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r - . ) \» :t Chamberlain’s Business Men Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Almost every family has need of a reliable romedy for colic or diarrhea at so(ne time during the year. This remedy is recommended by dealer* 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 has 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. WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN For the Week Endinq 8 A. M. June j 4, 1906. The weather was generally cloudy and showery over the State on the first day, and on the last two days of the week while the intervening four days were generally clear, with light to fresh southerly to south westerly winds. There was a wide range in tempe rature during the week over the en tire State, except along the imme diate coast, the first half of the week having been unusually cool and the last half was quite warm with daily maximum temperature gener ally above 9b degrees except in the extreme northwestern counties where they were between 85 and 90 degrees. The highest temperature for the week was a maximum of 95 degrees at Bowman, Florence and Sumter on June 1st; the lowest temperature for the week was a mini tnu.Ti of 49 degrees at Greenville on May 30th. The average tempera ture w.as slightly below normal. There were showers over nearly the whole State on the first day and on the last two days, the precipita tion having been heavy in Barnwell, Lexington, and in places in adjourn ing counties on June 3rd. with amounts ranging from one inch to over two inches. There was also a heavy shower in Union county on June 2nd with over two inches of rain in one hour. The week’s average precipitation was below the normal amount for the same period, with the least rainfall along the im mediate coast and in the northeast ern counties where the weekly ranged from a trace only to slightly more than half an inch. The weath er was cloudy and threatening as the week ended. Stirred by Revival Fire How Torrey and Alexander Religious Enthusiasm In Philadelphia HuS Quickened Church Members to Harder Work. Many Resolved to Make Greater Efforts Than Ever to Win Souls—Prayer Meet ing Held For a Business Man’s Em ployees Before Beginning Work. Unique Revival Luncheon Held at a Downtown Hotel—All Classes Being Con verted. vivnl flame is being carried directly j Into the homes of the people in every quarter at the city. Mr. Alexander re cently received a touching letter show- ' ing how the telephone service led to one girl's conversion. The letter ran us follows: “One Sunday in February our maid was alone in the house, and as she had been told by us of the possibility of hearing your meeting by phone she | took up the receiver for the first time and listened to the afternoon service. I She is a German Lutheran. The meet- Ing as she heard it affected her so much that she resolved to go herself the following Thursday. This she did j and was so touched and convinced that instead of going to a dance party that •nr “ evening she called for her sis ter and went to the evening meeting. When the cull was given to go forward she was one of the first and was hap pily converted. Site was very happy I RUSH FOR BSD LMDS THROUGHOUT THE PALMETTO STATE Farmers Settling Once Desolate Tract In South Dakota. FLOCKING TO IT BY THOUSANDS TEM9 OF INTEREST OF PASSING EVENTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA. RailruadM CriaK’roMitliiK Black Hllla Country Open tp Moat Fertile Soil to Growth CouMetjuent on Govern ment Irrliratlou—I.antl on Klver Bot toms NeedM Little but Seed to liaiae Imnienae Cropa. Jappenings All Over the State Taken from Our Exchange* and Tersely Told to Ledger Readers. All Humors Are Impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organa cannot take care of without help. Pimples, boils, eczema and other erup tions, loss of appetite, that tired reeling, bilious turns, fits of indigestion, dull head aches and many other troubles are due to them. They are removed by Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as SarsatabS. 100 doses $1. John Sheldon, a well-to-do colored ! man, living three miles from Seneca, Prophecy made eighteen years ago whipped his 14-year old hoy Tuesday regarding South Dakota Is now hi proc- evening. A few hours afterwards the ess of fulfillment, says a special dis- boy shot himself, inllicting a serious patch from Deadwood, S. I)., to the wound in the head. Dr. McCutchen New York Herald. The grinding of the attended the hoy, and thinks he may mills of the gods may be slow, but it recover 111 tt-Mug her iul»tre»» the tirst thlus jK (mfullll , 1SSS Ule |ir |„ t . I '"•« ■»««••>* *~l •*«« j e,l an article from Deadwood, S. 1).', ln ™“ T HT, !, hunniest tfirl you ever suw. She has . . * * lagton nab decided to au uuppiesi gin jou i concerning the opening up of the great rtment at Wash- , . . ... . . — „ authorize the no need now for the dance party or | —^“8 tkeopening upcf the gre^t establishment of a substation at the theater of which she was very h,0UX «*ervatiou and setting forth the corner ot Barnwell and Gervais streets J h Hnd is alad that she went to boiiefits to be derlved froiu sucb an a< ^ in Columbia. The substation will sell fond, and is gl . t . , to tiou. As the white man stands today stamps and money orders and in fact the armor, -hat e fe upon the topmost peaks of the Black have all the duties of a postoffice ex- the dance party. j Hills and surveys all the improvements cent the receiving and sending of By means of a new inven on ca e that have been made he recognizes that mail. This is the second substition the multiphone «v evangelists now ad- ^ day of fulfllIluent is ut han<1 i now in Columbia, dress two audlc *08 simultaueouslj. , oneuine of the Through the uiejaphone transmitter a ’ . g The State Firemen’s association Aurougu lue uivt < imv/i j Sioux reservation in 1888 it was the ' ^ •„ r>_^„,.in, i„,. , and telephone wire: he songs and ser- m ., n , OI1 tlmt 1he onlv , nto met ,n D.eemi le Tuesday to hold its mon» are carried to Bethany church, a * BiuG Iills country for the rail ’ f n I nua, 1 COn y ent l on ’ ' abou * delegates mile and a half away, where seven I tbe , Hlack 141,18 tou i n . 1 y . f0 . , being In attendance. The principal m Itlnhoues nlaced around the pulpit I rou ' 18 was across tllls tract between address before the association was de multiphones placed arouna me puipu , ^ and (1)e Mi8Souri and ^ the You 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. KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA takes up the work for your stomach, digests waht you eat and gives it a rest. Puts it hack In condition again. You can’t feel good with a disordered stomach. Try Ko- dol. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co, Gaff ney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. Fear the fortune that makes you forget your God. Thousands annually hear witness to the efficiency of Early Risers. These pldasant, reliable little pills have long borne a reputation second to none as a laxative and cathartic. They are as staple as bread in m H'| mitted. lions of homos. Pleasant but effect ive. Will promptly relieve constipa tion without grilling. Sold by Chero kee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. By GEORGE T. B. DAVIS. Each day striking results of the Phil adelphia revival led hy Evangelists Torrey and Alexander are being seen. The fiame burns brightly i#>t only at the big mass meetings where thousands gather nightly, but is spreading to lo cal churches throughout Philadelphia. Scores of churches all over the city are holding revival meetings. Hands of happy revivalists board the street cars and make them echo for miles with re- vival melodies. The movement is affecting fhe busi ness men of Philadelphia in a remark able mminer. One of those was so stir red up that he called his employees to gether the other morning before begin ning work and held a prayer meeting with them to irek God to keep them from profanity and other sins through out the day. One of the most unique developments of the revival thus fur was a business men’s luncheon tendered to Mr.' Alex ander a few days ago by a prominent real estate dealer of Philadelphia. Mr. Alexander had been out to the church of which this man was a member a short time previously and In a brief ad dress to a little congregation of about 200 guthwed in the basement of the building had started a revival fiame which has transformed the entire church. At the close of the address a group of ji dozen men gathered around the singing evangelist and confessed that their lives had not been what they should lie, hut declared that he*cefbrth they would make soul winning the business of tlieir lives. One of the lit tle group was J. II. McBride, a promi nent real estate man, who later de clared that, although he had been a member of the church for twenty-five years, he had not l>een a Christian. He and others present at the basement m^etkig seemed to receive a baptism with fire/and. their actions since then have •been the talk of the community. Mr. McBride had allowed jieople to in spect ids houses on Sundays, but at *4 multiply the sound and reproduce the whole revival service for the audience which gathers in the hurch. It is also expected that the rev val meetings will shortly be cairied o\er the phone t0 ; (^jicago and Northwestern and the Chi- approt>at Atlantic City ftnd reproduced to audi- cago aud Milwauk „ e rai , roads> but U o red the! ences who will gather in some church i bufldl Wflg done> Hut now rall8 are 1 *ork in which they K _ 1. 1 1 . , 4- 4-lw* 4* * » » » » yv n £« kO I « I l-k being laid across the old reservation promised land could be entered only by crossing this Jordan, so long impass able. The reservation was opened aud rights of way were granted to both the livered by James D. McNeil, president of the National Firemen’s association of America ami president of the North Carolina State Fi.emen’s association, whose remarks elicited the hearty approbation of the firemen and stir- r enthusiasm for the noble re engaged. or hall at the famous seaside resort. c j —, Tues(]ay the flnal and the best of Converts From All Classes. | ground and there will soon be direct fhe comrnen ce n ,ent days of Welsh All classes and all nationalities are | communication between the eastern and Keck Hisll shool witnessed the grn- being converted and fiheil with revlv- western parts of this great state, duating exercises proper with the al zeal. One of the new convefts was | Hitherto they have been more widely commencement oration and the the wife of a theatrical manager who separated than if they had been sepa- awarding of diplomas in the morning. had herself been an actress. She is rate state's, and while as the crow flies joint meeting of literary societies and now working and praying for her bus- it is only ISO miles from Deadwood to meeting of the literary societies and band's salvation. ! Pierre, the capital of the state, yet by the final numbers of the programme Another convert was a thief who had rail the journey consumes more than Tuesday evening. On both occassions stolen ever since he could remember, forty hours. ! tbe interest manifested was evidenc- His heart was touched i/ the song j The Chicago and Milwaukee road is ed by large audiences which packed “Is He Yours?” as rendered by j now building westward across the old , ,be liU ditorium and gave close atten- Churles Butler, the soloist. Immediate- Indian lands to the hills, aud the tion at al * ,iraes - ly following his conversion he returned Northwestern Is following suit and Mr H Hess committed suicide everything in so far as he could. He ; looking tor a chance to trump, if possl-1 by hanging hlm8elf wkh a wlre some is now working earnestly for the sal- i ble. At Evarts the coast line crosses time Tue8da y ,,1^1,1 or early Wednes- the Missouri river, and at Chamberlain dav morning. He was a prominent the Black Hills road crosses and has farmer of the Conneross section of already built west ninety miles. Tbe Oconee county, and lived four miles was converted on the same night as j Northwestern is working on contract* north of Westminister. Mr. Hess was lie, and the next night his father was covering eighty miles of grade. So fast | at Mr. Davis Abbott’s house, a half seen at the front publicly confessing j are settlers rushing in ahead of the mile from his home, at 10 o’clock his acceptance of Christ. ; proposed lines of these roads that it Is Tuesday night. Coroner Harbin held Dr. Torrey has received a letter from ' impossible for the railroads to keep inquest. His body was found a German woman who writes touch- j> a ce with them, and the proposed line dangling from a tree Wednesday ingly of the transformation that has j 0 f march can be determined tallies , mor, dtr with a wire around ids neck. ahead by the farmhouses and other d e ® nl4 ® cau 8e can he given. Moi^ Improvements rlelint overnight n« al- a ^ *f° ^ b»m vance guard, ot approaching elvlllaa. I a '‘ d m c » nt , ent ?^ v ‘jV , a '“^""‘r 7 .. 0 11 * seemed to have had a depressing ef- ,, 1 feet upon him. He leaves a wife and This old reservation laud, lying be- i severa , chi i dren and one gister tween the hills aud the Missouri river, | Is almost surrounded on three sides by vation of others, and one night he led three young men to Christ. Strange ly enough, the young man’s mother come Into her life. “What u happy mother 1 am. My three little hoys have confessed Christ, and I have been converted In last week’s meetings. I only wish 1 could tell you in German what is in my heart—it is so full of thanks and praise to my Jesus for ids love, for his blood, ; Indian reservations. It is composed lor his unspeakable gift. I confessed partly of a peculiar geological forma- my Lord Jesus before the world March tion known as the Bad Lands, a bro- G at an evening meeting. Jesus came | ten> j a gjr et i i unproductive tract of land into my heart. And now I will gather w-pere wonderful fossils are found and 1 appeared before the committee with uij children e\er^ moining and night where the Indian when in trouble was 1 Manager John Duncan and argued The special committee of city coun cil on the drafting of a zone of opera- ration for oyster factories organied in Charleston with Alderman O’Neill as chairman. Attorney John F. Fincken Our dear father and husbamT mow we I conjInt; 10 by thousands, xue muu 1 dern j en pj nckne y Kafferty. Reynolds, our <i<hi ratiiti aim riusoaua mow on fl, e r ver attorns needs practically I p at(ira anf1 Hn ' W( , r „ nilt ' thi ’ want you to pray for him. We are all I , . taiers and Kiley were put on this praying for him. He is a good fatUbr nothing but seed to raise immense Facility in sentencing others is of ten offered as a substitute for our own fidelity in service. once had notices posted np f flmt here after no Sunday Inspection will be per- Old Fashioned Revival Meeting. A few days ago Mr. McBride gave a , , ^ , , , crops, while to the land upon the up- very good. Imt doesMt know Jesus as. ^ water U]U8t l)e brought lu order j to make it proiluctive. rtown iu v die young bus in As and profisisioual men. Before the tn( a al ended it had l>et*n transformed Into a regular old Jushlou- Best For Women and Children. ' ^ revival meeting. Amid team and On account of its mild and pleasant 1 fervent "aniens” four men sitting at teste Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup is thfe table arose and publicly coofessed especially recommended for women their acceptance of Christ. Others, and children. It does not nauseate with determined fnr^ik declared that or gripe like pills and ordinary ca.- they woifld henceforth devote them- thartics. Orino laxative Fruit Syrup selves to winning men to Chrtat as aids digestion and stimulates the liv- never liefore. The little church where er and bowels without irritating evangelist spoke hud been unused them. Remember the name Orino and conversion, lint skice Mr. refuse substitutes. Sold by Cherokee Ak , xaud ^ H nieet1ng thHn . ,^. u rU ® _________ conversions at almost every service, Strife over words is often mistaken a,1 d the '\hole district has been set on for strenuous work, but onlv by the bre w,,b enthusiasm, strife-makers. ^ be h 1,84 of a uuw series of business men’s meetings was held recently at Constipation makes the cold drag the Academy of Music from 12 te 12:50 under at’the Colonnade hotel, whlt-h ! name It. In German 1 would call it was attemhM by about forty bright freedom, blessedness, peace.” committee. The factory has a peti tion In circulation, stating that it has his Saviour Please nrav for him I I “p-- - T— s,)ent ^ 510 > 000 during the past few . ‘ 1 V. , „. 1 4o make it productive, rtown iu v the years, and adverse legislation will re am so g a< wea s - | valleys the grass grows 'to the height quire the removal to another city. .1,1 so happy This week was beauti- of a hor8e , g Kld< , g The IJetitIon ig 8igned by many busi . f “ ’. . I wa8 .“ meeting Monday j Much ()f tJjl8 land ig wbat iH known ; ness people, asking the committee night for the first time, aud after that Jq tLe wegt fl8 guinbo ja,,,!, oue of tbe i n °t to order the factory removal, not withstanding the compalint of the pioneer aud to the man making new ! residents in the vicinity of the plant. Wm. Jefferies. (J. B. Wilson in Southern Christian Advocate.) William Jefferies, son of John and Sarah Goudelock Jefferies, was born April 2nd, 1830, and died February 10th, 1900. Between these dates, cov ering a little more than three quarters of a century, is recorded the life of a good and useful man. For fifty of these years he was called many times from the quiet home-life to serve his country, both in war and in peace. He always met these demands with credit to himself and to the best in terests of the country. Although op nosed to secession as a member of the legislature in 1858, when, two years later, South Carolina seceded and the call to arms was made, he entered the Confederate service and made a brave defender of his country’s rights. Before and since the war between the States, he was called by his coun trymen to serve them in the legisla ture of South Carolina, 1857 1876, and when Cherokee county was formed in 1896, he was the first chos en State senator from the new coun ty. In all these positions of trust and honor he acquitted himself well, and retained to the last the respect and confidence of his fellow-citizens. In early life Mr. Jefferies taught school; and throughout his life he was deeply interested in the educa tional work of the country, devoting much of his time and means for its promotion, especially in his own coun ty. Thoughtful, discrebt and kind, his counsel wa soften sought by his neighbors, and he was preeminently useful in this work. He was success ful in his business affairs in a marked degree, the result of diligence, frugal ity and safe managt inent. April the 3rd I860, he married Mrs. Bamoth L. Farr, whose maiden name was Hames. So' n after marriage he united with the Methodist Episcopal church, South, and ever after was a' useful and faithful member. He was, for about the entire period of his church life, an officer in the church, being a steward, Sunday school su perintendent and trustee. Many time® he was elected and served as a delegate to the annual and district conferences. Here, as in other im portant places, he served with abil ity. While large and varied business in terests laid claim *0 his time and thought, his home life was ideal. The burdens of business cares were never allowed to disturb the peace and good cheer of the loved ones, but always cheerful, affable and entertaining, he contributed to teh happiness of the home circle. He always felt a. spec ial interest in the young people and sought to promote their happiness' and well-being. A worthy son of a noble ancestry who bore a patriotic part in the Revolution, a patriotic citizen, an ideal neighbor, an honor able, upright business man, a faith ful Christian, a devoted husband, and a kind and loving father has gone to his reward, and has joined his sainted wife, who proceeded him to the heav enly inheritance only nine moaths. “Well done, good and faithful ser vant.” 1 will come every dav. There is some- ^ . . , . . , - - . * - 1 ^ . . , greatest objects of hatred known to the bus ness men’s luncheon to Mr. Ak*x- thing in my heart; I don t know how to 1 ” A Society Conversion. The converts are not confined to the lower classes. At an afternoon meet ing Dr. Torrey said: “When 1 came over to the 12 o’clock trails. It Is a black clay soil with won derfully adhesive qualities. Gumbo is a stuff of strong individuality. It Is like nothing‘else. Two strips of land lie side by side; one is average good I soil, and the oilier is gumbo. The rain fall that is sufficient to obtain good meeting here i intended to go out to crops on the average Mil does not lunch somewhere near here and hurry make tbe slig!it«?st impression on Its back to this meeting, but somehow 1 neighbor. It is a veritable Kentucky felt impelled to go home. I bad told colonel, with the exception that when my wife that I would uotMie borne to It once becomes water soaked it re lunch. I Junrped on a car in Walnut tains the habit. Irrigate it, and you street for my home on the west side, have then tbe richest land imaginable, aud just as I entered the gate to my And this is the land formerly despised, bouse a lady and gentleman were com- sneered at and considered to lie of no ing out. They hafi lieen inside* and had value whatever, been told that I wouldn’t be home to Mr. Peter Antonakog of Greenwood, was married in Greenwood Tuesday night to Miss Helen Sacrenty. of Sparta, Greece. This announcement I is not unlike thousands of others that I will doubtless appear today or pos sibly in next Sunday’s society news, but behind this one is m story of some interest an.l certainty with it, is his torical association in the name of the bride aH least. Who will not think at once of Fair Helen of Troy, for whom the long -and bloody Trojan war was ra ,r od and thanks to Homer, which has given us so many other classical names. Miss Helen Sacrenty, how ever. came of her own free will and accord. She left her home In Sparta some several weeks ago In company 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, Cowpens. p. m. An audience of over 1,000 gather ed at the first service, when Dr. Torrey spoke upon “Why I Bejieve tlje Bible to Be the Word of God.” Dr. Torrey declared that lie had once been an ag- Hypocrite* u.uallv Durst their tor- IT,, uh‘, rowed hide, hy overloading their ot U,e 1 “ ble Dud.lweome a f stomaches now b< d' ev< * M every word in the Bible 1 from Genesis to Revelation. In s\at- Was Wasting Away. ln 8 bis reasons for believing the Bible The following letter from Robert R to lie the word of God tbe evangelist Watts, of Salem, Mo., is instructive.! said: Tbe United States government has lunch. They were just passing out. as spent much money of late years in re- with her young brother, a boy of about I passed in my front gate. Tbe man claiming hitherto arid tracts of land. 12. Her lover in Greenwood anxious- turned and looked ut -me. He said,; One of the largest irrigation schemes ] v awaited her arrival, and as the ‘Are* you Dr. Torrey?’ I said, ‘Yes.’, on hand now is that in Butte county, time approached his smiles were ‘Well/ lie said, ‘my wife and I want South Dakota. This county lies in the most noticeable and contagious, l^ast to l*e saved. We want to talk to you.’ j extreme northwest corner of the state, I said,‘Come lu.’ They were very tine- Just north of the Black Hills and ly dressed, nice looking people. We northwest of the old Indian reserva- went In, and he said, ‘We have a con- tion. Local farmers and stock raisers fesslon to make.’ Never mind what it have been forced to pump aud Irrigate was. They belonged to excellent fam-1 and have as a result raised not only week she arrived in South Carolina and the marriage is the result. Hies here in this city, and the spirit of How Tillman Came to Lose an Eye. Although his brothers were old enough to serve in the Confederate army, Benjamin R. Tillman was » There is no need worrying along in discomfort because of a disorder ed digestion. Get a bottle of KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA, and see what It will do for you. Kodol not only di gests what you eat and gives that tired stomach a needed rest, but is a corrective of the greatest efficiency. Kodol relieves indigestion, dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, flatulence, and sour stomach. Kodol will make your stomach yotng and healthy again. You will worry just in the proportion that your stomach worries you. Worry means the loss of abil ity to do your best. Worry is »o be avoided at all times. Kodol will take worry out of your stomach. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. To build up the tissues of the body sin a glass of rich creamy milk be fore retiring. Chronic bronchial troubles and summer coughs can be quickly re lieved and cured by Foley's Honey and Tar. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. The acts of one partner bind all the others. God bud been working with both hus band and wife. We knelt and had very fine cattle, but magnificent crop. , 8choolboy of 15 when tbe great 8tru “ ”1 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 an.l well.” Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. FOimHONEY^IAR for mkUdroHi oafo, taro, Jfo oplatoo Kodol Dyspepsia Cairo Mts wiurt you oat. FOimHONEMAR “I did not always believe the Bible to be the w’ord of God. I sincerely doubted that tbe Bible was the word of God. 1 doubted that Jesus Christ was the Kon of God. I doubted wheth er there was a personal God. I was not an infidel—I was a skeptic. I did not deny—I questioned. I did not know, but I determined to find out. If the Bible was the word of God I determin ed to fluid that out and act accordingly, and if the Bible was not the word of God I determined to find that out and act accordingly. I found out. I found out beyond a perad venture that tbe Bible is the word of God. Today It is with me not a matter of mere proba bility, nor even of mere belief, but of absolute certainty." By means of the megaphone trans mitter installed In tbe armory tbe of bay. alfalfa, wheat and sugar beets. ; gle began . H e knew th.at at 16 he But although the farmers themselves muS ( j 0 j n f b( » Confederate forces, prayer together and took them to the buV e conimemced irrigating on a small and b j s brothers wrote back from the ! Lord Jesus.” scale, yet thousands of acres of laud field entreating him to get as much I remain unreclaimed, aud it is for the | education as possible, because the reclamation of this vast area for the war might Last so long that he would never again be able to go to school. U. B. NIimw Explain. III. Eplvrain. I told a lie accidentally on the plat- ! benefit of the prospecting settlers that form ut Wakefield, England, the other the national government commenced d ly, says <». B. Shaw, the English work on this project dramatist ami critic, in the Clarion. A j — workman corrected me afterward in private conversation. I assured him that it was pure Ignorance on my part. “Ob,” he said, with a slightly disap pointed ulr, “didn’t you know? We thought it was one of your epigrams. Even at night young Tillman wo .Id continue his studies, freqquently lav- rying a lighted nine knot into the woods and lying down with his booKS beside it. He was a link, tall si Locomotive, mm Fire Engine*. The Reading railroad is having some i ent boy, dictatorial and brusque, but cf its shifting engines equipped with a natural student. The heat of the pine torch injured his left eye and a plunge of cold water brought on a fire apparatus so that they can beSitil- ized in case of an emergency, says the Buffalo News. With a pressure of 140 1 tumor that destroyed it. It was the I think this shows a remarkable Insight i pounds of steam u stream of water ilmost two years of illness following on the part of a poor 11A11 Into the true was thrown a distance of fifty feet and I this mishap that prevented the youth nature of moyt modern epigrams. , did effective work. Each engine will f r< J m serving in arras against the un- have tjvo sections of hose fifty feet RallMnr Building In India each. This is carried in the rear of the India’s railway building for the next | tank. A seven-eighth Inch nozzle is three years will amount to about $50. I used. Tbe tank of this locomotive has <100,000 per iiiinum. ■ capacity of 0,000 gallons. The sworn statement of the manu facturers protects you from opiates in Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar—the cough syrup that drives the cold out of your system. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co.. Gaffney; L. D. Al lison, Cowpens. Ignorance of the law* excuses one. no 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 forma of kidney and blad der diseases. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Don’t leave your cheerful smiles at th-. office when your days work is done. J *' xm 1 I