges Not a pound of old scrap or burnt out iron is permitted in their manufacture. They are made in the best manner possible and of the best material. They are made to last. Both patterns and prices please. Orangeiburg, S. C. KIDNEY CU Will cure any case of Kidney or Bladder Disi beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can c LOWAIAN DRUG CO ' See Zeigler i Office Over George Zeigler's Sto The Judge Uses Forcible Laiiguu^t Judge W. B. Simmons of Fin tie, Va., told the reporter that I. <v M. Paint was usuea on bis resbi -net in 1882, and held its color well <??? 21 years; he furthermore said that ; years ago he was induced to uiu 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 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 ro I n years. Actual cost of L. & M. about fl..2i? per gallon. Donations of L. & f.5 made to churches. Sold by I G Wannamaker Mfg. Co. 'Oraugohurg There is only one man to whom woman can be crueller than to the one she hates?that is the man, whom she loves. DeWItt's Kidney and Bladder, Pil? are unequaled in cases of weak back, back ache, inflammation of the blad der, rheumatism pains, and ail urinary disorders. They are antisep tic and act promptly. RVery case of kidney or bladder trouble should be attended to at once, and the ach?* in the back, rheumatic pains, uri nary disorders, etc., are warning signs. Don't delay, for delays are dangerous. Get DeWItt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. Regular size 50c. Sold by A.C. Dukes, M. D.. and A. C Doyle & Co. A man will try to marry the girl he loves?a girl will try to love the man she marries. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup not only heals irritation and allays in flammation, thereby stopping the cough, but it moves the bowels gent ly and in that way drives the cold from the system. Contains no opi ates. It is pleasant to take, and children especially like the taste, sol nearly like maple sugar. Sold by A. C. Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doyle j & Co. When you stand on the doorste\> of Love always get past into the hail before you give the belle a ring. They Take the Kinks Out. "I have used Dr. King's New Life Pills for many years, with increasing satisfaction., They take the kinks out of stomach, liver and bowel:;, without fuss or friction," says N H. Brown, of Pittsfleld, Va. Guar anteed satisfactory at.J. G. Wanna maker Mfg. Co.'s drug store. Women rarely know what a con tempt they have for society until they find themselves cut by it. Personal Appeal. If we could talk to you personally about' the great merit of Foley's Honey and Tar, for coughs, colds and lung trouble, you never could be induced to experiment with un known preparations that may con tain some harmful drugs. FolieyV Hoaey and Tar costs you no more and has a record of forty years of cures. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. Many a man seems to think he can afford to many only when the girl has plenty of money. Hoarse coughs and stuffy colds that may develop into pneumonia ov er night are quickly cured by Foley's Honey and Tar, as it soothes in flamed membranes, heals the lungs, and expels the cold from the sys tem.' Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Duk:s. A good man often burns the can dle at both ends in order to throw more light on the subject. Guilty of Counterfeiting. Passing counterfeit money is no worse than substituting .some un known worthless remedy for Foley's Honey and Tar, the great cough and cold remedy that cures the most obstinate coughs and heals the lungs. Lowman Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. What makes a woman proud c? her children is to be able to tell the wonderful things they did, just as if they really did them. | Mrs. McRaney's Experience. Mrs. M. McRaney, Prentiss, Miss., writes: "I was confined to my bed for three monts with kidney and bladder trouble, and was treated by two physicians but failed to get re lief. No human tongue can bell how L suffered, and I had given up hope of ever getting well until I began taking Foley's Kidney Remedy. After taking two bottles I felt like a new person, and feel it my duty to tell suffering women what Foley's Kidney Remedy did for me.' Low man Drug Co., A. C. Dukes. Cures Backachq Irregularities MS Do not risk having iase not Bright's Disease^ [O more, or Diabctcfr c Dibble T? A pi.oj!" .-sorrowing. Two Worn "en Eggs Ratal a '. ?uehtiou. Ktr.rory wr tten in Pratt, Kan., is to rect that last win ter one wo iere borrowed of another ad1 .1 e rgs, then worth? thrice fortunate Pratt, Kan.!?24 cents. Recently tne borrower determined, whether wtb ass stance or not his tory conceal? to return the eggs and carried to uer neighbor's house a aozen as good as those that had been tauen theno. But the neighbor re fused to take them in extinguish ment of her claim. The price of eggs she said, had fallen with the ap proach ot spring, and it was then only 12 cents per dozen. Therefor* ehe wanted not one dozen, but two, and for no less would she call the transaction equitably closed. Then there was trouble. The first woman insisted that she had borrowed, not bought, the eggs, and that considerations of money value did not and should not enter into tho matter at ail. This the second wom an denied, repeatedly, and the dozen eggs were taken home after much or^ atory. and a few tears equally divid ed between grief and rage Now all the other women in the vicinity nave taken up the quarrel, and, still according to history, the question aa to whether the borrower or lender ia right, has become an important issue in local politics?so Important that the spring election in Pratt, Kan., turns on It, according to the New York Times, which adds that borrow ing except when conducted on strict business principles. Is an evil prac tice, exceeded as a destroyer of friendship only by out-and-out theft. Too Mnch Much and Too Little. Mr. Benson of the London Times, in his extremely Interesting account jf the Younghusband expedition in to Thibet, gives some remarkable facts r.bout the carrying power of men who were employed to do the heavy work of the journey. According to his account thous ands of coolies were used. The pay was per pound, and the average load was 80 to 90 pounds to the man. bone, however, carried dou ble and even three times the aver age, In order to earn extra compen sation. Mr. Benson tells of one Hin doo coolie who carried a piece of machinery weighing 575 pounds up the mouncain slope, making his way I from bowlder to bowlder with this I almost incredible load on his back. As a contrast Mr. Benson calls atten tion to the fact that the English trade umona will not allow r work man to carry a <oad of more than 14 pounas. if his tools or the material weigh more tnan that he must have a . helper. It may well be asked if this kind of civilization is going to work favorably to the proper development of the individual. The man with his plain food and the full exercise of his muscle will be apt to produce sturdier stock Van the one who is limited by ra?'es that would seem to? mild for children. There is no in tention of comparing coolie and skill ed labor, but there is a very nice question of influence upon the right progress of the race. The Collie. "See that sheep dog?" said an English farmer pointing to a collie. "Well, I was visiting my daughter in Somersetshire and had taken the dog there with me by rail. "While we were all in the garden In the evening I went into the house for something and the dog missed me. Jumpiug the fencu he set off on the return journey just as dark ness was coming on. He could not have wasted much time about It, for my servants told me he was back at the farm more than forty miles away, early next morning, and they kept looking out for me, as we were gener ally not far apart. "I bad that dog from a puppy, and 1 knew he had never seen that road before. It was dark soon after started, yet he must have traveled at the rate of five or six miles an hour all the way, at a time few, If any, people or conveyances would be, near to help him aiong. How Birds Meet Emergencies. Dr. Francis H. t.errlck says a sparrow will pluck a horse hair from the mouth of a nestling, while an other, bird, like an oriole, will stand by and see its mato hang until dead without attempting to release It. A robin will tug at a string which has caught on a limb, but Is never seen fully to meet the situation by releasing the string. It will make several turns of a cord about a limb and leave the other end free with out any relation to the nest, so that its effort is useless, it ties no knots. The gull according to abundant and competent testimony, will car ry shellfish to a considerable height, drop them on the rocks or hard ground, and repeat athe experiment until It gets the soft meat.?Chica go Tribune. Our First Appearance. Highest authorities place the time Blnce men first appeared on the earth at 288.000 years. Of thiB ,78,000 be long to the preglacial epoch, 100,000 to glacial, 44,000 :o Interval between prehistoric and neolithic, 10,000 to neolithic epoch and 6,000 to time elapsed since beginning of the his toric period In Egypt. No goods can be landed in Tur key which bear a trademark at ell resembling a crescent. 7he Inierier 'When a fellow i: ? shirt with a bosom rink and matcn ug h complexion, it is a a courting; and that is Wllcox. jr.. is up to. at- ??? on this chair." John VVilcox. Sr.. twist: in a congratulatory em in' own powers of discernment "What makes you think s. asked his wire. "I don't think; 1 know, V. . more, 1 can lay my linger o.i gal." "Who Is It?" questioned his ?. t, eagerly. "NoLody in this town. Juu or has run through the hull list, and there ain't none of 'ern to his lik.ng; so he has strick a new trail." "Do tell me, pa." pleaded Mrs. Wllcox. "Well. I'll tell you as fur as I Know, which to my thinking is fur enough. 1 heard the" fellows tu town most had hydropho-y over a gal from the city, who is elocuting in the town hall oi an evening. Soon as 1 heard it that slippery shirt bos om of Jun or's popped into my head. 1 put it parallel wJia that gal in my mind and It didn't take me iong co ? be they was bound to meet uu witL each ether soonc. or later. "When 1 got that point of vew I strohed down to'the town hall to get ano'.her. i sneaked in and tcok t iiack reat. The hrst thing I knew rhe little elocutor come walking ?..cross the platform nodding her yel ow head like a tassel or corn Id the 'ireeze. She talked like she was haunted. Kind of scarey and myster.ous. I'll ?e oarned ir it didn't give me the creips to listen. "1 looked to see how Junior was taking it tn and. ma, that boy's heart was beating right in his eyes. Any gal with a grain of sense, who seen him looKing at her like that, would kno\' he was head over heels In love, with her. Now trie question le what's to be done about it!" "Done about it?" repeated his wife Inquiringly. "That's what 1 said. 1 aln'f" going to have no son ot mine marry a pub lie speaker. T ie women foWts in my family has always had a back seat, and it's the place rur em. "Ala. ir you had the gumption of a plucked chicken you wo?ld go to her and say we would be much obliged ir she would light out again." "Me!" gasped Mrs, Wllcox In hor ror. "1 wouldn't do such a thing for a thousand dollars." "Then 1 wlW 1 have always no ticed," declared Mr. Wllcox bitterly, "that I'm the one to eat all the drum sticks and do all the mud s'.inging m this family; but thank the Lord, Cm equal to it!" a ? a "Ma," whispered Mr. Wllcox agi tatedly as he thrust his head into the ??:ttlng-room a Tew evenings later, ?where Is Junior?" "He is upstairs." Mr. Wllcox inserted his whole body Into the room and closed the door t'ortly. "How d'd he act, ma?" "He didn't act at all; Just went quietly to his room. What do you mean?" "His gal is dead," announced Mr. Wllcox tragically, "and I killed her!" Mrs. Wllcox gave a suppressed scream. "There a'n't nuthing left for mo ?nit to ha've a private hanging of my. *tir. groaned Mr. Wllcox. mopping nis forehead excitedly. "Junior don t know I uad a hand In it; but oe knows she'z dead and he's most crazy. I'll never be able to look thai; ooy in the face again." "How did It happen, pa?" breath ed his wife .ensely. , "Well, I went to her as I said 1 would, and told her in so many words that Junior was the pride o' my lire, i had my p'ans all ia'd fo. hi? advancement and I didn't wan; th< :n upypt by her. "Stif dldn i say much bt.t man :"*ed 'o convoy the Impression thai she co**?! '?red n polecat an honor "i>:c :?? ??!)!)( r of society compared to me. site :s;ie thought too muc i ol '::!) or to'V.-.nd in h!s way. and that wotiid leave at once, though she had ;>f tided ?? s ?>;> Inn?"?*?. Th ? train she wem on wa^, wrecked, a:. 1 "-he's Ivlhg this minute as dead as a nackerei." "But. pa. it wasn't ??v-r fault." as. verted his wife with v.stble relief. "It it hadn't been for me she would be in the .own hr.l] right now and that poor boy upstairs wou i not he lying there with hs hea:t broken, it Is of no use, ma, I He broke off Irritably as some one knocked at the door and went to sue who u was. A telegram was handed in ad dressed simpiy to "J. Wilcox." Mr. Wilcox wrenched it from the enve lope and read: "Lady In question not seriously injured." He gave a wild whoop and throwing the message r.t bis astonished wife, uashed upsta'ri. "Junior," he shouted, bursting in to the n:om, "what do you mean by laying there like a carved figure on a monument when your gal is need ing yoa? She ain't much hurt, son. Go and retch her here and let your nia nurse her up. Vou might kind or throw In that your pa sent you." "I'll he willing to bet my best bat," reflected Wllcox, In a moment or rueful calmness, "that if I'd had sense enough to keep my tongue out or this affair, things would never have come to a climax." Shiver Just scratch a match?light the Perfection Oil Heater? and stop shivering. Wher ever you have a room that's hard to heat?that the fur nace doesn't reach?there you'll need a PBFHM1 ? Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Device) . Just the thing for buzzard tune or between seasons. Its genial glowing heat makes any room cheerful and cczy. No smoke? no smell?smokeless device prevents. Brass font holds 4 quarts of oil burning 9 hours. Fin ished in japan and nickel. Every heater warranted. which is so much appreciated by workers and students.. Made of brass, nickel plated with che latest improved central draft burner. Every lamp warranted. Write our nearest agency for de scriptive circular if your dealer cannot supply the Perfection Oil Heater or Rayo Lamp. Standard OH Company f> (Incorporated)' . . -,? , ? otiisms mm ARE NOW READY FOR INSPECTION. A LARGE ASSORTMENT "~ OF INITIAL HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, FAN CY HALF HOSE, FANCY SUSPENDERS, IN REGULAR BOXES. NECK TIES IN SINGLE BOXES. KID GLOVES/ WOOLEN GLOVES, OF ALL KINDS. A NICE PRESENT WOULD BE A BOX OF SLX PAIRS EVERWEAR GUARANTEED HOSIERY IN ATTRACTIVE BOX AT $1.50; GUARANTEED TO LAST SIX MONTHS. EVERYTHING ELSE IN NEW FURNISHINGS. SEE OUR WINTER SUITS OF CLOTHES AT FROM $7.50 TO $15.00. SHOES, HAS, ETC. COME IN THIS WEEK. 6ENTS CLOTHING CO 56 W EUSSELL ST. GEO. R. BOWMAN AND O. L. CHUM, Managers. S THE FURNITURE STORE \ 1 A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR 2 HOLIDAY GIFTS 0 t 0 * |) Library Tables, Parlor Tables A ? Leather Couches, Leather Rockers $ Reed Rockers & Odd Pieces O A Art Squares & Rugs ( I ''Elastic" Book Cases Q Make ?our Selections From the ^ Q New Goods We Are Now Receiv- ? $ ing and We Will Deliver When- $ V ever You Say. * ? V 0 t ? 0 WE HAVE EVERYTHING FOR THE HOUSE Wannamaker, Smoak & Co. jag 0 0 re Insurance. > Call or Phone.