The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, May 09, 1906, Image 7
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, /s m/ jL
Sawn MQBon bans «oM hi »ost S2 months. luSs Signature,
CmSss Crip .
fa> Two Days.
«. <• a
on every
box. 25c.
*%%**iiii*i:**%zzil%%****%*%**
NEW MILLINERY STORE.
I have opened a millinery business next door to H. W
Black’s store and cordially invite the public to visit my
store. I will sell you a beautiful ready-to-wear hat at
a reasonable price and if I haven’t any in stock to suit
you it will only take a few minutes to trim one to suit
your taste. Yours for business,
' Mrs. Lucy T. Hiott.
THE JOY OF LIVING
C&H BK FULLY KKAUZKD WHBf YOU
IOY GOOD HEALTH
ersinE
The Popular Liver Medicine
Will Keep You Well
A OUJMtStNTEED CURE for all produced by TOR
PID LIVER and IMPURE BLOOD. Do not fill your system
with Arsenic, Calomel and Quinine. T>iey act as rank poisons
which vitiate the blood, debilitate the system, and leave a trail
of bad symptoms which require years to obliterate. HERO
INE is purely vegetable and contains no mineral or narcotic
poisons, is absolutely harmless and is the simple remedy of
nature. It carries off all poison m the system and Isavda no
injurious effects. ^
CUBED BY HEBB1NE AFTER OTHER
REMEDIES FAILED
«r. L. A. Hfcks, Iredell, Dens, eeye: '* I wee
•idk in bed for eight months with liver trouble, the
doctor •seemed to do me no goad. I wss told to try
Her bine, and it cured me in a short time. I cannot
reoetmmerid this wonderful medicine too highly.**
TAKE IT NOW l
LARGE BOTTLE, 58c GET THE GENUIHE
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.
ST. LOUIS, U. S. A.
■JOHN M. KLEIN.:
The New Idea.
549 Main St cct
We now extend to our Friends and Patrons
a spring greeting and a welcome to our store.
Come and look aCour new line of Spring and
• « •
Summer goods. All the new and latest styles
just in from .headquarters, We are making
a bid for your trade and want it. Can we have it.
W. Buford Sanders.
t
i
t
NATURE IN THE, OCEAN.
Creator.. Devoorlos Each Other to'
I'rev.nt Overproduction.
It is estimated that the cyelops will
t>ej:et 44*-\UU0 young in the course of
the year, and If these were all permit
ted to mature and reproduce them
selves the sens would in a short time
be u simple mass of living organisms.
But the cetochilus. or “whale food,”
constitutes almost the exclusive food
of the vast shoals of herrings and the
aeu living salmon and salmon trout.
Their existence Is one of the' greatest
economic triumphs of nature, for these
minute creatures scour Uie sea of its
refuse and keep it sweet, while they
form the food of fishes, which in turn
furnish wholesome food for millions of
human beings.
Feeding on dead vegetable and ani
mal matter, these entomostraca are
converted Into the food fishes of the
world by one remove, being first assim
ilated by the herrings, then nbsorl>ed
by the tunny, cod, mackerel and other
fishes which follow herring shoals and
prey upon the latter. They mainly
swim on the surface of the water, and
it is the search of them in this position
which brings the shoals of herrings to
the surface. Their countless numbers
are also augmented by the microscopic
larvae of fixed shells, such ns the bar
nacle, which itegins life in this form
first as a one eyed swimming (frusta-
cenn. then growing a pair of eyes and
finally affixing itself.
In rivers these larvae are the sole
food of all young fish and often also of
older fish. In early spring the crea
tures in every stage—eggs, larvae and
perfect though iniscroscoplc eutomos-
tracn—swarm in the water, on the mud
and on the water plants, and were It
not for nature’s provision for keeping
them in check so rapid would be their
rate of multiplication that, the whole
character of the water would speedily
be entirely changed.
&
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Mi
M
tt
A
&
Me
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ft
Miss Lizzie Trowell
Is headquarters for fine Dry Good and Notions, and
all that is necessary to convince you of this fact, -
is to call on her. She has the very latest goods on
the market, and can please you. Now, the reason I
say this is because I visit her store when I want Dry
p-
Goods and Notipns, and have always been able to
get what I wanted at reasonable prices. She also
carries a beautiful line of Ready-to-\Vear Hats*
childrens sailors and ties. Yours truly,
AIR IN HIGH ALTITUDES.
\
Customer.
w
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ft
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V *****%*%%****************
THAT IS WHAT YOU f GET WHEN YOU BUY
YOUR JEWELRY FROM
3. B. HDlesterbera.
It ©pair work a specialty.
Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pens.,
^SPECTACLES, CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY.^
with the newspaper,
t “What's no lie?” queried the other
party to the dialogue.
“Tills paragraph to the effect that
‘wise men are more often wrong than
fools are right,’ ” answered the other—
Chicago News.
The Sana* •• la Other Plaeee, hat It
Coatalaa Wo Mlorohoo.
o It Is an error to think that the chem
ical composition of the air differs es
sentially wherever the sample may be
taken. The relation of oxygen to nitro
gen and other constituents Is the same
whether it is on the heights of the Alps
or at the surface of the aea. The fa
vorable effects, therefore, of a change
of air are not to be explained by any
difference in the proportions of Its
gaseous constituents. The important
difference la the bacteriological one.
The air of high altitudes contains no
microbes and is. in fact, sterile, while
near the ground and some hundred
feet about it microbes are abundant.
In the air of towns and crowded places
not only does the microbe Impurity in
crease, but other impurities, such as
the products of combustion of coal, ac
crue also.
Several lurestigators have found
traces of hydrogen and certain hydro
carbons in the air, especially in pine,
oak and birch forests. It Is to those
bodies, doubtless consisting of traces
of essential oils, that the curative ef
fects of certain health resorts are trac
ed. Thus the locality of a fir forest is
said to give relief in diseases of the
respiratory tracts. But these traces of
essential oils and aromatic product
must be counted, strictly speaking, ns
impurities, since they are apparently
not necessary constituents of the air.
Recent analysis has shown that these
bodies tend to disappear in. the air ns
a higher altitude Is reached until they
disappear altogether. It would seem,
therefore, that microbes, hydrocarbons
and entitles other than oxygen and
nitrogen, and perhaps also argon, are
only incidental to the neighborhood of
human Industry, animal life and damp
vegetation.—Chicago Cbronicl^.
Whr Bod tea Were Embalmed.
The Egypt*** 118 believed that the soul
lived only as long ns the l»ody endured;
bfnee their rea/ion for embalming the
body to make It last as long as possi
ble. It is estimated that altogether
there are 400,000,000 mummied in
Egypt
Bad men live that they may eat and
drink, whereas good men eat and drink
that they may live.—Socrates.
i It is some compensation for great
evils that they enforce great lessons.—
Bovee.
Ancient Remedies For Hlcconirh.
The hiccough seems to be a modern
a^d dangerous disease, but the an
cients knew it and prescribed reme
dies that might now be tried advan
tageously. Galen recommended sneez
ing. Aetlus approved of a cupping in
strument with great bent, to the
breast Alexander believed In an ory-
mei of squilh. Alsnfyamvlus made lue
of refrigerant drafts. Rhazea put his
trust in calefacients. such ns cumin,
pepper, rue and the like in vinegar.
Rogefius ’looked kindly on cnlefncieut.
atteuuant and carminative medicines.
tracer Dalle fa of People of Ancloat
KVTPt Ucffardluff Pass.
The inhabitants of ancient Egypt are
believed to have been the first people
to attempt to domesticate the wild spe
cies of feiinae now represented by the
common house cat This belief Is based
upon the fact that sculptured repre
sentations of such animals are found
upon their monuments of the year
2000 B. C., more than 1,200 years be
fore they appear on European monu
ments. An Egyptian tomb of the year
1300 B. C, is the first to show a sculp
tured representation of the cat as a
domesticated animal, those of the
greater age first mentioned probably
representing the creature In its wild
state. In the relief sketch of the date
last mentioned, 1300 B. it is unmis
takably n pet, being shown ns seated
beneath a chair. The Egyptians of
that age mummified dead cats just as
they did human beings and in many
instances entombed hundreds of thou
sands of them in a single pyramid or
pit. Bubnstis was the Egyptian cat
goddess and was always represented
as having a cat’s head. Among that
queer people puss was regarded ns nu
emblem of the sun, its eyes being sup
posed to vary In color and In the size
of their pupils with the progress of
that luminary across the heavens.
Herodotus tells us that when an
Egyptian cat died n natural death its
owner went into mourning and shaved
off his eyebrows.
Established in 1794.
Oldest Firm;In Amerlo
D. A. WALKER ft CO.
IRON FENCE CHEAPER THAN WOOD
32.Medina Street, „
CHARLESTON, S C
MARBLE AND
CRANITK WORKS.
and ’ i!
1
i
Jfot Jumt Wbat He Meant.
Lloyd George was addressing a meet
ing in Wales, and his cbair*»un said:
*T hnff to Introduce you to the member
of the Carnarvon boroughs. He hass
come here to reply to what bishop
of St. Asaph said the other night about
Welsh disestablishment. In my opin
ion, gentlemen, the bishop of St. Asaph
Is one of the biggest liars in creashon.
But he hass his match in Lloyd
Georgs r*
.Savored of tho Tret*.
“That’s no lie.” remarked the mm
It is Dangerous to Neglect a Cold.
How often do we hear it remarked:
“It’s only a cold,” and a lew days later
leorn that the man is on hla back with
pneumonia. This is ot such common
occurrance that a cold, however alight,
should not he disregarded. Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy counteracts any
tendency of a co d to result in pneu
monia, and baa gained Ha great populari
ty and extensive sale by its prompt
cures oi this mpit common ailment It
always cures and is pkaeant to take.
For sale by John M Klein. ,
Send For Prices,;
Mr A. K. Beach represent* us at
Waltertooro !
A D WALKER. J D. SCOTT
A Mountain of Gold?;
could not bring as much bappineas^to
Mrs Lucia Wilke, of Caroline, Wis., as
did one 25c bt x of Bucklen’a Arnica
Salve, when it completely cured a run
ning sore on her leg, which bad tortured
her 28 long years. Greatest antiseptic
besler of Piles, Wounus, and Sores. 25c
at Jno M Klein’s drug store.
Abhor Meat and Bar Osier Theory. ^
Atlanta, May 5.—A new religious
sect, which anibng other tenets pro
fesses an abhorence of meat, and be
lieve that a man may live to be 150
years,old with the proper care of him
self, will locate in Atlanta. Rev.!
Harry G. Walker, of Milwaukee,' Wis., 1
has been in Atlanta recently Investi
gating certain resorrs near town with
a view of purchasing a place for his
sect to make its quarters. It appears
that the sect styles itself the Convert
ers. They are about 400 people in
this new band of religious enthusiasts. I
Ward Entertained at Shanghai.
Shanghai. May 5.—George'*}. Ward,
of New York, vice president of the
Commercial Pacific Cable company,
who arrived here recently to supervise
the completion of the Manila-Shanghai
link, was entertained by the American
associations of China at a banquet at
which several distinguished Chinese
who were among those present heart
ily welcomed the new cable connec
tion with the United States.
A good complexion is impossible with
the stomach out of order. If pasty sallow
people would pay more attention to their
stomachs and less to the skin on their
faces, they would have better complex-
Iona KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA will
digest what you eat sod put your
stomach back !a right shape to do its
own work. Kodoi relieves palpitation
of the heart, flatulence, sour atomach,
heart burn, etc. Bold by John M Klein
Deaths from Appendicitis
decrease in (be same ratio that the use
of Dr King’s New Life Pills increases.
They save you from danger an l brin
quick and painless
patios ana the
Btrength and vigor
bse. Guaranteed by Jno M Klein, drag-
gist. 25c Tr> ^em,^ 4
db.king’sincw discovery
Will lanly Stos’IM Ciwh.