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DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost ever papers is sure ybody who reads the news- to know of the wonderful cures made by Dr. l Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, I the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. k it is the great medl cal triumph of the nine* teenth century; dis covered after years of , scientific research by D r * Kilmer, the emi- ' nent kidney and blad der specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have kid ney, iiver or bladder trouble it will be found Jus* the remedy you need. It has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work, in private practxe, among the helpless too poor to pur chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, may have a samp'-* bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr, K^merScCY. Bing- .lamton, N V The egu>a f:f*y ctTi. a^d n^iu^of Swunj-.^xir. ioT'a/SitCS i*f sc-d uy •. j '<A On ggists. Don’t make any mistake, but re member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghampton, N. Y., on every bottle NEWS FIOM THE NATION’S CAPITAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE TO MEET AT OYSTER BAY. able report. That report never reach’ ed the House, however, for Speaker Cannon called in Chairman Gardner of the committee and read th« riot act to him for allowing the bill to come out of the committee, and it re mains on the House calender. That is the way labor has been treated by the Republican leaders. How do the labor people like it? Not the Riqht Question. "The bravery of young men.’ said Rear Admiral Buhler at Atlantic City, according to the New York Tribune “is a fact, that I shall never cease to marvel over. Did you ever hear of hope too forlorn, a risk too over whelming, for the young men of the armies and navies of the world to undertake? ‘If only th eyoung men's wisdom equalled their bravery! But this is impossible. Someiimes 1 think boys have so much braverv there Is no room in them for anything else. “I used to know a bov who was brave enough, but reckless, careless, extravagant. He accumulated a great quantity of debts. "His father gave him a talking to one day. “ ‘Suppose,’ he said, ‘that I should be taken away suddenly what woujd become of you?’ ‘‘‘I’d stay-here.’ the boy answered, smiling. ‘The question is. what would become <>f you?’ ” Ordered by the President to Visit His Home and Talk Over the Situation of the Party of “Great Moral Ideas.’ Washington, D. C.. Aug. 1.—Just as he has dominated everything else connected with the Remiblican party since he became president of the United States. Mr. Theodore Roose velt has orlered Speaker Cannon, Chairman James S. Sherman and Sec retary Loudenslager. of the Republi can congressional committee, to visit him at Oyster Bay and talk- over the situation of the party of “great moral ideas” in this congressional fight. He not onb- is going to give them their lessons as to what they must do in the fight for them and compel them the fight fo rthem and compel them to hew to the line laid down bv him. He is the boss of the Republican party and no set of men know it bet ter than the speaker and the congress' sional leaders of the Republican par ty. He is going to have in the cam paign book just those things he wants in and he is going to eliminate just those things that he wants out of it. He is going to tell Jim Sherman that if he wants any of the half million dollars left over from the last presi dential campaign, now in the hands his henchmen, Cortelyou. that will have to dance to the Roosevelt music or he will have to wrestle for himself. That s what the genial Jim does not want to be compelled to do. and be will lis ten to the song of the Rooseveltian boss and go away from Oyster Bay with a plethoric purse. Roosevelt is just beginning to wake up to the fact the labor people meant business last March when they put an.i Uncle Joe Cannon lungs that they want' the last session of the was one thing and an spit in the faces of the last March coming th.* Prof. Tyler, of Amherst college, said recently; “A man can liv.* com fortably without brains; no man ever existed without a digestive system. The dyspeptic has neither faith, hope nor charity.” Day by day people re alize the importance of caring for their digestion; realize the need of the use of a little corrective after overeating. A corrective like Kodol For Dyspepsia. It digests what you eat. Sold by Cherokee Dni 0 ' Co. Gaff ney; L. I). Allison. Cowpens. He who wrong. thinks no evil can do no Don't drag ehmg with a dak. heavy f‘eling. ^ on need a pill. Use De- Witt’s Little Early Risers, the famous little pills. Do not sicken or gripe, but results are sure. Sold by Chero kee Drug Co.. Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. Waiting works wonders work while you wait. if you Makes the Liver Lively. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup gives permanent relief in cases of habitual constipation as it stimulates the liver ?>nd restores the natural -ction of the bowels without irritating these or gans like pills or ordinary cathartics. Does not nauseate or gripe and is mild and pleasant to take. Remembf the name ORINO and refuse substi tutes. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. man may do the best get the worst of it. be can and A world of truth In a few words: "Nearly all other cough cures are con stipating. especially those containing opiates. Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and ' r ar moves the bowels. Contains no opiat s." You can get it Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney, and L. D. Allison, Cowpens. up to him some of the d passed by Congress. It easy one, to labor leaders when everything was Roosevelt way with a swin 1 ' that was dazzling, but when the sober second thought comes and they ascertain that the labor men are i" deadly earnest, they get scar ed and com * down like Scott’s coon. The recent order promulgated by the President that all officers of the army and the navv must report all viola tions of the eight hour labor law, that h been on the statute books since 1893. made bv contracts hand ling government works, is an eleven th bon*- repentance. The labor peo ple have for years been trying to get such order out of the Republican ad ministration. but without avail. The contractors have been violating the law and laughing in the faces of the labor people who have complained to the officers in charge of the works, the l?vtter telling them that they were not there to plav detective for the labor people. This latest order of the President now compels thi officers to play detective and report all violations of the law, and it is simply a sop thrown to Labor in the face of all the grievances complained of bv the labor people. Will this thing fool the labor people and make them face about in their determina tion to get even for all the insults that have been flung In their fac$*s in the past dozen years by 'the powers that b c > in the national capital? Well. I guess nit. It is the general impression here and is substantiated by the talk of those who seem to be in authority in labor circles, that they will go ahead with the program thev have manned out to »>!ay for even. They are going after the scalps of a good many members of the Republican party in the present Congress and if all signs do not fail there will be many familiar faces missing in the Sixtieth Congress. One of those faces, it seems likely, will be the Hon. Chas. E. Littlefield, of Maine, The labor people are after him and several more members of the judici ary committee of the House, for the part they played in defeating the anti-injunction bill at the last ses sion of the House. Thev also are after the Republican members of the committee on labor who refused to vote on and get the eight hour bill out of that committee. The bill finally did get out of the committee simply because the Democratic mem- bps of the committee one day caught the Republicans napping and voted it out of the committee with a favor- Referring to our navy’s submarine boats, a description of the “Octopus,” the largest of four boats now build ing. will prove interesting. The Octopus is 105 feet long, and will have a sped on the surface of 10 1-2 knots per hour, and 8 1-2 knots when running submerged. She will carry four large torpedoes, any one of which could blow a battle-ship to atoms and destroy her complement of six or eight hundred souls. The contract for this boat calls for a service or endurance test in the open sea of twenty-four hours dura tion. at high speeds after which she is to remain at sea. self-sustaining, for three days. The vessel is to be able to sink to a distance of 200 feet below the surface of the sea. It will he seen that this under water torpedo-boat will he a formid able craft, and on her stealthy cruises will he a terror to the leviathan bat tle ship or cruiser. The features of the submarine boat which make it invaluable as a war weapon, is its ability to approach the enemy unseen, and. in the unlike ly even of being discovered, its pro- tectio from hostile fire afforded by the fifteen or twenty feet of water intervening between the top of the boat and the surface of the water. The submarine of the latest type costs between $300,000 and $500,000. With its torpedoes it can blow to atoms a first class battle-ship, costing ten or twelve million. In the recent debate in the Senate on the naval appropriation, a propos ed appropriation authorizing a mons ter battle-ship to cost $10,000,000 or $12,000,000 was under discusron. Senator Tillman said: "We have read of battles between whales and sword-flshe and we know how much trouble the great leviathan has in battling with a school of sword-fish. That simile occurs to me as an illus tration of the inutility, the useless- nest. and the dangerous condition into which a great ship like this might be if .a lot of torpedo boats, or submarines, or other destructive agencies, or even smaller vessels having equally good guns that could pierce her armor or pierce her hull, should be her adversaries.” which Standard Oil already controls. Such “a government b?nk having the power of Issue ami rediscounting for other hanks” and thereby having them all more or less In Its power, with the unscrupulous men in charge that dominate Standard Oil interests. —ould Indeed he a wonderful institu tion. It would heat the hank of England and the hank of Prince, In financial power, and would dominate our polities also. Standard Oil has no expectations of such an institution immediately. It is for the future when the people are more composed politically, hut It takes time to lay the wires that can be el ‘drifted into life when times are propitious. It is well, however, to keep watch and ward over those elected as representatives of the peo- p] * that they mav not he hypnotized by this great power, which, in one of its smaller corporations, controls more money than the old United States bank that the Whigs—the Standpatters of Jackson’s day. fought and held for. Nothing but a united and honest Democracy can prevent the consumation of this scheme of vast finance, or something like it, for tb« Republican party would ac cept it today, in order to perpetuate itself in power. The fact that the Republican sec retaries of the treasury, with th#* evi dent approval of the President, en courage this close connection with the Standard Oil interests is porten- tious of favor of this plan of finan cial centralization in the highest Re publican quarters, and will require jealous watching on the pan of De mocrats and honest Republican voters to thwart and prevent it. Chas. A. Edwards. PALMETTO TROOPS FIRST. A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE. is to be cut, hand early the spoils, ficials were Tile connection between the Rocke feller banks and the United States Treasury Department is so close that any plan for popular blood-letting favors to the National City Bank of New York and the Riggs bank of Washington is always known far in advance by those institutions. In deed. the Higgs bank keeps a minor official, who was for awhile assistant secretary of the treasury, on purpose to nose around his old haunts and keep the Standard Oil people advis ed of when a fresh financial mellon so that thev cap be on for the lion’s share of In 1905 the treasury of- mailing circulars of the National City hank to all the holders of certain bonds, which were to he converted and the profits of that large transaction largely accrued to Standard Oil in consequence of this Republican official assistance. The present immaculate administration of course could not he caught graft ing. and all the favors granted the Standard Oil clique were for the benefit of the tariff plundered tax payers. There is another young man who Standard Oil took over from the treasury as an asset of the Gage ad ministration, he noses as a great au thority on “high finance,” predicts panics and foretells prosperity as suits the Standard Oil interests. He is the Mother Carey’s Chicken of fi n nee. to tell of the coming storm and stress to the country if tin* ad vice of Standard Oil is not heeded. At present he is harping on that old plundering scheme of “a scientific bank-note currency,” the best plan for which would be “a government bank having the power of issue, whose sole business would he in its relation with other hanks and chief operations would he the counting for other hanks.” That proposition would even stag ger Andy Jackson, for with Standard Oil capital embarked in "a govern ment bank.” the old United Slates hank and Biddle, that gave President Jackson and the Democrats so much trouble before thev could squelch it. would look like one of the new $25.- •MM nationals in comparison to one of the gigantic financial institutions Stranger Procures Position at Spen cer and Drops Out of Sight. Spencer. N. G., Aug. 1.—Spencer has been considerably stirvd during the past few days on account of the mys- t *rious disappearance of a stranger who came here two weeks ago. givin 0, ills nani'* ,as Moore, of Oregon. The stranger, who was a mechanic, se cured a position at the Southern shops here and put up at the Spencer Inn. wh re he insisted on paying his hoard a month in advance. The next .lav he left his loom with his bag gage open and clothing strewn over the room and has not been seen since. He was supposed to be at work hut it was found that he had not aim aired at tin* shops. It was I now - that he carried considerable money ami foul nlav -is feared. Mr. Moore, who was about twenty-five eyars of age and of genteel app arance. came to Spen cer from Sacramento, Cali., where he was at the time of the San Francisco Third South Carolina Regiment the First Troops at Chickamauqa. Chattanooga. Tenn.. July 28.—South Carolina troops had the unusual hon- of being the first on the grounds today at Chickamauga. As one of the r#* "ular army officers at the station remarked. “South Carolina is always first In everything.” The two specials were combined just after Chattanooga was passed and at 1:15 the historic battleground was reached. Of course it rained. The troops. 403 of them, reached the sta tion just as the shower began to come down. The volunteers had some regular army experience and the few regulars hingin^ around th« station laughed at the dripping Palmetto boys as they climbed the hill in a drenching downpour. But the camp is only about 200 yeards from the sta tion and the Third South Carolina regiment got busy with the tents and covering at once. Just 15 minutes later the First Ala bama regiment arrived and about an hour later the Virginia and Louisiana troops came in. But witji the exceo- ♦’ n of the few companies or regu lars sent here several weeks ago. South Carolina was "farthest at Chickamauga” today. Monuments marking the valor of North and South in 1805 are on every side, and tonight Yank and Rebel are together cooking an experimental supper and thinking of the hard work. The work, it -might he mentioned, com mences Sunday. The regulars do not know much about Sunday in the maneuvers, and time is short for the instructions to he given the State troops. The run to the camp is regarded as remarkable in railroad circles. '1 he tiain reacaed Columbia Friday eve ning thr/e hours Dte. It was deliv ered at Clinton at 11 and 11:30 p. m. and reached Atlanta at 0 o’clock this morning. There the belay lasted an lr and the run from Atlanta to Chickamauga was made in just a lit tle under seven hours. On hoard the trains were M ssrs. C. F. Stewart and \V. L. Burroughs of the \Y. E Renneker of the nnd B. H. Hartley also boat d. Col. Schachet took charge as soon as he arrived at the camp, and the hoys w nt on picket duty at once. The grounds are well drained and will rot he affected by the rain. Col. Fuller, whose long experience i- th»* arniv is very valuable to the in > perienced volunteers, is in his glory and is meeting all of his old l -t^nds of the cavalry. The artillery Blood Humors Commonly erase pimples, boils, hives, eczema or salt rheum, or some other form of erup tion; but sometimes they exist in the system, indicated by feelings of weakness, languor, loss of appetite, or general debility, without causing any breaking out. Hood’s .Sarsaparilla expels them, renovates, strengthens and tones the whole system. This is the testimony of thousands annually. Accept no substitute, but insist on having Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sartatab*. 100 doses th Tamed Poetry. "I wish to submit a lyric, sir,” said the timid young man. "My friends say it’s a beauty—really sings itself.” “Humph!” said the cold hearted ed itor. “We couldn't use a poem like that. We want one that, once print ed. will remain perfectly quiet and not keep our readers awake by sing ing itself at all times.” The Man’s Business. "Aw—really.” remarked Gussie Dudeley, "isn’t it ridiculous to say ‘clothes do not make the man?’ ” "Quite so.” replied Cholly Dresser. “If one didn’t have so many clothes one would not need a man.”—Phila delphia Press. whose redis- earthquake. All have thus far In efforts to ,*11 futile. local" him GIRL GOES TO PENITENTIARY. Seaboard; Coast Line of the Sea- There is nothing so pleasant as that bright, cheerful, at>peace-vrtth-the- world feeling when you sit down to your breakfast. There is nothmg so conductive to good work and good re sults. The healthy man with a healthv mind and body is a better fellow, a better workman, a better citizen than the man or woman who is handicapped h- some disability, however slight. A slight disorder of the stomach will derange your body, your thoughts and your disposition. Get awav from the morbidness and the blues. Keep your stomach in tune and both your brain and body will respond. Little indiscretions of overeating can he easily corrected and you will he surprised to see. how much better man you are. Trv a lit tle Kodol For Dyspepsia after your meals. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney: L. D. Allison. Cowpens. Wings of lory as the riches are as unsatisfac- stings of poverty. corps here is nut. chummy and would rather keep to itself. Tomorrow morning the d o'clock rising will he enforced, ami from now until next Friday ev rybody works. There will he 2o,ijph here tomor row. Susie Sen- Hannon, Aged Thirteen, fenced to Five Years- Concord. N. C., Aug. 1.—Susie Han non. the thirteen-year-old girl under a five years’ sentenc > for the killing of H. Y. Stack here some time early in the year and in w'*o«e interest an effort was made to secure a condition al pardon, must go to prison. She will b * taken to Raleigh tomorrow by Sheriff Harris or one of his deputies. Governor Glenn refused to grant the conditional pardon asked for, that dur ing her term of sentence she be placed in a reformatory or some pri vate home. The governor, however, wrote her attorney. W. G. Means, that he would hear a personal argument from him, either Thursday or Satur day of this week. This will not likely he made and Susie will he required to serve the term of sentence. am- Afraid of Their Wine. Henry White, the American bassador to Italy, tells this story: “Two Englishmen attended a dinner a! one of the Neapolitan hotels on the water front. After the dinner the Englishmen went out for a walk along the em- hankment. The sea was rough. The sm-ay splashed over them. Soon thev saw a statue, and as they neared this statue it nodded to them gravely. “ ’Did you see that statue nod?’ said the first Englishman. "‘I certainly did,” the second said. “‘It is this confounded Capri wine,’ the first said. “‘Well,” the second said, ’we had better get back home to bed before we ar * run in.’ “So. ashamed of themselves, the Englishmen went home to bed, and when, amazingly fresh when all things were consid red. thev sat down to breakfast next morning their waiter said to them: ‘Did the gentlemen feel the last night’s slight earthquake shock?’ ” Methodist on Compulsory Saluda, July 28.—The on education at the Cok triet conference in session '■ oorting with gratification the creased interest in educational Education. committee sburv dis- here, after in- mat- rom* conference movement Some pa ters. refer d with regret to the fact that too many of the white children of the State are n -.'er-iine school. In this connection i.:<. yaittee says: “It is to he reg;y' ’ that in some places some paren d> not sujid their children to sc *' i« not amiss, perhaps, fr mittee to advise that this should approve the for compulsory education, lents win not use the schools unless the Iv- require it. and it is due the chinch and State that the entire com ing generation should have a fair preparation for the duties of religion md humainty.” Dr. John O. Wilson, of Lander college, was chairman of this committee and the report was unanimously adopted. The committee on temperance. Rev. Forest Speer, chairman in concluding their report say: “We call noon our intelligent people to resi«# and op- •e the sale of intoxicants for bev erage purposes in anv way or bv any body. We denounce the dispensary a.T a thing inherently corrupt and therefore impossible of purifioation. Let us resist it as an enemy to our church and State. We cannot serve God and he patient under our present harmful liquor laws.” This r-port was also unanimously adopted. Messrs. W. H. Wallace, d Newberry. J. Y r . Duffle, of Verdory. Gamewell Major, of Greenwood, and B. W. Crouch, of Saluda, were elected delegates to the n -xt annual confer- Men Past Sixty jn Danger. More than half of mankind over sixty years of agp suffer from kidney and bladder disorders, usually en largement of nrostate gland. This is both nainful and dangerous, .and Fo- lev’s Kidney Cure should he taken at the first sign of danger, as it corrects irregularities and has cured many old m n of this disease. Mr. Rodney Burnett, Rock Poit, Mo. writes: “I suffered with enlarged prostate gland and kidnev troubles for years and after taking two bottles of Foley’s Kidney Cure I feel better than I have for twenty years, although I am now 91 years old." Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. A man's most hitter ex-friend who can no him. neemv is the longer work ence. which meets * -* Cob ’.mbia in No- vein her. —After August 4th Dr. Sim’s Spring Tonic will sell at regular price—$1.00 per holt *. Gatfney Drug Co. '*nv does #L mosquito unhappy i n Time? Answer: DeWitt’s Witch the sun burn? Why does sting? Why do we feel the Good Old Summer we don’t. We use Hazel Salve, and these little ills don’t bother us. Learn to look for the name on the box to get the genuine. Sold by C’.iejokee Drug Co.. Gaffney: L. D. Allison. Cow- pens*. Even the expected is it happens. man who apt to he expects surprise the un- 1 when Foley’s Kidney Cure will cure all disea**'*s arising from disordered kid neys or bladder Sold bv Cherokee Drug Co. A man is seldom as old as he feels or a wonu.n as young as she says she is. In this Stat- it is not necessary to aerv * a five day’s notice for eviction of a cold. Use the original laxative 'ough syrup. Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar. No opiates. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co.. Gaffney; L. D. Allison. Cowpens. The faster a he will occupy a cemetery. man 11 v ground j s the quicker floor space in Many persons in this community a**-* suff ring from kidney complaint who could avoid fital results by using Foley’s Kidney Cure. Sold by Cher okee Drug Co. rr,. f Great Sacrifice of Summer Goods! f mmm Must Be Closed Out. Can’t Carry Them. You Can’t Afford To Miss These Bargains. » 10 and 15c Zephyrs and Crepes at 6 l-2c Cash. 124-2 and 15c Battistes at 9 l-2c Cash. 25c figured Mulls at 19c Cash. And many other things to go cheap. 10 and 12 l-2c Quality Percals at 7 l-2c. Ladies’ and Children’s Slippers to go at 20 to 25 per cent, discount. This means 25 to 33 1-3 per cent, saving to you. Think of it. You can afford to buy these goods if you don’t want them. New, fresh stock. CLOTHING! We are in the Clothing business again and can do you good on this line. Men’s Suits from $3.50 to $15.00, Boys'Suits from $1.25 to $5.00, Youths’Suits from $4.50 to $7.50. Straw Hats and Felt Hats bought at prices 33 1-3 per cent. off. These are great values for the price. We have just received 68 cases of Children’s, Ladies’, Boys’ and Men’s Shoes. Our reputation and the Manufacturer’s is back of all these goods. Our competitors will tell you that they will give you just as good Shoes as W. J. Wilkins & Company, don’t accept that, but come to us where you can get the best. None better at the prices. ::::::::::::: W. J. WILKINS COMPANY