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•M. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy ^ £ Almost every family has need 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 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. MISS JONES' READY PISTOL. THE TELEPHONE GIRL IN THE LIMELIGHT. Unsatisfactory Change. “Such a change,” sai.l Senator Till man. apropos of a certain bill, “would be about as satisfactory as the change that a landlord once made. “A woman came to see this land lord. She wanted to look at a house that was to let. The man sent a clerk to show her over the house, and on her return she said: “ T like the house very well. There ‘ is only one thing that I object to.’ “ •Well, madame, any reasonable al teration.’ the landlord murmured suavely, “would be made provided you took a three-year's lease—’ “ ‘I’d take a three years’s lease,’ said the woman, ‘if only the house had more closets.’ “ 'The number of closets shall be doubled,’ said the landlord. “ "Very well,’ said the woman, in a pleased voice, and she signed the lease then and there. “After she was gone the landlord called in his clerk again. “ John,’ he said, ’tak-e a carpenter over to No. 37 and have him divide each of the closets in two. Too Easily Discouraged. (Exchange.) A young man in Indiana at work in a holiness league, who married a woman to reform her, has given up, broken-hearted, the task in four months. Worn^n who are experts in the business have tried . the same experiment for years with the same result, but are not so easily dis couraged, since they are trying it still. HIT A WILD FREIGHT CAR. 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 back 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. A man h>oks good to you when he looks profitable. Thousands annually bear witness to the efficiency of Early Risers. These pleasant, reliable little pills have long borne a reputation second to none as a laxative and cathartic. They are 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 AllLson, Cowpens. While it is never too late to mend, it is sometimes too late to unmend. 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 gripe like pills and ordinary ca thartics. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup aids digestion and stimulates the liv er and bowels without irritating them. Remember the name Orino and refuse substitutes. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Be good, but do not be a good thing. 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. Cowpens. When a man gets stuck on himself may he be said to have made a bad bargain? The People of the Community Are Aroused—Several Theories As to Motive of the Criminal. (Special to Charlotte Observer.) Selma, N. C., June 24.—Last night between 11 and 12 o’clock, at the home of her father in this place, there was a bold attempt by some unknown person to enter the room of Miss Pearl Jones, but the attempt was foiled by the use of a revolver in the same steady hand that exactly two weeks before so successfully des patched her would-be assailant. Miss Jones was relieved at the tel ephone office about 11 o’clock, oame •home and had just eaten her midnight lunch and gone into the sitting room, where she was talking with the rest of the family, when the dining room door was heard to open. Her grand father. who was in the room at the time, looked into the dining room but found no one there, so he securely fastened the Joor and returned to the sitting room. Pretty soon, however, seme one was heard walking on the porch in front of Miss Pearl’s room and her room-mate, Miss Josle.Hunt, who had already retired, saw the form of a man at the window of her room through the space between the bottom of the shade and the window sill, whereupon she called to Miss Pearl. However, before Miss Pearl could get there with her pistol the form had disappeared. Miss Pearl and her father, who had just returned from the railway sta tion went up stairs and woke Mr. W. G. Gatewood, a railway engineer who has a room there, and the two of them went out into the yard to in vestigate, but could find no one. Mr. Jones, hearing another noise, thought it might be one of the night hands at the fertilizer plant, of which he is superintendent, that had been sent to his residence to see him about some thing and probably did not know which door to come to. went to the plant, where he found all the hands in their places and no one had been sent to see him. He returned to his resi dence where, with Mr. Gatewood, he made a more searching investigation but could find nothing. Then, hoping the trouble was over, he allowed Mr. Gatewood to retire and soon the fam ily retired. Before they had gone to sleep. Miss Jones, hearing another noise like a man stumbling on the porch in front of her room, shot through the win dow, biu unfortunately the culprit es caped, the ball entering the railing around the porch. He was heard to jump from the porch and the night being unusally dark and cloudy he had no trouble escaping without being seen. There was a heavy rain soon after this which blotted out his tracks, if he left any. This affair, while not so widely known as the one two weeks ago, has aroused the citizens of the communi ty. There are different views of tha affair expressed here. Some think it was merely a case of attempted rob bery of the house, others think it was a case of contemplated criminal as sault upon the girls, while others hold to the theory that it was a mat ter of some of the young negroes of the place trying to avenge the death of their former companion. If either of the latter two theories are ever proven to be correct a rep etition of the trouble in Wilmington in 1898 is feared. This is a specially aggravated case in view of the fact that thy girl has so recently, however triumphantly, passed through an or- oeal calculated to shake the nerve of any ordinary person, and if the culprit is ever found out it will not be safe foi him to remain in this community many minutes. The people here are determined to give this girl the sup port she deserves. Up to this time there is no clue whatever. Mrs. King, who lives just across the strort. says that yesterday a neero man came to her house and asked her to change a $1b bill and while he was talking to her and when he left and until he was out of sight he kept hie eyes fixed on the Jones home, which fact impressed her to the ex tent that she informed the Joneses of j it and warned them to be on the lookout. This being the junction of two important railway systems it is an easy matter for such person* to catch any one of the many trains passing here every hour in the day. Atlantic Coast Line Passenger Train Meets an Accident. Goldsboro, June 20.—Northbound passenger train No. 42 on the Atlan tic Coast Line ran into a carload of lumber just this side of Nurse river to night and injured Engineer Tom Mc Millan and his fireman. The passen gers were badly shaken, hut no one was injured. A freight train which reached the cltv just ahead of the time for the jmssenger train had a carload of lum ber attached to the rear end of the caboose. The car was in bad order and was being towed in. It broke lose from the freight train without being noticed by the crew and ran down the track a mile or more before it struck the incoming passenger train. The timber on the oar was telescoped over the engine and was jabbed into the cab. The crew of the freight train, which was shifting in the southern part of the city, heard the jam when the collision occurred and went to the scene. As soon as it was learned the en gineer and fireman were injured the freight engine crew came here for surgeons and Dr. W. H. Cob!) .and Dr. R. B. Miller went to the scene. At this time they have not returned and it is impossible to tell to what ex tent the men are injured. The fire man is a colored man and his name is Chestnut. , Later the passenger train which arrived from Norfolk was dispatched to the scene to bring the passengers and the injured men on to this city. It will require a wrecking crew to clear the track. One of the trucks under the lumber car was knocked off the track and in the darkness had not been found. The passenger train was due here at 9:35 and at 11 o’clock some of the passengers who had walked the distance were arriv ing in the city. Woman Kills Big Grizzly. Trinidad Correspondence Denver Re publican. On the Duling ranch In Stonewall, a large grizzly bear was shot and kill ed by Mrs. Duling, wife of the coun ty commissioner, a few days ago. Mrs. Duling was alone on the ranch and was riding about looking after stock when she saw the bear eating a heifer it had killed. Mrs. Duling had a Win chester and promptly killed the griz zly. She is known as a remarkably nervy woman and during her many years residence in the Stonewall has killed several bears, at one time saving her husband from what seemed to be sure death, when he was attacked by a female grizzly he had wounded. Mrs. Duling killed the bear when it was within a few feet of her husband. Iodine, Cure for Snake Bite. (Topeka Capital.) For a sure cure for snake bite, take about seven drops of iodine, scarify and bathe the wound also with iodine. This remedy was first used by a medical officer in British service in India. It has cured both man and i number of animals; it never fails; it is really wonderful in its efforts. One instance I will relate. A young man working for me in the harvest field was bitten by a very large rat tlesnake on one pf his large toes. I gave him about seven drops of tinc ture of iodine on a little sugar and to make doubly sure repeated the dose an hour later. His foot swelled, but next morning he was all right. I have had animals whose bodies have swelled considerably, but all have re covered from the bite 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 Cherokee Drug Co. ( The greatest good to the smallest number seems to be getting qtiite a start on Miss Democracy. —Libbey’s glass cost but little more than other cut glass, so why not buy the best—you will be better satis fied—there is nothing like knowing. Gaffney Drug Co. FOimHONEY*»lAR •ores Coldsi Prevents Pneumonia OR.KING’S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Slop That Cough. l BITTERS AND KIDNEYS. Up a Mountain bv Balloon. (Chicago Tribune.) A balloon railway is now running up the mountains at Salzburg. Austria. It consists of a large captive balloon attached to a single steel railway, which in turn is fixed firmly to the side of a steep mountain whose pre cipitous slopes no other form of rail way could climb without making a series of serpentine detours and pass ing through tunnels. The balloon remains balanced in the air about ten yards above the rail to which It is attached by a stout wire cable, and it is moved up and down the side of the mountain at the wilj of the engineer. For an ascent the balloon itself furnishes the lifting foreo by means of hydrogen; for the descent a larger reservoir attched to the balloon is filled with water at the highest station and senses as ballast. Under the balloon is a circular car seating ten passengers. The wire cable passed through the floor of the car to a speed regulator beneath, which is controlled by the engineer. The inventor, Herr Bald- erauer of Salzburg, states that the balloon railway will replace the fur- nicular railway In the future. —“Is that cut glass?” you will hear , them ask. “Yes,” you will hear one ! say. She has found’ the word "Llb- bey.” She knows what that one li^ j tie word means. Gaffney Drug Co. DISPENSARY IS AGAIN KNOCKED. CROPS RUINED BY HAIL STORM. COMMITTEE REPORTS ON ITS WESTERN TOUR. Dispensary Paid More for Whiskey A n Innovation. (Topek-a Journal.) There is great excitement over the report that a bride who will come to Topeka soon has a maid. This will raise the limit and establish a new record in Topeka. Occasionally a To peka woman steals the housemaid or nurse, exchanges her cap and apron for the lady’s maid kind and takes her out of town with her in order to make a noise like an aristocrat, but it is believed the new bride will be the only woman in Topeka who has a really and truly lady’s maid all her own. who never helps out In the kitch en, nursery or laundry. Than Other Consumers—Long Dis cussion Over Other Matters. Columbia. June 2(5.—The matter al most of sensational interest before the dispensary investigation meeting today was the long-looked for report of the sub-committee, consisting of Messrs. Lyon and Christenser. on j their several trips of investigation to , the whiskey housts from east and west, which have had dealings with ; the State dispensary. The report goes into the details of ' the visits to the houses anil a number of instances are pointed out of houses selling to concerns outside the State j at lower prices than to the State stuff sold to the State dispensary, which | is, in almost every case, the biggest | purchaser. There are many pages of this sort of details, the renort finally : winding up with a recommendation to | the effect held up be continue! sin j pended. The hills for just claims, | along with the others and the whole matter referred to the next legislature i with the suggestion the body appoint , a board of expert accountants to can-1 vass the various claims in detail, and say what should be paid and what not. The sub-committee argued along the line, that it could not give the claims the searching investigation demanded, as the members of the committee were inexpert accountants, and that the committee bad no authority, anyway, to scale claims. The body of experts should have authority to do this scal ing and say what mrt of the claims should be paid, or if any of them should be paid. The session this morning was of lit tle Interest otherwise. The Carolina Glass Company had a lengthy statement to submit in de fence of the various things that should be insinuated against it and after some skirmishing. Mr. Lyons with drew objection to admitting this state ment. he to have the opportunity to canvass it through witnesses later. Attorney G. Duncan Bellinger, offered an affidavit from Boykin as to the Lanahan incident, but this "'as held over to he submitted later. The state ment of the Carolina GDss Company was admitted into testimony answer ing questions from the case. Gover nor John C. Sheppard, who wanted to know the fate of claim for concern here represented in the capacity of an attorney, this concern not being men tioned in the sub-committee report. Mi;. Lyon said there were a number of concerns the committee had discover ed nothing against. Some of who ap peared to have dealt fairly and honor ably with the State, but the sub-com mittee had not been able to go to the bottom of these matters and had de cided therefore to recommend that all claims referred back to the legislature. The committe spent about an hour listening to arguments from lawyers about whether the sub-committee re port should be adopted finally adjorn- ed till next Monday. Adjutant Gen eral Frost, has not yet received a re ply to his telegram of yesterday to the ward additional $18,000 coming to this State under the new appropriation for the militarv will be available for the Chickamauga encampment but reply has come from Secretary Richardson, of the passenger association confirm ing the rumor that the road will exact a two-cent mile rate. Crops in Path of Storm Ruined— Haj( Was Terrible. Greenville, June 19.—In the Bell- nie section of the county yesterday rfternoon great damage was wrought to the crops over a considerable area by a tremendous hail and wind storm. The path of the storm was a mile wide. The hail storm touched Mari- i etta and traversed the Bellvue sec tion;* reaching within two miles of Travelers Rest, where its course was changed toward Tygerville. From reports gathered today many farmers lost their entire crops. A farmer from that section in the city today exhibited the best stalks of cotton he could find in his crop. Every leaf ami bud were stripped and the stalks were cut half in two, the portion of the stalk, which re mained standing being badly scarred and cur. There is not the slightest chance of any cotton coming out.’ ii, is stared. The destruction seemed to be complete. The corn was literally torn to pieces and it is in the same condi tion as the cotton. There is no way to estimate the damage done. With the hail storm there was a blinding rain and a high wind. This helped to make the destruction com plete in the path of the nail. The stones fell thick and fast and the ground was quickly covered Peculiar to Itself In selection, proportion and combination of ingredients. In the process by which their remedial values are extracted and preserved, In effectiveness, usefulness and economy. Curing the widest range of diseases, Doing the m"»t good for the money, Having the most medicinal merit, And the greatest record of cures,— Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs. 100 doses $1. ■W How to Treat Appendicitis. (Brooklyn Eagle.) Dr. Chauvel, medical inspector of the French army, deals a heavy blow at the popular surgical treatment of appendicitis in a special report of a statistical nature. He shows that out of CG8 cases of appendicitis in the military hospitals of France 188 were operated upon, while 480 receiv ed only medical treatment. Of the latter there were only three that re sulted fatally, whereas of the much smaller number dealt with by the use of the knife twenty-three were lest. HOYT HAYES PARDONED. Governor Heyward Convinced of Al leged Wife Murderer's Innocence. Columbia. June 23.—Governor Hey ward tonight announced that he had granted Hoyt Hayes a full pardon. To no other matter which he has had to consider as governor has Governor Heyward given more careful and ear nest thought than to the case of Hoyt ! Hayes. Hayes has since October. 19"4. 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 young and healthy again. You will worry just in the been in the State penitentiary, the Proportion that your stomach worries sentence of death having at that time j J ou - ^ orr -' m ^ ans ^ oss °* a -^* ity to do your best. Worry is to be avoided at all times. Kodol will take worry out of your stomach. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. Jesse James. Attorney. (Kansas- City Star.) Jesse James, son of Jasse James, the outlaw, was enrolled today in the circuit court as. an attorney at law. He passed the examination on June 9 before the board of State examiners in Jefferson City, and made the high est grade in a class of 37. His aver age was 97. He said today: “In two weeks I will emit the pawnbroking business and will devote the balance of my life to the practice of the law.” Serious Injury by Hickory, June 2G. farmer, living in the town was struck by the prevalence of a afternoon and paraly be was grooming in stantlv killed. Mr. is serious. Electric Bolt. —Mr. Lewis, a suburbs of this lightning during storm yesterday zed. The horse his barn was in- Lewis’ condition Don't Know Her Money. (Lipli^cott’s Magazine.) . A village doctor whoso most trouble some patient was an elderly woman practical]v on the free list, received a sound rating from her one day for not. coming when summoned the night before. “You can go and see your other pa tients at night,” said she. “Why can’t you come when I send for you? Ain’t niv money as good as other people’s?” “I do not know, madam,” was the reply. “I never saw auv of it.” Killed by Lightning. Tarboro, June 25,—About 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon G. W. Wynn, who lived at the Runnymede Knitting Mills, wag struck by lightning while standing on the back porch of his house and Instantly killed. The house was onlv slightly burned on top before it was extinguised. The de ceased was formerly from Roblnson- ville, where his remains were carried for Interment. HOPE SHE ENjOYED IT. been commuted to life imprisonment by Governor Heyward. T.ie govern or’s action then was based upon the grave doubts of Hayes’ guilt. Since then he has studied the case even more carefully and is now convinced i that there is not sufficient evidence Though an artist may draw a con- ! against Hayes to warrant the with-; elusion, he cant sell it. j holding of the pardon. His action is ^ r - takes a man with a great head to voluntary, no recent petition having; dodge responsibilty. j been presented in the matter, ’ ———. \ The sincerest tribute that can be paid to superiority is imitation. The many imitations of DeWitt’s Witch School “Mam” from New England Hazel Salve that are now before the Gives Picnic to Negroes. people prove it the best. Ask for De- Spartanburg, June 22.—There was a Mitt’s. Good for bums, scalds, chaff* big negro picnic pulled off here today ed skin, eczema, tetter, cuts, bruises, at GU ndaie, it being ariven by Mrs. boils and piles. Highly recommended . Pruden. of Massachusetts, who is and reliable. Sold by Cherokee Drug ^ teaching a school for negroes at that Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens- place. The picnic was pulled off with . ' the usual results, only this time there Even after we have government in- were no fatalties. Charlie Stevens, spmion from “hoof to can.” it might . alias “Foot,” of Spartanburg, cut Ro- be .a good plan to occasionally inspect i land Norris, of Glendale, in the side of theinspectors. — <», Chronic bronchial troubles and summer coughs can be quickly re- I the head, the wound extending from the temple down to tl\e throat. The wound was dressed and it is not thought that the negro will die. “Foot” has not been arrested yet, I and is in Spartanburg attending to his j business. The picnic took all the ne groes from the city, there being a j scarcity of labor i • all lines today. lieved and cured by Foley’s Honey and Tar. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. The Auto in Spain. (New York American.) Spanish royal society has just held an unprecedented automobile parade, complimentary to King Alfonso, as automobiling is one of his pet' di versions. There were 1S5 cars, counting the detachment that came from Barcelonia, all most elaborately decorated. There was not a single ar rest. as the pace was regulated bv the slowest car, which led. One of the chaffeurs, whose car had broken down, remaVked to an American: “What can you expect? Onlv two cars broke down; onlv two ran into each other, and the Marquis de Viana fell out of his car and got run over by another but was not seriously hurt.” In the first car were the Queen Mother and the Duchess of San Car los; the second held the King's aid- de-camp; in the third Prince Carlos and the Princess Ena’s brother; in the fourth the Infanta Maria Teresa and husband: the fifth the Infanta Isabella, and then came King Alfonso. Princess Ena reviewed the parade. King Alfonso and Princess Ena held a reception to v'siting statesmen in Pardo Palace, and the Princess was “presented with an address” as they sav in Spain. She was openlv assur ed by Spain’s leading men that Alfon so would make a good husband. \Ye have no biographical sketch of “Farmer” Coburn, who declined the appointment as United States senator i from Kansas, but it s one of the three Not Worrying Over Price of Cotton. 1)est that he is not a native of Spartanburg. June 22—The farmers 0hio - throughout the county who are hold- i ing their last year’s crop of cotton do , Tlie sworn statement of the manu- not seem to be worrying about the facturers protects you from opiatei nrice of the staple, for thev are de- in Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and voting their time to the making of Tar—the cough syrup that drives the the present crop. The past few days cold out of >' our system. Sold by have been most favorable for farm Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. AL work and the farmers are taking ev- Hson, Cowpens. erv advantage of the excellent condl-! tion of the weather. On hundreds of A Chicago man. after twenty-seven farms laborers are at work in the cot- ?’ ear s of married life, has obtained a ton and corn fields. divorce in South Dakota. Even in the In many sections there is a com- ma tter of divorces the .average Chica- plaint of scarcity 0 f labor and the goan fears to patronize home in Justry. farmers are having a great deal of I trouble to secure sufficient help to Warning, keep up the work in hand. * One man y°u have kidney or bladder trou- stated that he ha-* hired a couple of ble an<1 do not use Fold's Kidney hands the other day. paying them Cure, you will have only yourself to good wages, hut the laborers worked blame for results, as it positively onlv a few days and skipped out for cures al l forms of kidney and blad- Cleanliness as a Habit. (Boston Advertiser.) Chicago, in the earnestness of her ■attempt to clean up the city (as to its physical aspect), is forming the chil dren of the city into an army of clean liness with a set of four simple rules, telling them to pick up at ietst one piece of paper each day. to “slick up” around home, to do missionary work on the neighbor's children and to keep more or less clean as to hands and face. In this wav the optimists of Chicago hope to plant the s.eed of civic cleanliness. They will nurse the budding plant (If it ever buds) and try to develop i vigorous shrub which shall sweep the tares of untidi ness before it, so that in the next generation the man with the muck rake will pass Chicago by hurriedly and hopelessly. The primary idea is a good one; there is no doubt that the phyalcial aspect of Chicago can be im proved and that the children can do a deal in helping along the improve ment. It is not a new idea: other cit ies have tried these “children’s bri gades” with satisfactory results That dattoship ought to insure Mr. Bryan the solid Sulu vote of the anti- Imperi^list society of New England. —There are a lot of clever imita tions of the genuine article these days. Be careful when you go to pur chase a piece of cut glass. other parts of the country. Cough Medicine. (Saturday Evening Post.) I had a little husband— I never knew a worse. I'm sure better than his wife or life He loved his little purse. 1 did my best to wheedle him— He saw my r'eep intent. And though he had ,a chronic cough He never coughed a cent. J So I sought a little lawyer— My husband's own close crony— And divided with the man of law My lawful alimony. A Patroness. (Philadelphia l^edger.) “I’ve decided to patronize your store,” she said, condescendingly; “everybody says you keep such pure I drugs and all that.” “Yes, madam.” replied the new druggist, "we are particularly caretul to supply only the best. What can | I do for you, madam?” “Give me a two-cent stamp, please.” In Darkest Africa. (New York World.) I "I read the news, said King Gooroo, “And sad I am to see then How folks in far-off Christian lands Bamboozle u$ poor heathen. !"That rank 'canned missionary' stew I had today for dinner I’m sure was not a saintly man. But some ungodly sinner.” Ready for Business. (Judge.) “Mr. Jones, 1 want your daughter. She is worth her weight in gold.” “Wa'll, Agger her out and gimme a cheque. I kin use th’ money.” When the baby talks, it is time f to give Hollister’s Rocky Moutain: Tea. It's the greatest baby medicine' known to loving mothers- It makes ■ them eat, sleep and grow. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets. Gaffney Drug Co. —Each piece of Libbej s cut glass has the word “Libbey” etched on the j glass itself. Gaffney Drug Co. der diseases. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. FOtEYSKlDNEYCURS KldMys and ffliddtr Bight Kodol Dyspepsia Caro Dig acts what you eat. FOLEYSnONEY^TAR for ehUdront Off*:, aure. Jfo oplatma r ♦ 1 * : If anybody has a message for the people of this community he cannot deliver it to them so effectually, so cheaply, so quick ly in any other way as through ♦ the columns of this paper. ♦ It is the business of this pa- 4 per to carry messages of one kind and another Into homes. The message will be delivered, too, under favorable conditions, for few persons take up their local paper except in a pleasant and receptive frame of mind. The sign upon the fence board may be good, but it can be aeen 4 only by travelers who go that ♦ particular road. The message ♦ in the local paper carries itself ^ to thousands, no matter by whkh ♦ road they travel. Select your your message where the most good. and put it mil do W«, jwrhapa will bat ♦ ♦ i t J M if ! * 4 ■*•-4