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l* ' ? r <f sallowness |l This disorder is due to a torpid liver involving the stomach and bowels. To correct the trouble take simmons b RED Z LIVER REGULATOR ; (THE POWDER FORM) When the complexion is sallow and you have spells of vertigo (blind p staggers) on stooping or rising suddenly and your bowels are i rregular, with much, flatulence (wind in the tc bowels) you are badly in need of o! Simmons Liver Regulator. The liver hi is the cause of all the trouble and a] when the liver is at fault, there is c nothing more effective. Simmons ,T Liver Regulator quickly restores . sound, healthy conditions in the liver, stomach and bowels; sweetens the breath, helps digestion and rl brings back the ruddy hue of health m to the complexion. te Sold by Dealers 8 Price, Large Package* $1.00 e) Aak (or tbe genuine with the Red Z on the labeL If you cannot get It. remit to ua, we n; will tend It by mail postpaid. Simmons Liver Regulator la alto put up In liquid form tl for thoae who prefer It Price 81.00 per ai bottle. Look for the Red Z LabeL ^ J. H. ZEILIN & CO., Proprietors c( St. Lonls, Missouri a] <> "? "^e< . n - bi GEORGIAN HEADS COMMISSION. 0, w Jndson C. Clements Becomes Chair* hi man of If Interstate Commerce. tl Judson C. Clements, of Georgia, sen- 1)1 ipr member of the Interstate com- p merce commission, and a democrat, bl has been elected chairman of the com- ^ mission, in succession to Martin A. B< Knapp, of New York. p While the commission is coiriposed of four republicans and three demo- ^ crats at present, it has been the uni- 11 form policy of the commission since w its creation to elect its senior member as chairman, entirely irrespective Cl of his political affiliations. The election of chairman of the 01 commission is highly important, not only to the transportation companies, si but by the shippers, and also to the public generally. The chairman is ex-officio one of ol the mediators under the Erdman act, which provides a means of adjust\ment of controversies that may arise between common carriers and their !l g employees. M Mr. \_Vmonts Is a native of Gebr-"* born in 1846. He was appointed 1,1 " ^ to the commission by President Cleve land, in March, 1892, and has received three successive appointments. He is regarded as one of the conservatives of the commission, although for B many years he has advocated vigorously, in public speeches.and before Congress, the adequate supervision ?110 control by the government of e? comomn carriers. s* His efforts have been directed, as cc shown by his decisions, to the protec- S( tion of stockholders, investors and the public against practices declared both legally and morally evil. aI cc Making Life Safer. w Everywnere lire is Deing maae more jc safe through the work of Dr. King's co New Life Pills in Constipation, Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Liver re Troubles, Kidney Diseases and Bowel Disorders. They're easy but sure, and perfectly build up the health. 25c at Fi T. E. Wanamaker & Sons' and Ladd's Drug Store. 1 m vi The Chronicle costs only |1 a year, ar Thomas P [ Like Money i I is available ? can be j ?by the plant as ne< Like money in th be washed away. N< to forms insoluble. Thomas Phosphate I ' J Every Pound in a 1 Our free pamphlets "Thomas |H I "Home Mixing" will fully convir H j COE-MORTIME SPECIAL 1M1 M | NEW YORK. IDISTOC PROJET GIVEN APPROVAL ct OARD OF ARMY ENGINEERS jf REVERSES FORMER ACTION th 11a to teamboat Line To Be Organized. lnl Boats Will Ply Between Orange- ke burg and Charleston?Also Canal taj Is Planned. mi I CI harleston Post. <je The announcement from Washing- pr >n gives satisfaction that the board jje f engineers of the war department ;0] as reversed its former action in dis- re, pproving of the recommendation of apt. E. M. Adams, corps of engineers, flr . S. A., in charge of the river and arbor work, regarding the improve- at, lent of the Edisto and the Ashley re, vers, with the construction of a ca- an al connecting these rivers; and in- rei irest will attend the work of the con- a8 ressmen in securing the needed mon- ve r for the prosecution of the project. The scheme of the advocates of the 0f roject is the promotion of water cr, ansportation between Charleston g0 id Orangeburg. The development of pe le waterway is contingent upon the ve immunities putting the route to use, tid with the indorsement of the proj- ag it of the board of engineers, it is g^ ow up to Charleston and Orange- gj, urg to proceed with the organization tij( { the proposed steamship company, an ith a capital stock of $20,000, one- be alf of the capital stock to be held in re, le two cities. With the action of the oard of engineers, it is now up to the romoters of the enterprise to^ get usy and organize and prepare for le construction of the necessary leamboats as soon as the water im- ye rovement is assured. _ Of interest also to the trade of harleston is the plan for a canal con- S ecting the Santee or its tributaries \ ith the Cooper river or Charleston , arbor, which project is now under y ansideration by Captain Adams. 7 ha'leston looks to this project with luch more interest and concern than le Edisto, for the reason that the posbilities of trade are so much .larger y,this route. The Edisto project will ! jubtless enlarge the cotton receipts I Charleston, and promote the ferlizer movement, but the route nough the Pee Dee and Santee secons, connecting Charleston with Co- I imbia, is naturally preferred, because ^ le waterway improvement will affect , much laigi'i .sectiun irrrd - mean so ? mch more in trade. f TO REAPPORTION STATE. HI Introduced Providing for New Distribution of House Members. The loss of one representative by ich of six counties and the corre>onding gain by each of six other mnties, in the membership of the :ate House of Representatives, are ovided for by a bill introduced by jnator Lide, of Orangeburg. The re- ? jportionment is to be made in acirdance with the census of 1919, hich showed many changes in the lative population of the various >unties of South Carolina. The ,counties which will lose one presentative each, according to the rms of the bill, are: Charleston, erkeley, Beaufort, Aiken, Chester and ilrfleld. The counties which will gain one ember each are: Anderson, Greenlie, Dillon, Orangeburg, Richland id Spartanburg. hosphate j in the Bank! : "checked upon* I* eded. 1 ie bank, it cannot 1 either does it revert If contains no "fiJler." I | .^on Has Its Value I Phoaphatc and Its Uses" and icc you of its worth. Ki !" R COMPANY, | PORTERS, CHARLESTON, S. C. THE TEXAS TO BE TARGET. lip That Bore Brunt of Santiago Fight In Sentenced to IgnimlnouN Fate. Orders have been received at the larleston navy yard for the dispatch the former battleship Texas, now e station ship of the Charleston ,vy yard, to Norfolk, where she is be." stripped and there converted to a target for the gunners of the ssels of the North Atlantic fleet. The place of the Texas is to be ken by the protected cruiser Balti>re, whjch is shortly to be sent to larleston, when her crew will be tached and put on board the Texas, oceeding on her last voyage under r own steam to an ignominious end r a vessel having her distinguished cord in the service. The battleship Texas was one of the ot nt tho mnHorn hflttleshins of the MV V4 VMV ? ?? ? I nerican navy. No little sentiment Laches to the Texas. She has a fine cord for things done in the navy, d it is known that there is no little sentment felt among officers as well the people at the prposition to conrt the Texas into a target It does not seem to be in the line economy to destroy such a valuable aft, which might be put into fairly od fighting shape in case of war, esciaUy when there are so many other ssels that might be utilized. An earnest protest is to be made ainst the removal of the Texas. The ip has been at the Charleston yard ice September 29, 1909. Visitors at e navy yard have found the Texas interesting place, with the guns aring brass plates telling of the cord and service of the ship. With the removal of the Texas, an iportant feature of fhe navy yard, so speak, will be removed. % You can get The Chronicle for $1 a ar. Send it to a friend. coffee fathers ^^1 dust and store^y sweepings. Paper bags leak strength, freshness and aroma. IJSijN \jL teA JM fdfi, LUZIAHHE)" COFFEE in its air-tight can is dust-free, strong, fresh and of per[flk feet qualify. S IS Look for This Sign . - ON LEADING GARAGES $ Mtke Ip* I ffor backache, rheums Foley Kidney Pills pur SURE CURE pa For A53 Diseases of STOMACH, IB Lives akidneys hgjg , I ? TRIPLE LYNCHIN6 ^ IN KEMTUSKY TOWN STORM COUNTY JAIL AND TAKE OUT PRISONERS Small Crowd in ShelbjYllle, Ky., Hang Two and Shoot One?Two Were Charged With Assault and One Sentenced to Die for Wife Murder. Storming the Shelby county (Kentucky) jail early Sunday morning, a mob composed of less than one hundred men seized and lynched three negroes, two charged with assaulting white girls and a third sentenced to be hanged for the murder of his wife and held in jail until the day for his execution could be set. The three were lynched in different places, and what at first seemed to have been a single lynching was found to have been a triple one, with the finding of the three bodies. The body of Eugene Marshall, sentenced to be hanged for the murder of his wife, whom he had beheaded, was found hanging to a bridge over Eminence Pike, only a short distance from the jail. Jim West, who had been employed as a chauffeur in Shelbyville for several months, was one of the victims. He was charged with an assault on a U/hitn tVAl v fhn Hnncrhtflr of o Qhol. v. u"ueu"' ?* ? ?*- ; I JtESIDEIS 66.8x2'. FOR SALE if taken This lot is on the corner ol and is a bargai J. A. SE COAL__ Chestnut Coal ^Egg Coal ' 1 ?Goal - Above prices include deli for less than ton orders d Wijite Rock Eggs Borred Rock Eggs H.L.POWE. CHEI Tires worlds important automobile < een won on Mkkelin Tires. IN STOOC BY PEE DEE IRON WORKS CHERAW, S. C. cL CLUD (Baag V-UUP tisrn, kidney cr bladder trouble, ify the blood, restore lost vitality a: nick Relief and Core for Head- SS I ache, Bacftache, Dizziness, Indigestion, Malaria, etc. fijjH 1 ?y county farmer. He. too, was hangd from the bridge. Wade Patterson, th ethird negro fl ynched, was charged with assaulting V . white woman. Patterson attempted 1 o escape from the mob, and was shot 1 ind his body thrown into a creek. The mob which attacked the Jail ' vent about its work quietly, and few tersons knew of the triple lynching itnil the bodies were found, several lours later. Few of the mob were masked. The ail lock was smashed with a sledge lammer, and there was little difficulty n getting to the prisoners. According to the deputy Jailer, Edvard Thompson, the jailer hid the Jail leys when the mob approached, and ater, when the mob became more inilstent, be let the men into the jail >fflce. "They said there were three negroes lere they were going to get, or else >low up the jail," said the deputy. They kept yelling for the dynamite, ~ MAM kAAf V ill It DUillC UL LUC UiCU DlttJ ICU Ui ,UCOt >n the cell locks with a sledge hamner. About twelve men had their juns ^pointed at me, demanding the Leys, but I insisted I did not know vhcre they were. Finally, at 3:25, hey broke open the cell door and took >ut West, Marshall and Patterson." For either acute or chronic disor[ers, for annoying and painful urinary rergularities, take Foley's Kidney Jills. An honest and effective medicine for kidnfey and bladder disorders. Sold by all druggists. rCE LOT 33 Feet FOR $400 at once : Church and High streets n at the price. lLLERS COAL 4 i - $9.50 % / - - $8.75 V . - - $7.50 - " ; very east of C. & L. rayage will be charged^^K $1.25 per Setting $1.00 per Setting ' Cheraw, S. C. jnH FOR SALE ALL OVER THE WORLD nntests im _ * nny i and urinary irregularities, nd vigor. Refuse substitutes# I The best ionic, Crrti#ve A Mediciue for thc/? eaee9. 50c. GuamaiM^, fl