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J / Weak Hearts Are due to Indigestion. Ninety-nine ef every one kundred people who have heart trouble can remember when It was simple Indiges tion. It is a scientific fact that all cases of heart disease, not organic, are not only traceable to, but are the direct result of Indi gestion. All food taken into the stomach which falls of perfect digestion ferments and swellstho stomach, puffing it up against the heart. This Interferes with the action of the heart, and In the course of time that delicate but vital organ becomes diseased. 1 Mr. D. Kauble, of Nevada, O , says: I had atomach trouble and was In a bad state as I had heart trouble with It I took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure far about four months and It cured me, Kodol Digests What You Eat and relieves the stomach of all nervous strain and the heart of all pressure. Bottles only. $ 1.00 Size holding 2 4 times the trial size, which sells for 50c, Prepared by E. 0. DeWITT &0O., OHIOAQO. Presents One Minute Cough Cure For Coughs, CoMo and Groups SAVING A HEAT VICTIM Sun Stricken Reporter Tells How He Was Treated. PLUNGED INTO A POLAB SEA. POLmHONEMAR •tope tla* ooufla •sad boolsltasaga Let The Shoe Store Fit Your Feet One of the very importantthings in buying Shoes is the fit. This we study as'well as value. Bring‘,yourfeet and let us fit them. We don’t p’ride our selves on cheap Shoes but good Sho;es at right prices. The R. S. Lipscomb Shoe Company Arrived. Gaffney Company Prescription Druggists. J. E. Greene, Manager. Opposite Belli Hotels. WANTED. Wanted for prospective buyer, 50 or 60 acre farm, near Gaffney, on easy terms and at a reasonable price. Wanted—16 acre farm near Gaffney. For Sale. 386 acre farm. 67 acre farm. 70 acre farm, seven room dwelling, fine barn. 49 acre farm, good tenant houses, both almost in corporate limits. Two houses and lots, Blacksburg. Two fine lots in Gaffney, two blocks from depot, Lot 80x200, West End, 5350, easy terms. For Rent. 130 acre farm. Several nice houses and lots in Gaffney. , Representative of Sun Fire Insurance Company. R. L. PARISH, Office National Bank Building. POLEYSHONET^DVR #l»r chltdrmni tafm, aurm, Jgo oplatat :: The most brilliant gem that waa ever takes from the earth would aot amount to much if there were no peo ple to appreciate its beauty and to vie with each other for its possession. The most spacious store, the most carefully selected stock of goods, the clever est corps of clerks will not avail unless people know about them. Knowledge of such things is spread in various ways. A passerby may drop in and be impressed. He may tell his neighbor, and he in turn may tell somebody else. That is one way, and there are some merchants who today think it is good enough. Modern develop ment, however, has sup* plied in newspapers the best means. They go into ev ery home in the land, how ever humble, however mag nificent. Through them all of the information can be supplied, not to one, but to thousands. Arc you using this Mpcr to tkc beet adv&nugtf , FOR Building and Plastering Lime, Coal, and Plaster Hair, Plaster Paris, Shingles, Portland Cement, Dynamite, Blasting Powder, Fuse, and Dynamite Caps, call on LIMESTONE SPRINGS|L1ME WORKS. CARROLL A CO., Lessees. Telephone 57. The Builders Supply Go. Successors to L. Baker, Will furnish your Building Material of the best that the markets afford and at the lowest living prices. No. 1 heart pine Shingles and Laths, Guar anteed Pure White Lead and Zinc, and Pure Linseed Oil. Nothing better to paint your house with and costs less than mixed paints. When In need of anything In the building line, call and see us; we’ll treat you cour-, teously and make your estimates for nothing. Lv. B a It e r. MANAGER. 1 Promptness Guaranteed. Picture Framing, .Sign Writing, Paper I Hanging,Tlou je and Carriage Painting L. R. Gaines’ ’Phone No. 47 POPULAR EXCURSIONS via SOUTHERN RAILWAY. The Southern Railway will sell round-trip tickets to the following points, for special occasion: Nashville, Tenn. Peabody Summer School, Vanderbilt Biblical Institute, June 14th, August 9th, 1905. Rate, one fare plus 25 cents, for round trip. DENVER, Col. Account Interna tional Epworth League Convention. Rato very low, and will be given up on application. Southern Railway can offer many other attractive rates. For full Information consult any Ticket Agent, or R. W. Hunt, Division Passenger Agent, Charleston, 8. C. Totter* In a !Vevr York Street and Then Waken L’p Suddenly In an lee Bath at Bellevue Honpltal—How He 'Waa Handled by a Doctor and HI* Attendant*. During the recent spell of hot weath er the physicians of Bellevue hospital, in New York, have been doing a noble work In the relief of citizens stricken by the heat. Their ministrations are not only successful In saving the life of the patient, but the process to which the sunstruck one Is subjected Is pleas ant aud bracing. This account was written by a reporter for the New York World who was recently treated at Bellevue for sunstroke: It was a curious series of circum stances that sent me to the Isolation ward of Bellevue. Too much to eat at Irregular hours and not half enough sleep, followed by a wild desire to hus tle lu the hot sun on an important news story, gave me a feeling of awful lassitude and dejection. The work to be done lay over east of Second ave nue. At 5 o'clock I remember labor ing along heavily In a slow walk, my legs feeling like bags of sand and my head throbbing painfully. I felt hot. dry, stifling, feverish. Suddenly my body seemed to go sail ing smoothly In midair, the unneeded legs floating uselessly under It. All the world was whirling in a mass of red vapor wreaths, and I began to fall. The falling sensation seemed to last for ages. I fell, now fast, now slow, again fast, until I plunged Into the polar sea. Oh, how cold It was! Surely nothing else could be half so cold as this. Dim ly my struggling mind began to re member reading somewhere tbe Eski mo belief that hell is a place of eter nal, illimitable lee. This surely was that place. Fubr, who nobly stood by his fallen companion, afterward as sured me that quite twenty minutes elapsed from the time I dropped like u log on the hot side of Twenty-fourth street until I began flopping like a newly caught fish In tho Ice water tub at Bellevue, but the mind of the pa tient recognized no gap between the fall and tbe ice bath. 1 struggled with all the force that was In me to break the grasp of count less hands that held me down In that Icy sea. They were not trying to drown me, for nose and eyes aUvays remained above tho waves, but surely they were going to freeze me to death, for file cold of the Icy sea seemed to strike into the spinal cord Itself. With one last gathering of strength I plunged upward. No use. Eight hands held me fast. Now I noticed that the eight hands were chafing me ceaselessly from head to foot. Per haps, after all,-their Intentions were not murderous. As my mlud became clearer I was able to distinguish the face of the man in command, u long, studious face, with a square blue chin and lit by kindly blue eyes that gleamed through glasses. “Not so bad now,” said tbe face. “What’s his temperature?” “One hundred and one, six, doctor," replied another face, which I had not seen before. “Good," said the doctor. ‘‘Keep the massage going.” The eight hands flew over the pa tient's body, rubbing as briskly as tbe hands of trainers over a football player. There was in the situation a humorous likeness to that of an athlete being rubls*d down between rounds. The patient grinned a little at the Idea. "How’re you feeding?” asked the doe tor. "Kuk - kuk - kuk - cold,” I replied. “They’ve gut 8,000 cubic miles of Ice and salt packed on tbo top of tho back of my bead.” “M-m-m,” mused the doctor, while he and his three assistants kept on briskly chafing limbs and body. “What's the temperature?” “Ninety-nine," answered a voice. “Good," was the doctor’s comment. “Now, thou!” Lifted by the eight hands, the pa tient’s body was wafted from the Icy polar sea to a bed, a small, white cot. 1 lay back on warm, exquisitely clean woolen blankets and skivered luxuri ously. But the ice mountain at the top of the back of my bead still felt so In tensely cold that it seemed to burn. The doctor cut the string under my ear and took off a big rubber cap filled with cracked Ice. I looked down from the cot and saw beside the l>ed a long bathtub on four rubber tired wheels. It was painted white outside and made of spotless, highly polished zinc with in. A dozen or more crystal chunks of Ice floated In the water. ‘The doctor laughed ns I jooked down Into the tub and shivered. “You’ll do,” he said. “You’re all right.” After a few hours’ rest they brought me a bowl of chicken broth and bade im* eat It slowly. I have never tasted nectar, but surely It must be something like this. The doctor came In and said I might go home, but I must be sure to get a long night’s sleep. "A knockdown like this takes a lot out of you.” he said. "You were not •one of the worst cases, hut you must be careful. The bath? That wasn’t so awfully cold. We never let It get be low .VI degrees F. The cold plunge and plenty of massage stimulated your clr- cnlatlon and brought It back to the normal. If you had been a very bad case wu would have given you hypo dermic Injections of digitalis and strychnine to spur tho heart to ac tion. But you didn’t need that." GOAT AS “LAMU CHOPS.” How the Feattre Billy 1* Trans formed by Batcher*. Goat, says the department of agri culture in a bulletin recently Issued, goat, common garden goat, supplies a considerable part of the “lamb" and “mutton” handled by the great pack ing houses and sold by the wholesalers and retailers all over the country. Au expert named Thompson, who conducted the goat Investigation, re flects as follows in his report upon goat as a table delicacy, says a Wash ington dispatch to the Kansas City Star: “It Is generally agreed by those who speak from experience that the kids of all breeds of goats are a table deli cacy. It Is true that among the great masses of the people of this country there Is a remafkable and well ground ed prejudice against anything bearing tbe name of goat. “Within the environments of the larger cities are found many kids, and it Is evident that only a few of them ever grow to maturity. What becomes of the rest? Butchers rfnd meat deal ers answer this question by saying that they are sold as lamb. No meat dealer has ever heard a complaint against the quality of such lamb. “A considerable number of middle aged and old mongrel goats are pur chased by the packing houses of the larger cities. They are purchased as gout, but are sold as mutton, and many of those who so strenuously con demn goat have eaten It a score of times.” Mr. Thompson adds that the elderly goat Is not as good as good mutton, but that it is not any worse than bad mutton. He insists that the prejudice against it would disappear If the peo ple would only make a test and eat goat as goat instead of as lamb. He Is not very hopeful, however, of such a result. Mr. Thompson Is George Fayette Thompson, editor of the bu reau of animal Industry. He started ni*on his goat report with the purpose of answering the numerous Inquiries which have reached the bureau ns to the possibility of creating a goat in dustry In the United States. It was while Incidentally remarking upon the present size of the Industry that he nm<|e the startling statements which confound our morning lamb with goat chops. WITHIN A FLOWERY FENCE. Facts Are Stubborn TWnjs Uniform excellent quality for OVOr 1 quartor Of a century has steadily increased the sales of LION COFFEE, The leader of all package coffees. lion Coffee is now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a positive proof that U0N COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE suryires ail opposition. UON COFFEE keeps Its old friends and makes new ones every day. UON COFFEE has even mom than Its Strength. Flavor and Qual ity to commend It. On arrival from the plantation. It la carefully roast ed at our factories and securely packed In 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed tor use In the home. This precludes the possibility ofl adulteration or contact with germs, dirt* dust. Insects or unclean hands. The absolute purity of UON COFFEE Is therefore guaranteed to tbe consumer. Bold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE 00., Toledo, Ohio. Yovel Feature* I’lnimed For the JnmeMtown Kxhibltlon In 1007. Flower displays will be a feature of the Jamestown exhibition In 11)07 on tlx* shore of the Hampton Roads, be tween Norfolk and Fort Monroe, says the Washington Post. Over 5,000 small plants were gath ered last winter for use on tbe grounds. There are more honeysuckle slips than any other shrubs or vines. Nearly 125,0(H) honeysuckle plants were secured. Next In number come slips of periwinkle, and third are the trumpet vino plants. Recently the grounds were Inclosed by a wire fence stretched on decorative posts. This fence will be covered with flowers and verdure. Twenty thousand rosebushes have been placed along the lines of wire, and trumpet vine and honeysuckle have been planted at Intervals. Before the gates of tbe exposition open a thick mass of green, commingling with honeysuckle- flowers and red roses, will obscure all outside view. It has been part of the decorative plan evolved by the board of design that native plants should be used as far as possible. Fifty thousand Eu ropean private cuttings, such as are In use for hedges In England, will be used, as well as between 10,000 and 20,000 cuttings of mountain laurel and willow and miscellaneous collections from old Virginia gardens. Among the large shrubs will behollys, red maples, locusts, flowering dogwood, apple and cherry trees, red cedar, paper mulber ries and water oaks. Several thousand willows are already In position. It has been the design to preserve the natural features of the grounds wherever possible. The por tion of tidewater Virginia where tbe exhibition Is to be held Is known for the luxuriance with which plants and flowers grow. * ft * R! Within Reach ist he money to your credit in the Gaffney Savings Bank. But remember that it is your reach only that it is within; your written order is neceasary to obtain it. Burglars aud thieves have no chance to get it. 1 The Gaffney Savings Bank would like to open an account with ycu. One dollar will do for a start, your own pride will make it grow. We pay four per cent, inter- est on air deposits. The Gaffney Savings Bank. Office in The National Bank of Gaffney. — ^ M M M • AM.** A • ^ ^ B to S ^ B IN-rnIntcncc of the Darker Race*. Thirty years ago it was common enough to meet persons not unedu cated who talked as though the darker races were dying out before the gin, gunpowder and disease disseminated by Europeans, says the National Re view. -Almost every one knows better now—knows that the Chinese, the Hindoo, the Arab, the negro, the chief colored races, In fact, increase and multiply wherever the white man re strains war, famine and pestilence. Even the American Indian between Texas and the Gran Chaco Is In no hurry to be Improved off the face of 1 the new world. The education of the colored races and their equipment by European science are only beginning, I yet the last decade has witnessed tho defeat of two great European powers— one by chocolate hued mountaineers, the other by tawny Islanders. The Cherokee Building and Loan Association Opens its Second Series Angnst 5th, 1905. Now is the time to subscribe and file your application for a loan Don’t put it off. Others are join ing and loans are made according to turn. It’s like goingto mill. See us about it. W. H. Gooding, Sec. and Treas. C. A. Jefferies, President. Strictly "m Grade Buggies Bnrlal by Machinery. The Armley burial board at Leeds, In , England, Is considering the desirabili ty of adopting a singular labor saving device for Interments, says the Lon don Chronicle. Tho Invention consists of an appliance for lowering tho coffins into tho grave, and It Is claimed that there Is nothing to offend tbe senslblli- | ties of the mourners, tho body being lowered slowly and reverently. When the coffin reaches Its resting place the girths of the appliance release them- 1 selves automatically. The adoption of . the Invention, It Is pointed out, will prevent the painful scenes that s »me- Mmes occur at funeral* Go to Smith Hardware Co. and buy the famous “Tyson & Jones.” The Smith Hardware Co. now have the exclusive agency for our fine line of Buggies, Runabouts, Phaetons, Surries, Car riages, &c., in this immediate territory, and will make the prices right. Call on them. You can get no better work on any market. :: :: :: :: :: TYSON & JONES BDGGY CO., Carthage, N. C. Study Your Own Interests If it is a Buggy you want, you want the best. The best Buggy made is tho Buggy made by Taylor, Cannady vfe Co. We have them in both open aud top. The only Wagon giving absolute satisfaction is the celebrated Geo. E. Nissen. We have them. Do you want the only Disc Plow that will work a hillside and give satisfaction? If so, call and see Avery’s Pluto Disc Plow. A full line of Turn Plows aud Farming Implements. : : : Lipscomb, Goudelock <2b Co. GAFFNEY, 'S. C.