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A Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Almost every family has Heed of a reliable remedy for colic or diarrhea at some time during the year. This remedy is recommended by dealers who have sold it for many years and know its value. It has received thousands of testimonials from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy sicians with the most satisfactory results. It kas often saved life before medicine could have been sent for or a physician summoned. It only costs a quarter. Can you afford to risk so much for so little? BUY IT NOW. THIS ADMINISTRASION. A RANK AND ROTTEN FAILURE AT ITS HEAD. Remember the Orphans. As summer time comes on, the thouRlit of vacation Alls every mind. We are apt in our seeking after leisure to forget that there are or phans to he thought of and cared for. Ask the superintendents of our or phan’s homes and without exception they will tell you that the hardest time in the' whole year, is “the good old summer time.” Provisions gets scarce and money a great deal scarc er still. It is a splendid time to re member the orphans then. When the wheat crop comes in, send “sam ples” to be tested by the palates of the little people. The 200 pupils at tlio Thornweil Orphanage could test several hundred 1 ushelg of wheat, for tlie neighboring mill makes the gift of wheat, as acceptable as flour. Ant^ as for money, only $5.00 will eare for a little child for a whole month and t.iere are 20b littls child ren to be cared for here. Provisions can lie sent to Thornweil Orphanage, Clinton, S. O.. and money to Rev. Wm. P. Jacobs, at <ho same place. Acted as a Sweet Elixir. (Charlotte News.) rh#> Gaffney Ledger bemoans the fact that some of the Soutb Carolina papers and the weather bureau have tried to throw cold water on the cele bration of this city. Thanks for In terest, neighbor, but the cold water baa only acted as a sweet elixir and the celebration has thriven upon it like a parched plant. Yo* cannot induce a lower animal to eat heartily when not feeling well. A sick dog starves himself, and gets well. The stomach, once over-worked, must have rest the same as your feet or eyes. You don’t have to starve to rest your stomach. KQOOL FOR DYSPEPSIA takes up the work for your stomach, digests waht you eat and gives it a rest. Puts it back in condition again. You can’t feel good with a disordered stomach. Try Ko- dol. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaff- ne#; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. The greed of one church does not I ’-'unote the glory of the Lord of all j churches. Thousands annually bear witness to the efficiency of Early Risers. These phiasant, reliable little pills have long borne a reputation second to none as a laxative and cathartic. They arc as staple as bread in mil lions of homes. Pleasant but effect ive. Will promptly relieve constipa tion without griping. Sold by Chero kee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. Th-' man with a large sense of his own importance is likely to be dis tinguished for general importance. Best For Women and Children. . On account of its mild and pleasant taste Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup is especially recommended for women and children. It does not nauseate or grip* like pills and ordinary ca thartics. Orino laxative Fruit Syrup aids digestion and stimulates the liv er and IkjwoIs without irritating them. Remember the name Orino and refuse substitutes. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. When a man gets red cobwebs on his cheeks the world takes him at his face value. Constipation makes the cold drag along. Get it out of you. Take Ken nedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar cough syrup. Contains no opiates. Chero kee Drug Co., Gaffney: L. D. Allison, Cownotis. God does not furnish foundation on which to rest, but ones on which to build. Was Wasting Away. The following letter from Robert R Watts, of Salem, Mo., is instructive. “I have been troubled with kidney ></ disease for the last five years. I lost flesh and never felt well and doctored with leading physicians and tried all remedies suggested without relief. Finally I tried Foley’s Kidney Cure and less than two bottles completely cured me and I am now sound and well.” Sold by Cheroke e Drug Co. Pet dogs In sunbonnets and blue glass spectacles may be seen follow ing their owners through the streets of Berlin In hot weather. Subacrlbe for Tho Ledger; 91 a year. POLEYSHONET^TAH for ekltdront oafo, taro, JJo oplatot Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digeats what you eat* FOLEYS HONEYHCAR Why Doesn’t Mr. Roosevelt Prosecute the Standard Oi| Company Under the Sherma n Anti-Trust Law? Washington, May 25.—I dislike very much to be always posing in the attitude of ^ prophet, In this cor respondence, but It is human nature to be pleased with ones self when any prediction comes true. It was stated in this correspondence nearly a year ago and reiterated from time to time, that) when the rub came on the railroad rate bill the Republican administration, that has been mak ing such a brave front in the so-call ed interests of the people on that subject, would turn tail and run like a scared dog, would lie down like a steer in the road, would surrender abjectly and completely to the rail roads. That is just what it has done. Mr. President Roosevelt, the “idol of the people.” the man in whom they blindly believe, the men who can do n- wrong, has giverr in to the men who represent the Interests of the roads and has accepted the one amendment to the bill that they want. An amendment to take the rate-making power out of the hands of the commission and pbac'* it in the hands of the courts, just where the railroads want it placed. According to this amendment the rate fixed by the commission does not hold until the courts have adjudicated the mat ter. thus compelling the roads to get busy and trv the case as soon a# pos sible, but it stop* the rate from being operative until the courts have de cided whether or not' it is a just rate, etc., and so on to the end. Thus the roads can keep the rate in question in the courts as long as they please and wear the shipper to a frazrJe. This is what the mads want and of course they will accept it and the bill wilt pass with this amendment and then this hypocritical administration w'” sing out loud and long that it has gained a victory for the people and the people will believe that it has and will go on swearing to it and will never know the difference. The only people who will know the dif ference will be the shippers of the country, and not one-tenth of the voters of the country are shippers Thus nine-tenths of the voters of the country are fooled and will continue to believe that this Republican ad ministration has gained a victory for them over the railroad corporations. Oh, what idiotic rot! I am rapidly Josing faitti in the saying of the im mortal Lincoln that “you clan fool part of the people some of the time, and all of the people part of the time, but you can’t fool all of the peo ple all of the time.” It looks very much like this adminis tration is fooling all the people all of the time and that It will keep it up unless the people will begin to be lieve what is told them by those who know whereof they speak that this Roosevelt administration is the mt- tenest fake and humbug administra tion that ever attempted to adminis ter the affairs of this government. * * * This whole railroad rate legislation is a humbug and fraud. 1 said so a year ' > and I am sticking to it. The Democrats in the House voted for the Hepburn 'bill because it was the best thing they could get. It is far from a complete measure that will give the people what they need and ought to have In Hie way of railroad legislation. What the people want in legislation is something that will stop the rebate ovil, and this, the Republican congress will not give them. The people are not clamoring for lower rates, but they are asking that unjust discriminations lie stop ped, that one man shall not be given a lower rate than another ami that proper punishment be provided for the rebate giver and taker. There is a law on the statutes today, the Elkins law, that provides a fine for the giving of rebates on freight, but what does a railroad care for a fine when thev are getting rich by paying them and continuing to disobey the law? Again, the Elkins law is a dead letter <>n th* books for no attempt has been made b> this administra- tration to enforce it. What’s the use, then, giving them more law that thev do not intend to enforce? The pre sident sends in his brave message to the congress and cusses out the rail roads for giving rebates to.the Stand ard Oi] Company, thug creating a mo nopoly in the oil business and mak ing the greatest trust) in the world, but h» does not nroeecute the rail roads for the giving of the rebates and ha does not prosecute the Stand ard Oil Company under the Sherman anti-trust law, which likewise is a dead letter under this rotten Repub lican administration. Why does he send in messages asking the congress to give him more law that he will not enforce? Whv does he not get busy with his department of justice and do something that will make the • f^ople reallv <av that his administra tion is a good one. The administra tion is not built that wav and It will go down In history as the rankest and --ottenest fake and failure and Its head as the most monumental moun- l tebank who ever tried to do bulsness the white house. According to Roosevelt this is rank treason and late majeste, but if so. let it go at that, for It also Is the truth. • * • The Democrats of the senate had the best chance In the world to place the Republicans In a hole on the rate bill and then soap the sides and pull up the ladder, but, as usual, they di vided and never could get together on anv thing. Thev have about lost the opportunity to do anything like making political capital on the rate bill and the fight this fall for the lower house of congress narrows down to the question of tariff revi sion and the trusts. The Democrats can make a winning fight on that, alone If the; will but follow uj> th«* j advantage they have gained so far. 1 Th-' proofs wo have shown up to the effect that the manufacturers of this country who are protected bv the tariff wall are selling g<s).U to foreigners cheaper than to the eon- sumers at honie has pieced the R®* publicans on the defensive and th' ,v are running like a jack rabbit with a hungry coyote camping on ids trail It Is an object lesson ho plain that he who runs mav road and If the peo ple of the country can’t see It and won’t see It and keep on voting the Republican ticket and send back Republicans to congress who will continue to vote to rob them, then thev deserve to he robbed. * * * Another great) big case of robbery of the people In the interest of the steel and armor plate trusts is in the naval bill now before the house of representatives and which appro priate $100,000,000 to maintain the navy and build great big battleships at a cost of millions of dollars each. It not. only is robbery but idiocy to spend millions on a battleship that can be sunk in twenty minutes by one of these little ‘‘di ’dapper” sub marine torpedo boats that do not cost * half million dollars. Take one of these little submarine torpedo boats of the Holland type .that has proved its efficiency in every way and in every emergency and that cost about $500,000 each and it can make junk out of a $10,000,000 battleship in a few minutes. We can get' twen ty of those boats for the cost of one battleship and thev will beat all the big, long range guns In the world for coast defenses. Every other country that is up-to-date is doing that very thing and why In the name of com mon sense does not this country do the same thing? Why do we need a large navy? To protect American commerce? Stuff and nousense! Nearly all American commerce is carried in England and German ves sels and the navies of those coun tries are protecting it because those vessels fly the flags of their coun tries. What is the use building more battleships to protect something we haven’t got? That is a case of plac ing the cart before the horse with a vengeance. The thing to do is to stop robbing the people in the in terest of the steel and armor plate trusts, save millions a year buying submarine torpedo boats and spend some of the money building up the merchant marine <>f this country in the interest of the shippers of the country. * * * Speaking of the shipping interests of the country and its merchant ma rine, I met and had a talk the other day with a member of the Merchant Marine Commission that} drew th© shi”'ing bill now before congress. In defending the bill as something that would build up the merchant marine of the country, he said: “Be yond the strengthening of two exist ing mail-contract line«—one to Great Britain and the Continent and one to Ausuralia—all the new regular steamship services involved in this bill ,are to the markets of South and Central America* Mexico , South Africa, and the Orient. No provision whatever is made for an additional uew lin r> to Europe. The speed re quired of al] these new lines, while adequate, is so moderate that ships built to perform the coutracts will all be large carriers «f cargo. The mail subvention is not a new expe- divnt in the maritime policy of the I’nited States. Sixty years ago Pre sident Polk, a Democrat, recommend ed that such subventions bo given to encourage the steam mer. lumc fleet, and congress grunted large sums for the establishment' of mail lines not only to Europe*, but to the West In dies and tho Isthmus of Panama and in the Pacific Ocean. Thtre is, there fore, abundant precedent for the mail subventions of the present hill. They involve no departure whatever from the old and accepted national prac tice which operated successfully from i847 until the system was tempora rily abandoned in the unhappy sec tional quarrels in congress imme diately preceding the civil war. Bui the commission has felt that public sentiment would not be content, un der present circumstauces. with of fering national aid to a few specified sisil lines. Therefore, in section 2 of this bill, a general subvention at the rate of $5 per ton U provided for the useful cargo carriers of the “tramp” type, which are particularly valuable for the transportation of bulky agricultural products, and the vessels of the deep-sea fisheries. No general subvention of this kind for the encoragement of “tramp” or cargo veH.-els lias ever been given by the I Ini ted States. The nearest approach to this is the bounty grant ed from 1792 to 18W5 to the vessels and men of the deep-sea fisheries. The subvention ’’ow proposed Is not) a gift outright. IU conditions are carefully guarded by the terms of the bill. ;-nd every effort has been made * require an equivalent to» the nation through service widch must be ren dered by the shipowners toward the c-°ation of a naval reserve and kb • expansion of commerce.” Chag. A. Edwards. MR, FINLEY NOMI- ■ What better selection eould we make to represent us in the senate at our national capital, and how could we further honor ourselves better? Then Mr. Editor why not start!troubles,—pirnp4eg, boils and other MR. TILLMAN’S SHORTCOMINGS EXPOSED. In the Estimation of Our Correspond ent the Latter Has Not Lived Up to His Opportunities. Editor Ledger:—Mr. Tillman’s pet puppet, which he so gently fondles and loves for some mysterious reason, and which he so earnestly endeavors to have us believe is ours by command of the Almighty God, in heritance, or, more seemingly, by de cree from his (B. T’s) royal lifti- ness, seems to have met with the un popularity which it. so generously merits, and which promises to soon meet with its just doom. It Is prob ably safe to say that It is setting the now—for the time Is high—to herald eruptions, besides loss of appetite, his name end of the State that tired feeling, fits of biliousness, to the other, from the hills to the sea, “ ’ that the name Finlev might become |‘“ dl g e6 * on and headache * justly familiar and justly loved for. The sooner one gets rid of them the all it deserves and fop ail it stands ant | wa y g e ^ j-jj and to build up the system that has suffered from them is to take Bryant B. Lipscomb. MORAL COURAGEOF THE HEN SarSapariUa Does Her Own Work jn Her Ow n Way _ ^ Without Assistance. CLlZU £*lllS (Medical Record.) Reams of paper, says The Chica"© inter Ocean, have been consumed by her admirers in efforts to do scant Forming in combination the Spring Medicine par exctlltncty of unequalled strength in purifying the blood as patience, her modesty, her industry. Some of the best thinkers in our land. and our thinkers tare perhaps among the best to be found in any part of the world, have dwelt with pleasure upon her unselfishness, her utter disregard a..,/ aa , V w naj y'“' 1 ’ ^| of personal compliment, her studied pace to which its haughty lather ‘ . . avoidance of attention for strangers, justice to the almost Innumerable shown by unequalled, radical and per- praiseworthy characteristics of the' manen t cures of American hen. I Essayists and ooets have vied with 1 ®croTula Bait Rheum one another in naying tribute to her Scald Head Bolls, Pimples will soon have to trot. Cherokee, as we know, is a brave old county, possessed of men who could well he set forth as moral guides, yet she does not stand dis tinct and alone from her sister conn ties which makeup the grand old State whose flag w,. hail. But Fncle n directs attention to the advertis ing columns of the county papers and points out tho filling coffers of the! her abhorrence of publicity, her un tiring devotion to duty, her unswerv ing fidelity to a sacred trust. No man who can be content to sit quietly on a fence, as many of our ablest students of natural history have done, whiling away the time by whittling a stdek, or relieving the tedium with a cob pipe—no man. we say, who observes the American htn at a respectful distance, as she editors by the liquor fi | ' ll t• , [' om <, u t 'j pursues her chosen vocation, appar- 4. 4- « V «1 * 1 «... - ♦ I > 1 t t I I a . . < 1 I 1 < > * side the State, when the little editors are boosting to the dry inhabitants of the counties. We are Incline 1 to believe that Mr. Tillman drew large ly upon his feigned imagination \vit"U he made this reckless statement, for when one of our spunky editors* Jj^) ' | ently unconscious of everything around her. bent as she over is upon her useful task, will hesitate to test!- fv cheerfully to the fact that she pos- **«sses, and to a very large degree, the one trait in which the human race is and conspicuously deficient. She does her own scratching and at tends to her own business. Individualism lias been developed in the henyard almost to the point of brings him to account for his "conch cd in general terms" statement, lie snails—naturally and for good; reasons. It is probably true In other cases, should it be known that c ( li-! ahsol'ute perfection. No self-re tars of other papers made a like d ‘*- S | U , rt | nK American hen would em- maad. Can It be that Mr. Tillman; pj oy au assistant in the carrying on has forgotten that it was these same| ()f hj>r work stands for free corn- envied editors, through the medium, n0titio| , f , 1(l | m)a deat sense of the of their papers, to the dry id thirsty term Now atul , hpn G f course, it citizens, who were largely instrumen-j , ha , , W o American hens see tal in making him what he is today, same bug at the simp time and or has Ue through his madness gtart f or ^ simultaneously, but the dreamed of how he soared from j unsuccessful competitor never thinks amongst the common people like the of taklnR th<< captured hug out of the bald eagle to her nest, drawing tbe; competitor's mouth. Each multitude a» the magnet does the American hen is on the alert constant- needle? It would be well f»r Mr. Till-|j v Each goes for her own grasthop- man to stop to realize that it was the ,; er ftS H rale j f (me 8UO cee is In up- people who seated him In the high PO") rooting & worm, the other may oh- sition which he now occupies, and itj serV e the fact casually, but there Is is these same people who have d®-'never any time wasted upon diseusa- clared that th e burden of sin now, ing the advisability of a division, hanging over their heads in the shape The American hen is no socialist, of a State dispensary shall be »o! g ke j g ollt G f S y m p atkv W U|, tfjg ed^in. more, and their will cannot bp re-|) lour movement. She forms no so- sisted by human being, however; cieties she wears no un j on label, monstrous they feel. We will not She ris e s with the sun an( i retires All Kinds of Humor Psoriasis Blood Poisoning Rheumatism Catarrh Dyspepsia, Etc Accept bo substitute, bat be sura to get Hood’s, and get it today. Lazy. (J. M. Lewis in Houston Post) It is 10 o’clock An’ no bait aint’ dug, An’ there ain’t no joy In the old brown jug. An’ there ain’t no tellin’ How tired I be; Oh, hee-oh-heigh-oh— My—oh—me! An’ I’m noddin’ here With a darned ol’ book, When I ought to ha In ^ bayou-crook. Where the shadows are, An’ sun-flecks fall Like blobs o’ gold, And the wild birds call. It most too late For to go out now. An’ there ain’t no bait Dug anyhow; An’ if ’tw T an’t too late, It seems to me I’m too darned lazy—oh— My—oh—gee! I’m goin’ to sprawl Here on the floor, An’ not give a thought To the fish no more; An’ sleep and dream, Till the shadow^ fall, That I’m flshin’ out Where the wild birds call. Yes. it seems to me That’s the best way For to spend a warm. Old springtime day; Just lyin’ around The house like me— Oh—hee helgh-o— Oh, my!—oh—gee! consent, to be goverened to suit his vai" interests. It is not a day of be ing governed without representa tion; to have our moral rights and our social liberties trampled to earth undefended. Peculiar, Mr. Tillman could not with the going down thereof, and during her hours of activity, beyond giving utterance to an occasional cackle, or naturally exulting for a few moments when she has laid an egg, she indulges in no frivolities. All these things, or things to the even lose sight of this disgraceful ia- samp general effect, have been said sUtution when Seemingly devoting of her before, but she is continually his best efforts at shaking his rat tle-box sombero railroad mte speech' Does it appeal to any one that Mr. Tillman would have it a punishable | offense for railroads to give a pass surprising us with new claims to our admiration. An American hen iwss- ed through a great fire in Biddeford. Mo., last week, without) deserting her nest. The flames roared above her. | < more especially to a goverment oi;- The STnoke W eii- n igh stifled her. The tidal) and for the same to be ae-| wa t er almost drowned her. But she tired stomach a needed rest, bur is a rentable and used. And does he hold remained at her post of duty. And corrective of the greatest efficiency, railroads responsible for passes lost: W hen the excitement was all over she . Kodol relieves indigestion dyspepsia i “in transit” ami men—honest nml : * ^ it- «... ’ ~ - ^ ’ Oh, darn It all, I'm a weary duck!, I s’pose I’m missln’ Some dandy luck Whore the fishes bite An’ the breezes blow. But I’m goin’ to sleep. Oh—hee—heigh—o! There Is no need worrying along In discomfort because of a disorder ed digestion. Get a bottle of KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA, and see whan it will do for yon. Kodol not only di gests what you eat and gives that If is being keenly looked forward | Sunday last, followed by her brood. proportion that your stomach worries to, a t the present flj-raU he is sail-] Nobody who knows the American i you. Worry means the loss of abil- ing. for him to introduce a bill mak ben will claim that she is not physi-Jity to do your best. Worrv is to be ing it a criminal offense for an ex- ca iiy a trifle too timid. She lacks a ; oidc( ., at ‘ a]1 tlmes Kodo j wI11 uke onm S i, C ? mi l an n )° T franks—ex-1 animal courage. But that she is pos- WO rry out of your stomach. Sold by cept it be to f nited States senators, | segsed 0 f a high degree of moral ( cberokee Drug Co. Gaffney I D w, ’° do uot J os e them, thereby mak-j coura g e has long been conceded. R Allison, Cowpens. exposures rare. I was moral courage that enabled the! ’ ■ -’till, the tranqiull people have j Biddeford hen to remain on her nest, | Whenever a girl wants find a T“x , Z„ 8 rerof° f „ur ,, oubS\ e ™;u ""l ^ n ° ^ 0r t „''° ^ ^ hlmVtwee,! I . exposure ! of 0,11 1>ubllc stl ' ants ' water or no water, until she had the cover paRes of a (lirne novel _ that hatched out her chicks. Surely. was wr itten by a man among the many things we have to! ' be proud of as a nation, we should. The s i nC e re st tribute that can be . . not ' in naming them to foreigners, t superiority is imitatinn T’.ip whereby the knife is applied to those overlook the American hen, who sees manv imitations of DeWitt’s WRch of whom w e would court ami accept her dutv and does it. regardless of Hazel Sa]ve that before the favors. It would surely be worth the j conflagrations or cold-storage Plants. ; DeoD , p nrm . p it tho h oat ic t. n ^. i wnile to peer the peer in all hisi | vimineous personality, posing as a figuiv. in the august body of which he is a moment part, and to note the! _ .. ... . .. o a i seriousness in whicn he takes the] gs 1906 |justful puns concerning his vast pos-! I sibilities and mush-room popularity.! T* 16 week was generally ”d are glad to see the old pitch- fork gently shelved for a bare few j moments, until a worthy s«n can ; brave a bill to the senate chamber. WEEKLY WEATHRE BULLETIN people prove it the best. Ask for De- Witt’s. Good for burns, scalds, chaff ed skin, eczema, tetter, cuts, bruises, boils and piles. Highly recommen led and reliable. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. cloudy Yet with ail this foggy splendor be! ] with frequent showers and thunder- i fore his eyes, his mind trickles back storms during th e last three days to his lost child, swept into th? eter- nal black history of our State by the mighty moral wav® of realization of her Christian people, at last aroused A physician’s remedy for burns is made from equal parts of linseed oil and lim 0 water. This mixture should over practically the entire State. The mean temperature was about always be in one’s medicine chest, three degrees per day below normal,] • . in the central parts, and about nor- Chronic bronchial troubles and To the Trustees of Second Methodist Church. Gentlemen: — Always have your church buy lin seed oil at barrel prices. Don’t let them pay $1.50 a gallon for canned oil, which ought to cost but 60 cents a gallon. Ready-mixed pain; is about) half oil and half paint. Buy oil fresh from the barrel and add It to the L. & M. Paint, which is semi-mixed, and you then get a full gallon af paint at the lowes; price. 4 gallons E. & M. Paint mixed with 3 gallons Linseed Oil will paint a moderate sized house. Actual cost L. & M. about $1.20 per gallon. C. S. Andrews, Ex-Mayor, Danbury, Conn., writes, “Pa nted my house 19 years ago with L. & M. Looks well todav.” Sold by Smith Hardware Co., Gaff ney. S. C. to their responsibility to neighbor] mal in the southern and soMtheastern f umI " e r coughs can be quickly re- Ian,1 self. He grasps in desperate Portions, owing to somewhat lower i lie yed and cured by Foley s Honey anger at the few passing straws that | maximum temperatures than usual an d Tar. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. float down the deep stream of his a»d to nearly normal night tempera- ' tures. The highest maximum tempe-i To p w °man woo is not busy is so rature for the week was S7 degrees rare that she ought to be labeled and at Rock Hill on the 21st. and the low- exhibited in a museum as an obsolete est minimum temperature for the specimen of the daughters of Eve. t,. c u. Bl F Wa B., uu,. ui me week was 50 degrees at Greenville ~ State alone, but by displacing the! from the 23rd to the 2Cth. inclusive, - T* 1 ® ® wo ™ * t * ternent ® f the m . anu They who seek God’s work find God In their world. vanquished hope. It Is now high time for us to ex press our distaste for this terrible course upon ou rchildren—not by voting the dispensary out of the man who steers the devil’s boat through the peaceful waters of our self-respect, in spite of public protest and public rebuke of the same. I say call him down and out forever and for good, for indeed It Is the only repentant act left to us. • We have a man representing our ■district in the person of Hon. David E. Finley. He Is honorable, able and brave, who would do justice bv the people and serve the State and na tion with credit to himself and honor to the republic. His Influence and labors have al ready been most agreeably felt by th« people of his district, and on every side and in every community can the result of his efforts be seen. He has served several years in the House of Representatives, I’nited States, during which time he has ■been honored for his honesty, ability and for the interests he has displav- ed in behalf of the State and union. and at Waterboro on the 23rd. facturers protects you from opiates The precipitation averaged about JI 1 Kennedy s Laxative Honey and nomal, although it was not well dis- ^ ar co,, £h syrup that drives the tributed over the State, there having ®?^ d y our system. Sold by been a deficiency in the central, ] ^ aero * i ^ e Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Al- northern and northeastern counties, i Uson, Cowpens. and heavy rainfall in the southeast-1 ern. Savannah valley and northwest-' Most of us count up everything els© ern counties where it was in excess | our blessings. Right there our of the normal, and where the weekly adding machine stops. It isn’t right amounts ranged from one inch to over th° u gh. three inches. Fresh to brisk easterly winds pre vailed over the State generally, and northeast gales occurred on the coast. The amounts of precipitation for the 27th and morning of the 28th are not generally shown in the "Observ ers’ Reports” but are included in the special rainfall reports. It Is claimed that little of our food is pure, but it doesn't seem as though It would be imposUble to adulterate frogs’ legs. * Warning. If you have kidney or bladder trou ble and do not use Foley’s Kidney Cure, you will have only yourself to blame for results, as it positively cures all forms of kidney and blad der diseases. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Make the girl in the looking glass as sweet as you can. She’s a good friend to you, and you want to treat her well.