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WANTED! Millions to know the great merits of Alabastine, the Btnltary Wall Coating—Not a hot or cold water disease-breeding kalsomlne, bearing a fanciful name. LET US HELP YOU. Write for onr artists’ free color plans—different effects for different rooms—In white, delicate grays, greens, pinks, blues, and yellows, using astved I ( ' J ~ A n _ _ I, |i AaMAM A Destroys disease HOCK IlCmCnT germs and ver min; does not rub or scale. No washing of walls after once applied. You cau brush It on—mix with cold water. Other finish es, mixed with either hot or cold water, do not have the cementing proper ty of Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue, or other animal matter which rots, feeding disease germs, rubbing, sealing, and spoiling walls, clothing, etc. Such finishes must be washed oft every year—costly, filthy work. Buy Alabastine only in 5 lb. p’k’gs, prop erly labeled. I’rotty wall and ceillnK design, “Hints on Decorating” and tint card. free. ALABASTINE CO.. Grand Rapids, Mich., or 105 Water St., N. Y, For sale in Gaffney by CHEROKEE DRUG COMPANY. FRINGE REFUSES RUSSIANS A LOAN This Action May Help to Obtain Peace In Far East. RUSSIA IS APPROACHING A CRISIS NEGRO GETS A NEW TRIAL. Mrs. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, oerwau* neat, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion, Kadol oures Indigestion. . This new discovery repra- senta the natur/tl Juices of digestion as they axial in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does no* 'nly/cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this C ous remedy cures all stomach trouble* cleansing, purifying, sweetening ene strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. „ Er. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W. Va., aaya — ■waa troubled with aour stomach for twenty year* lerbeby” m * * n<1 W9 aro now uxln( 11 1,1 Kodol Digests What You Eat Bottleaonly. 51.00 Sire holding 254 tlmas the trir alze, which sells for 50 cents. &r r o. Dewrrr * oo.. ohio voo For Sale by Cherokee Drug Co. “Ask for the 1905 Kodol Almanac and 200 Year Calendar. Edwards, the Condemned Woman Says He la Innocent. Harrisburg, Pa., March 15.—Th< Pennsylvania supreme court having decided yesterday to send the case ol Samuel Greason, negro, under sentenci of death in Reading for the murder ol Job nGd wards in 1901, back to the Berks county court, the 'board of par dons today granted a continuance in his case and also in that of Mrs. Kate Edwards, white, who is also con demned to death for the same crime. At the February session of the par don board the condemned couple were reprieved until ten days after the pres ent meeting of tae board so that the attorneys could again take the case of Greason into court. The decision of the board today acts as a stay, pending the disposal of the case of the Berks county court. Greason and Mrs. Edwards had been sentenced to be hanged on Feb. 16, but on Feb. 15 attorneys for Greason appeared before the board of pardons and submitted evidence to the effect that Mrs. Edwards had confessed that Greason was innocent of the crime ol killing her husband. The board ol pardons thereupon reprieved Greason so that his case could be further in vestigated and reprieved Mrs. Ed wards in order that she might be used as a witness in Greason's Behalf. Nothing has been done looking to ward a new trial for the condemned woman. VALUABLE TABLEWARE STOLEN. $5,000 GUARAN- / TEED BY A BANK DEPOSIT Railroad Fare Paid. 500 FREE Courses Offered. B ardatCost. WrlteQuick GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE,Macon.Ga. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM ICteanics and boautifle* the hair. 1 Promote* a luxuriant growth. I Never Falla to Beatore Gray I Hair to its Youthful Color. I Cun* *calp disease* Sc hair falling. One RKnute Cough Cure ^or Coughs* Colds and Croup* NOTICE! We want every man and women In the United States Interested In the cure of Opium, Whiskey or other drug habits, either for themselves or friends, to have one of Dr. Woolley’s hooks on these dis eases. Write Dr. B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box 287, and one will he sent you free. French Press It Favorable to React and Great Pressure Will Be Brought To Bear on Czar—American Vesse Is Seized. Paris, March 15.—The post pone mem of the Russian loan is definitely con firmed. This is likely to exert a pow erful influence towards peace as it is the first time the French financiers have shown an indisposition to ad vance any funds, while the uncertain ties of war continue. The following dietalls of the postponement are froir an authoritative source: A committee representing the syndi cate of FTench underwriters went tc St. Petersburg to arrange the condi tions with the minister of finance anc a contract was drawn up for a $120, 000,000 loan, taking the form of treas ury bonds running seven years at t per cent. The contract was then brought bacl< to Paris for the advance of all the un derwriters. In the meantime the dis astrous events in Manchuria naturallj aroused doubts on the part of finan ciers as to whether Russia shouli | make peace or pursue the war. The influence of the financial elements wa almost unanimous for peace but Rus sia's distinclination to consider peace appears to have induced the decisior j not to proceed with the contract and i accordingly the signing of which was ! expected yesterday has been postponed | and all the pending negotiations are also postitoneci. According to the Russian view this does not mean thal | the negotiations have been broken ofl hut merely that they are adjourned m the Russian authorities say the syndi cate holds itself bound towards Russia now as before. However, the circum stances of the adjournment tend tc show that, the syndicate inclines tc wait for some definite development of peace before proceeding any fur ther. It is authoritatively denied ir the highest Russian quarters that tht French government exercised anj pressure towards preventing the in crease of French holdings of Russiar securities. Nevertheless it is probable J that some members of the government noting indi\.ideally v^Kjed the pre vailing view that caution was deslra-; Colonel M. J. Burke, United Statea hie. Since M. Rouvier has combined consul at St. Thomas, is critically ill with pneumonia. There is no hope for his recovery. A HARD CIDER DRUNK. The Experience of a Boston Drummer In New Hempehlre. “I don’t know whether any of you fellers ever indulged In a hard cider drunk or not,” said the Boston drum mer, “but I had one experience, and don’t hanker after another. It was in New Hampshire, where they say that cider ages slow and gets that oily, unctlous taste to perfection. I took a day or two off my route to pay a visit to my uncle and aunt, and I had hardly greeted them when Uncle Dick brought in a pitcher of hard ci der to dampen the cotton in my throat. I hadn’t had any in years before, and it went right to the spot and tickled me all over. “As I was drinking my third glass and telling Aunt Hannah how all my folks were, a good-looking girl came In. As I was drinking my fourth and telling Uncle Dick what a fine farm he had, the preacher and his wife showed up. As I w r as slowly sipping ray fifth and wondering why in the devil people ran after champagne when they could get hard cider, a widow called to ask Uncle Dick’s advice about a sick cow. “I was introduced to everybody in turn, and was making as good an im pression as possible, when I sudden ly began to feel a strange elation. I think it was about the sane feeling General Nogi had when Port Arthur surrendered to him. I remember that I began to grin and laugh and .vanted to lend somebody $50, and then I lost track of things. “The next thing I knew,” continued the drummer with a sad shake of the head, “two days had passed and I was just getting over one of the biggest jags ever seen in that part, of New Hampshire. "What followed MURRAY IRON , MIXTURIE Now is the time toltakea spring tonic. By far the best thing to take is Murray'H Iron Mixture. It makes f mre blood and gets rid of that tired eeling. At all drug stores AOsj ti EJot 1.1 or direct from The Murray Drug Co., Columbia, S. C. No business can possibly be successful that is not adver tised. This is a sweeping statement, but it is true. There are tome merchants in this community whose experience apparently contradicts the statement. The contradiction, however, is only apparent. If they have attained any degree of success they have advertised. They have let people know what they had to sell, what they were here for and what they pioposed to do. Just in proportion to the thorough ness with which they have done this and met the conditions of their competitors they have suc ceeded. If they have used the newspa pers they have worked with the best tools so far as getting pub licity is concerned. If they have worked without the newspapers they have been handicapped and have not attained the highest possible measure of success. A fertile teed planted in fertile ground, carefully watered, will thrive and bear fruit A properly organised business, in any inhabited place, well advertised will succeed. The law ef growth is aa certain and Inraihle in one case aa the othac. fn himself the presidency of coun Oil of ministers and the ministry ol finance the government has indirectly exerted stijong influence on private financial affairs. It is eignifleant thal -the postponement of the loan Is coil cldent with a strong movement of thf influential French press favorable tc peace. The Matin prominently displays 2 statement believed to reflect the views of financial circles which declares thal If Japan is ready to adopt agenerous attitude by waiving an indemnity ol Imposing any humiliation upon Russia then Russia’s policy of war to the bit ter end will cease. It is noticeable that some of the Russian officials epeak approvingly of the latter propo eltion. They say peace is impossi hie if an indemnity or any bumillatlnB conditions are asked, so that the elim ination of those two points will go fai towards securing favorable cousidera tion of peace. Capture of An American Steamer. Tokio, March 15.—2 p. m.—Th( American steamer Tacoma was seized by the Japanese guardship yesterday Match 14.. The Tacoma Is an iror twin-screw steamer, of 1,650 tons reg ister. She is owmed by the Northerr Pacific Steamship company, of Seat tie, from which port she sailed Jan 6, with a cargo of barrel beef foi Vladivostok. It is said, although, os tensibly she was bound for Shanghai When last reported, the Tacoma wa? fast in the ice north of Hokkaido is land, with Japanese ships lying In wail to pick her up when she worked 1 clear A Safe Cough Medicine for Children. In buying a cough medicine for children never be afraid to buy Cham berlain’s Cough Remedy. There is no danger from it and relief is always sure to follow. It Is especially valu able for colds, croup and whooping cough. For sale by Cherokee Drug Co. There are no wolves In the empty sheepfold. Pleasant and Harmless. Don’t drug the stomach to cure a cough. One Minute Cough Cure cuts the mucous, draws the inflammation out of the throat, lungs and bronchial tubes, heals, soothes and cures. A quick cure for Croup and Whooping Cough, One Minute Cough Cure re lieves a cough in one minute because it acts first on the mucous membrane right where the cough troubles—in the throat or deep-seated on the lungs. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffeny; L. D. Alllison, Cowpens. V7i You cannot hoddwink heaven with a holy aspect. Raw or Inflamed Lungs Yield quickly to the wonderful curative and healing qualities of Fo ley’s Honey and Tar. It prevents pneumonia and consumption from a hard cold settled on the lungs. Chero kee Drug Co. Love gives no with courtesy. license to dispense I^or Settle From my prize-winners. R. I. Reds, Rose and Single Comb. Kggs 15 for #1.50; White Plymouth Rocks, U. R. Fisbei’s strain of prize-win ners, eggs £1.50 for 15: Tarred Ply mouth Rocks, Hawkins’strain, eggs #1.00 for 15. All my stock is flue se lected and show birds My Rhode Island Reds are the best that I could l^uy in Massachusetts and Rhode Is land. Send us your orders and we will give you good fresh eggs. Cherokee Poultry Yards E. R. CASH, Prop. GAFFNEY, - - - S.C. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. All druggists refund the money if It fails to cure. E. W. after I i Grove’s signature is on each box. 25c. Wealthy Man’s Home Ransacked and $50,000 Worth of Valuables Taken. New York, March 15.—Property val ued at from $10,0(K) to $50,000 consist ing mostly of gold and silver tableware, has been stolen from the home, in East Ninety-fourth street, of Joseph E. Schoenberg, a wealthy merchant, whe has establishments through Ohio and Pennsylvania. The merchant and his family are now traveling in Europe. Bric-a-brac, silverware, paintings and other house hold articles valued at nearly $200,000 were left there without a caretaker. Inspection of the house by Schoen berg's son-in-law and the latter’s wife disclosed the robbery. Some of the rooms had been com pletely ransacked and many chests containing the family silverware were nearly empty. Much valuable prop erty in the closets, however, had not been disturbed, evidently the robbers had been frightened off. NEWS TERSELY TOLD. FOR Up-to-Date Job PrirN ing, cal! at. the Chinese Govern Traffic. Tien Tsin, March 15.—Train servlet on the Yinl k ow, KoupatklnBeBlmlntoi railroad will be resumed tomorrow. Ii Is understood that the Japanese hav< agreed to the Chinese regulations gov arning traffic on the road. Japs Cruisers at Singapore, London, March 15.—A dispateh t< the Star from Singapore says that foui Japanese cruisers arrived here todaj from the eastward. Government Will Repair Cruiser Lena Vallejo, Cal., March 15.—The plans of the Russian government to have th< Russian cruiser Lena, which has beer lying at the Mare Island navy yard foi many months, repaired at the Unlor Iron works. San Francisco, have beer abandoned, as President Roosevel would not give the desired permission The work will be done at Mare Islam by the regular yard employes. Th< boilers of the Lena are to be retubed and the pumps repaired, and there 1 a great deal of other work. Tw< months’ time will be required to 00m plete the repairs. By the will of the late J. Dundas Llpplncott, probabted in, Philadelphia, the bulk of the testator’s $5,000,000 is left for the benefit of his widow. Secretary of -State Hay is cop fined to his home by a recurrence of his old bronchial trouble, which makes It dif ficult and painful for him to speak. Fire has damaged the medical de partment of the University of Tennes see, located at Nashville, to the extent of about $20,000; fully covered by in surance. A decree has been issued terminat ing the state of martial law which was proclaimed in Rio Janeiro and its neighborhood Nov. 16 as a result ol the insurrectionary movement. The Wisconsin assembly has passed a hill for the compulsory mutualiza tion of life insurance companies from stock companies when a company has acquired $20,000,000 of insurance. The British ship Wray Casde, from Portland, Ore., which arrived at Queenstown yesterday, has been driv en ashore and several others haw dragged their anchors owing to the severity of the gale off this coast. Whitecapers have made their appear ance in Marshall county Tennessee, and negroes are panic-stricken. It is reported that night raiders have re cently gone to the cabins of several negroes and taken the men to the woods and there flogged them. H. K. Kentwell, of Honolulu, alias H. K. Kapea, was arrested today in London, on the charge of embezzle ment at the request of the authorities at Washington, and later was remand ed at Bow street police court pending the arrival of papers In the case. Queen Alexandra, Princess Victoria and Prince and Princess Charles ol Denmark, have departed from London for Lisbon to visit the king and queen of Portugal. The trip Is largely tm the benefit of the health of Princess Victoria, who recently was operated on for appendicitis. Rear Admiral Whiting, United States Navy, has received a severe injury by a fall while alighting from a moving electric car at Honolulu. He sustained a scalp wound and was unconscious for two hours, but recovered after be ing taken to Queens hospital. His injuries are not likely to prove fatal. Announcement has been made at army headquarters that Brigadier Gen eral Frank D. Baldwin, at present in command of the Colorado regiment has been advanced to comm and thi southwestern division, with headquni ters at Oklahoma City. gBrigaruier General William R. MaMskey will suo coed him. got tight I learned from my grim Un cle Dick and my weeping Aunt Han nah. “I had kissed the good-looking girl. | I had hugged the widow with a sick cow and offered to marry her. I had threatened to lick the preacher if he didn’t cut off his chin whiskers, and I had taken his wife under my arm and tried to show her how to dance a sailor’s hornpipe. When Uncle LfcDGER O'fjCG. Dick had tried to stop me I had wres tled him (Iowtt on his hack, and when Aunt Hannah came to his rescue I had playfully bitten her ear and galloped her around the room. They had to send for the constable and two farm ers’ hired men to get me to bed, and the drunk lasted two whole days. When the old folks had finished tell ing me what had happened T replied: “ ‘Well, I am sorry for it and beg everybody’s pardon.’ “ ‘But that won’t do, James,’ said Aunt Hannah. ‘It might do for us, aa we are related to you, and as we gave you the cider, but It won’t do for the others.’ “ ‘Yes, I know you do, hut the preacher is coming today with a club, the good-looking girl has three broth ers who are waiting for sight of you, and the widow’ with the sick cow r Is going to hold you to your promise or begin a hreach-of-promlse suit James, the hair of the dog is good for the bite. Take another drink of hard ci der and then get out by the hack way. where Uncle Dick has a horse an! buck-board waiting to take you to town. When you co^-e again, James —when you come aga’n, I shall have a barrel of elderberry wine for you to d-ink, for you seem too young and guileless for the hard cider of this sober and Industrious State.’” Dr. S. H. Griffith, PHYSICAN - SURGEON - OCULIST' Former pupil of the celebra ted Oculist, Dr. Julian J. Chisolm, ol Baltimore. Has also taken special post-grad uate course in the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital of Baltimore. Gaffney, S. C ■ fty* Glasses Fitted Accurately and Scientifically. J* Office in Cherokee Drug Co., B'ldg. ShoeSafety in Walkover Shoes Shoe safety means a lot of things that you want when you spend your shoe money. It means being’sure of good'quali- ty, good fit, good style, good.value for the* price. It means satisfaction to you in every respect. You are sure of this -when you get a shoe with the.name “Walkover” on it. FOR SALE BY Geo. D. Tillman’s Word. (Fairfax Enterprise.) Our valued subscriber, Mr. S. Young, of Ellenboro, N. C..—whose noble head Is crowned with thosd sil ver hairs so beautiful and honorable In the righteous man, says: “Had I the power I would give the ballot to the mothers who rock the cradles of the world. It Is the mother to whom 1 the little tot looks up first of all with 1 love and confidence, and through all the ages the mothers may be trusted to live or die for the good of the sons and daughters they have brought in-; to the world.” The words of this dear old octoge narian recall my own beloved father’s [ words of approval and encourage ment to me when I summoned all my courage and spoke out to my world ' In appeal for Equal Rights for women In 1891. My father, too, was over j eighty years old, yet with all the feel-1 ings and ideas of an old school Southern gentleman I thank heaven: he had clearness of vision to recog-1 nlze the truth when presented to him by his own daughter. And then again I like to recall that the venerable George Tillman voted for and spoke in favor of giving the ballot to the taxpaying women of South Carolina in the constitutional convention in 1895. He said: “Wo-j man suffrage is coming. Women al-: ways exercise a conservative influ-, ence and they have wisely used the! ballot wherever it has been given! them and have not abused It. They vote in England and in four of the western States, and in half the States for such officials as school trustees. I don’t believe that 10,000 negro wo men In the State could evei command $200 apiece of property, but on the other hand 1 believe that 75,000 white women can do so.” This article from the Columbia Register I pasted in my scrap-book In 1895 and quote the words of the great statesman, George D. Tillman. Piety never parades itself. J. R. Tolleson & Comply- Gaffney, - South Carolina. 4 i i i i i i mm * 4 4 THE GAFFNEY HARDWARE CO HAS OPENED with a large and complete line of Hardware, Cutlery, Farming Imple ments, Harness, etc. Your patronage is solicited. : : : : : EVERYTHING NEW LIMESTONE STREET. * * * k k k mm t k i * 5t < LFr * h ^ nm'm m * ■ *AN13 ^. Jr * Stops the COUGH and Heals the LUNGS For Sals by Chsrokes Druj Co. For Salt by Chorokoo Drug Co. For Salo by Chorokoo Drug Co.