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.> - :*wL RHEUMATISM l BODY BACKED WITH PAIN Nt otbtr bodiljr BAtism. When the' trebched in the blhovihere is hartily umy part of the body tected. The muatles become SQre and drawn, the nerves twitch and stinj, the joints inflame and swell, the bones ache, every movement is one of Agony, and the entire body is racfcdfl vrjth pain. Rheumatism is brought bn by indigestion, stomach troubles, torpid ijiver, weak Kidneys and a general inactive state of the system. The refuse matter instead of passing off through nature’s avenues is left to sour and form uric acid, and other acrid poisons which are absorbed into the blood. Rheumatism does not affect TWELVE ARE KILLED AND SEVERAL INJURED By Exnlo&ion Of Oaa In Ala bama Doal Mine. •EVEN ARE FATALLY INJURED About fifteen year* a*o I naa a sever* Rheumatism and could. attack of work with any rere badly ■a ;tl.m ' and . tUfaotion. My leys swollen and drawn so Z could scarcely walK. I tried m« not ely walk. I tried many rem- •dies but could set no «vl**t. I ira# fin. ally recommended to fry S. S. 8. and It soon cured me sound snd well. I am now 74 years old arid have never had any return of the trouble, JOSEPH PROME HAWLEY, Box 104. Aurora, XU. netime agro I had Rheumatism and to quit work. The pains m my bask between my shoulders was so in* iy good 8. S. Sometime had to and bi tense I could not rest or sleep, everythiny but nothin? did me any go till I heard of and took S. S. S. This medicine cured me sound and well. 1% purified my blood and made me feel like a new man. CONRAD LOHR, 122 E. 19th St. Anderson, Ind. all alike. In some cases it takes a wandering form; it may be in the arms or legs one day and in the shoulders, feet, hands, back or other parts of the body the neat. Others •offer more seriously, and are never face from pain. The uric acid and other irritating substances find lodge ment in the muscles and joints and aa these deposits increase the mus- des become stiff and the joints locked and immovable. It matters not in what form the disease may be the cause is always the same—a sour, acid condition of the blood. This vital stream has lost its purity and freshness, and instead of nourish ing and feeding the different parti with health-giving properties, it fills them with the acids and salts of thii painful and far-reaching disease. The cold and dampness of Winter always Intensify the pains of Rheumatism, and the sufferer to get relief from the agony, rubs the affected parts with liniments, oils, lotions, etc., or uses { ilasters and other home remedies. These are desirable because they give emporary ease and comfort but have no effect on the real trouble which is in the blood and beyond the reach of such treatment. S. S. S. is the best rem- edy for Rheumatism, It goes into the blood and attacks the disease at its head, and by neutralizing and driving out the acids and building up the thin, sour lilMVmL wBBr DXtfiv A blood it cures the disease permanently. w w While cleansing f he blood S. S. S. tones piinwi w VPPFTARIF U P the s tomac hi digestion and every ftUulMDUt. ^er part of the system, soothes the excited nerves, reduces the inflammation, dissolves the deposits in the joints, relieves all pain and completely cures this distressing disease. S. S. S. is a certain cure for Rheumatism in any form ; Muscular, Inflammatory, Articu lar or Sciatic. Special book on the disease and any medical advice, without charge, to all who write. 1HE 8WUT SPECiFIC CO.. ATLANTA* GA* The Mines Where the Explosion Oc curred Are Owned by the Little Cs- haba Company, and Are in the Oa- haba Coal Field. Birmingham, Ala., Fob. M.—Pas sengers arriving here from points near Piper mines, where a gas explosion occurred late Tuesday afternoon, re port that 12 milers are dead, seven fatally hurt and half a dozen others badly injured. Officials of the Little Cahaba Min ing company, which operates the Piper mines, have gone to the scene, but have sent back no reports as yet and the local officers of the company are without additional Information. State Mine Inspector M. M. Kuffner, has also gone to the scene of the dis aster. The names of only six of the dead have been secured so far. The dead: Peter Costello. Steve Memeth. Matt Elzt. John Stone. Louis Yanko. Rich Smith (negro). The mine is owned by the Llttls Ca haba Coal company, dt which 1. R. Smith, of this city, is president. Piper is in Bibb county, in the BloOton field, about 60 miles south of Birmingham. The little settlement is on a spar track of the Birmingham Mineral and is difficult of aooess by wire communi cation. OUR Comforts Are What We Make Them M° ELROY ~ SHANNON SPRING BEDS hr TPTfrie^trw sif ^5:1 CROWN ICOISKIwKSS WILL NLVLR SA.GL Four Dsa'd; Three Missing. New York, Feb. 88.—A dispatoL from Valpraiso, Chile, to the Herald says that on Monday evening ^ fire started in the San Martin Vaudeville the^ier, in Santiago, when the hall was half crowded. A defective electric light •aploded behind the scenes, spreading fire to the nearest curtains, and a few moments later the whole building was In flames. Four persons are dead and three are missing. Only five were in : jured, but many were half asphyxiated The fire department of private ottl- aens did fine rescue work. Then why not make them the best by investing in a Crown or Victor Spring, absolutely guaranteed,"from $2.60 to $6.00 and a good Matress any where from $2.50 up to the genuine Ostemoor Felt for $15.00? Call and see them for yourself. WX.* ; 2 Killed Man, Then Suicided. New York, Feb. 28.—Thomas Dett- man shot and killed his brother-in- law, Thomas F. Fennon, during a Quar rel over Fennen’s young wile, Dett- m&n's sister, whose body at the time of the shooting lay awaiting burial In an adjoining room in the same house. The tragedy occurred in Fen nen’s home in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn. Dettman had come to at tend the funeral oeremony, and Quar reled with his brother-in-law over a surgical operation which had resulted In Mrs. Peunent death. um I The ‘Dexter’ Mattress H 15.00. *' The ‘Rex' Mattress lo.oo. The ‘Regal' Mattress 7.50. Ask for Them. Yours to please. SHUFORD & LeMASTER, Furniture, Stoves and Undertaking. Is It Time You Wont? If so, call at my big store and inspect the great line of fine Clocks I have, and see the best line of Trunks you ever saw, and look at the finest Sewing Machines in the State. I keep at the same old place, not far from the Court House. Call and hear the best Victor Talk ing Machine play you ever heard. All free ofjeharge. Call at the great installment house. W. J. Maness's Big Store. Hello. Central! Who keeps the cleanest market in town? Connect me. I want.to getjsome fresh meats. J. F. Fincken. Mangled at Result of Joka. Schenectady, N. Y., Feb. 28.—WU- $am F. Collins, of Petersburg, Va., a fiafember of the freehman of Union eol- Hfte during class sdrap, waa looked in bis room an the third floor of the dor mitory, the door being secured from the outside. Collins attempted to as eepe by means of a clothes line from the window of his room. The rope was not stout enough to bear his weight, and he fell three stories to the ground. He sustained a broken arm and severe Injuries to his spine, but will probably recover. Students Gather at Nashville. Nashville, Tenn. Feb. 28.—Students by the hundreds, picked delegates from 600 colleges, universities and theolog ical seminaries of the United States and Canada, are In Nashville, the num ber of which will reach a total of more than 8,000. Every section of the land is represented from the mari time provinces of Canada to Califor nla. This Is the fifth convention of the student volunteer movement for foreign missions, these conventions being held quadrennially or once in a generation. Illicit Distillers Killed. Naehvflle, Feb. 18.—A dispatch from Waynesboro, Tenn., says that two brothers named Henson have been killed by depflty marshals in Wayne oounty, Tennessee. The Hensons were moonshiners, end defied the offi- eers, who have been waging a vlgor- eus campaign against illicit distillers along the borders of Alabama and Tennessee. $125,000 for Rockefeller Hospital. New York, Feb. 28.—An offer of $125,000 from John D. Rockefeller for e hospital for children suffering from tuberculosis has been announoed. This offer Is made on the condition tost e Hke sum be raised by June 80, 1908, and that the permanent maintenance of the hospital be assured. The hos pital is to be located at the utislfle VETERANS URGED TO ATTEND. Charles Leland Dead. New York, Feb. S8.—Charles B. be laud, the last of seven brother^ all of whom were well known In the hotel business throughout the eouqfcpt Is dead in Broad Albtn, N. * 58 yean old. General Wllsy Issues Address to the Georgia Camps. Macon, Ga., Feb. 28.—General 0. M. Wiley, commanding the Georgia divi sion, United Confederate Veterans, Is Issuing an address to the camps all throughout the state calling upon them to prepare for the national reunion and to attend as far as possible, not withstanding the fact that Georgia Me morial day is also to be celebrated while the reunion Is in progress. Tills step will probaby mean that every effort is to be made to have the state largely represented in New Orleans, and staff officers will assist General Wiley In bringing the national reunion before the veterans with that end in view. “Some will probably remain at home to observe Memorial day," said Gen eral Wiley, “but the veterans of the state will make an effort to attend both celebrations, and those who re main in Georgia will find assistance sufficient to make Memorial day what it ought to be. We owe It to the veterans to attend the national reunion, but those who will have to remain at home will be in charge of the memo rial exercises, and in this manner we must care for both celebrations as best we can.” Five Burned to Death by Explosion. Lawton, O., Feb. 28.—Five men were burned, two fatally, by the explosion of a gasoline lamp in the corridor of the oounty jail. The injured are John Jamison, hydrocarbon operator, fatally; Andrew Fltswater, prisoner, fatally; Sheriff C. C- Hammond, Dep uty Sheriff Homer Hammond, Deputy Sheriff g. A. Elrod. Jamison was in the aot of hanging the lamp when the explosion ocurred. His clothes and those of Fitswater were covered with gasoline, and instantly ignited. They were horribly burned before aid could reach them. Grant Family Hold Anniversary. New York, Feb. 28.—At the dinner of the Grant family of America held Tuesday night at the St. Dennis, Gen eral Frederick D. Grant declared the family should stand together for that what was right in government. He ■aid the family was suffloiently nu merous and of sufficient strength to have great weight and that Its influ ence should be on the side of right. The dinner was the 805th anniversary df the birth of Priscilla Grant, wife of Matthew Grant, who founded the Grant family in this country. Killed by Father-In-Law. Taylor, Tex., Feb. 28.—Crazed with drink and with the avowed purpose of killing his wife and three children, who had fled from him, Martin Ju- reeik, a young farmer living 9 miles south of Taylor, went to the home of his father-in-law, John Zak, and de manded admittance. He declared he would kill all Inside and began by bursting In the windows. When Ju- reoik forced tha door he was shot and killed by Zak. Zak was released on $500 bond. Criticises Sanitary Conditions. Now York, Feb. £8.—In a report crit- lelslng the sanitary conditions of the subway, made by George A. Super, sanitary engineer, says that the sani tary administration of the iubway haft been the most unsatisfactory feature brought In his investigation. The stations and toilet rooms have not been kept In a clean, orderly condi tion, he says, and It Is difficult to cntiolse too severely the filthy condi tion of the roadbed at the stations. Te Lop Off R. P. D. Routes. Aoworth, Ga., Feb. 28.—Notice from the postoffice department at Washing ton, D. C., has been received at the postoffice at this place that after March 31 all five of the rural free delivery mail routes from this place will be discontinued. This Intelli gence comes as a disappointment to the whole community, and much dls- appointment is manifested. Schooner Grant Ashore. Cape Henry, Va, Feb. 28.—The name of the schooner ashore here Is the George M. Grant, of West Haven, lorn ber laden. Attempts to shoot a line to the vessel were unsuccessful. The sea Is too high for surf boats. The life-savers have asked that a revenue cutter come out and send a boat to the schooner from Windward. PAMKIITS^ HAIR BALSAM CllSiMU and beautifk* Um hair. Piomutaa a luxuriant growth. Warar VSila to Kaatora Ormy Bair to Ita Youthful Color. Cure* icalp diMater * IQc,and >1.0C at * 4 Per C Paid on Savings Deposits. Interest Compounded 4 Times a Year. Money May be Withdrawn at Any Time. If Puzzled About what to do with you? money, solve the riddle by depositing it with us. All [tranastions with us are confi dential. It cost nothing to open an account,‘and money can be withdrawn without cost. : : : : Money to Lend We are prepared to make loans upon liberal terms. ' 1 Planters Bank CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS OVER $90,000.00. f ; I C. M. Smith, .Prest. A. N. Wood, V-Prest. R. S. Lipscomb, Cashier. A. Louis Wood, Asst. Cashier. for sale The National Collection Agency, of Washington, D. C. Will Dispose of the Following Judgments: Sou-tLi Oear-olir-iei. W. I. Williams, Allendale $ 19 Mrs. C. L. Burriss, Anderson 28 S. F. McConnell, Anderson 24 J. J. Miller, Arlington 143 Ed. C. Holman, Barnwell 133 Robert C. Holman, Barnwell 178 J. H. Dreyer, Charleston 123 J. D. Woodley, Clio 62 M. B. Smith, Cold Point 361 Oscar K. LaRoque, Columbia 99 L. D. Melton, Columbia 155 J. H. Dent, Columbia 49 Jno. C. Curd. Columbia 216 J. E. Richards, Columbia 25 J. B. White, Darlington ii/, J. H. Skinner & Bro., Elliotts 171 L Y. King, Florence 185 G. T. Burnette, Florence 101 V. B. Blankenship, Fort Mill 408 A. Barber, Fort Mill 71 T. A. Mills, Fort Mill 46 G. W. Willard. Fort Motte A. R. Taber, Fort Motte J. W. Lykes, Greenville...... A. E. Davis, Hartsville J. W. Marsh, Johnston S. M. Askins, Lake City L. B. Roper, Lake City B F}. Mulligan, Langley J. B. Bramlett, Marrietta B. B. Williams, Norway G. A. Best, Olar H P. Wood & Son, Pacolet.., J. D. Moore, Pickens . W. C. McKenzie, Piedmont.. W. D. Bennett, Ruffins J. F. & J. A. Way, Silver...., H. D. Puckett, Troy Jas. S. McCarley, Whitmire.. C. W. Mobley, White Oak... B. M. Warren, Williams 134 09 71 14 25 35 133 02 43 88 210 40 225 87 64 86 709 95 81 78 307 53 18 55 7i 55 46 80 49 39 208 31 10 85 93 34 471 55 51 40 send Bids to Tiie National Collection Agency, 'Wei^lnir-igrton, D. G. This is a miniature copy of Large Sheets in Red and Blue Print, used for advertis ing the above Judgments for sale on all bill boards. Feb. 16-lni. Seasonable Goods At Actual Cost! ■iLJi , iL. amjstill selling Men's Youth VandJBoys’ Suits at Ac- tual Cost. This is not an odds and ends sale but a Clearance Sale of new and up-to-date Suits. I am’also selling all Ladies’ Jackets, Skirts and Coat Suits at Ac tual Cost. My reason for selling these lines out at cost is that I am going to discontinue handling same. I can suit anybody in Dress Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hr.ts and Gents’ Furnishings generally. Just received 200 barrels of Flour which will go at $2.25 per 100 lbs. Everv sack guaranteed. Full line Groceries and Hardware. See me before making your purchases. J. I. SAR.R.ATT- AH kind, of Job Work d,H " M a* office neatly and at Cure a Cold in One Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabus. ,£ /*v Z Savsa MDEoa koaas sold in 12 months. Thb Ugnatlire, on every box. 25c. Cures Biliousness, Sick Tj T mT PI Cleanses the system Headache, Sour Stom- FT I thoroughly and clears ach, Torpid Liver and ^ ■ H ■ ■ 4 M sallow complexions of Chronic Constipation, f Ertift Curtin pimples and blotches, nt to tafce MlAdUVC 111111 Ujlll[f If U i Pleasant Far Sato by Chsrstos Drag 0*. guaranteed Far S4a by Cbswfcai Dma Ca. Far tala by pricei commensurate with high grade work Try ns. 1 Subscribe for Tbe Ledger, Sl.00 ai«uar