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To sake Ice ales lor 1 cent contents ol la l«i plate. Stir jeii-o Ice Cream Powder into • quart of milk and freest*, without heating or cooking. Simple, ien’t it ? Save* the coat of egga, sugar and flavoring. Saves measuring out Ingredient* and cook ing. Does away with ail uncertainty, and In- •ureelhe beat and purest ice cream possible to produce. Failure impoesible. Nothing to add except milk. One package coating 13c. makee nearly two quarts ice cream. Flarort: Chocolate, Vanilla, Strawberry, Lemon qnd Unfavored. i package! 26c. If your grocer does not keep it send ns his name and 26 cents for two packages by mail. New Il lustrated recipe book mailed free. The Genesee Pure Food Co.. Le Roy. N. Y. P. S. LeHciau! Cream Pvtldirg ran a Ido be made from JtU-0 ICE CREAM Puwdrr. Calm age Sermon By Rev. Frank De Witt Talmatfe. D. D. -+ THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP For all Coughs and assists in •xpeiung Co.cs from the sys tem by gently moving the bowe.s A certain relief for croup and Whooping-cough. Nearly ell other cough cures are const i pat ing, •specially t*'C'ot. containing C p.-tesS Kennedy’s Laxative Honey & Tar troves the bowels, contains Bo Opiates. ) The Red ' Clover Blos som and ths Honey Bee .jgfe is on every KENNEDY'S fixiiTvl IVINO »hp * a Los Angeles, Cal., May 2G.—In this eeruiou, appropriate to the time, the old, tender theme of a nation's sorrow and how It was healed receives new treatment, and the lesson Is learned of a great people united In the bonds of a common patriotic brotherhood. The text is Isaiah xliil, 6, “I will say to the north, Give up, and to the south, Keep not back.” I sometimes think we make a mis take when we think of the civil war as f ending at Appomattox. The wounds were too fresh then on both sides. We know that the war Is ended now, and I think the beginning of the end dated abont twenty years ago. The begin ning of the end came in a letter which ! Adjutant General R. C. Drum on April 30, 1887, addressed to Hon. W. O. Endl- property might be confiscated and cott. secretary of war In President Uls homestead demolished. Yet wltb- Cleveland’s cabinet. The letter went ou ^ hesitation he sacrificed an honora- I ble position, land, family, homestead Sir—I have the honor to state that there and monej, ami threw them all Into are now in this office, stored in one of the i ^ southern cause. Then studv the atftc roonas of the building, a number of ; . .. r „i..n Union flags captured in action, but recov- j ^ ltobert L ’ ^ after cl ^ 1 ered on the fall of the Confederacy and moiu nft«r tua recognize each other's honesty. It Is almost impossible for a man who Is fighting to believe that his opponent, whose doubled fist is pummellng and beating him, has an honest heart or a straight hair In Ills head. But after the battle Is over, after time has cooled the blood, after onr adversary may have been laid away In bis silent grave, then we are able to look at our past actions and those of our enemies as ; through another’s eyes. Then we see that both of us may have been honest In our ideas, but both or one of us may have been mistaken in our judgment. If those southerners were not honest In their advocacy of state rights how can you account for the actions of Robert E. Lee? Study the history of the man any way you will, and yon will find him a noble, true hero through and through. He certainly did not en ter the southern array for fame. Had he stayed In the northern army he might have been commander of all the United States forces. He knew he was slated as the successor of Winfield Scott. Surely that was fame enough for any man. He did not enter the southern army for mercenary motives. ! He was already wealthy In his own | right, and Arlington Heights, his home, ! was just across the Potomac. He knew ! that if he entered the southern cause CONTAIN'I NO tJ L* 4«i PRFPAPED AT the LABORATORY OF K. o. Dewirr & co.. Chicago, u. b. a. For Mlo oy Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cow£*na. Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Examination. Tbeexandnution for the award jt vacant Scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will lie held at tic- CountY Court House OU Friday, July 5th at 9 a.m. Appicants must not uu less th n fifteen years of age. When scholarships are vacated after .July they will he awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet tbs condi tions governing the award Appli-ants for Scholarships should wrte to President John son before the examination for .•scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth IKK) and free tuition The next session will open -■ pteuber 1- l!<d7. For furtlier information and catalogue, ad dress Pres. D. B. Johnson, Kock Hill, S. law July 5-pd. CLEMSON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE to Scholarship and Entrance Examination Freshman Class The examination for the award of scholar ships from Cherokee County ano admission to freshman class will be held at the County court house on Friday July 5. at 1* a- m. Ap plicants for •cholarsliips may secure blank application forms from the County Superin tendent of Kducation. These blanks must be forwarded to the war department for safe keeping, together with a number of Con federate flags, which the fortunes of war placed in onr hards during the late civil war. Wiiile in the past favorable action has alwaysubeen taken on applications, proper ly supported, for the return of the Union flags to organizations representing surviv ors of tlie military service of the govern ment. I beg to submit that it would be a graceful act to anticipate future requests of this nature and venture to suggest the propriety of returning all the flags (Union ami Confederate) to the authorities of tho respective states in which the regiments which love those colors were organized. While in a!l civilized nations of the old world trophies taken in wars against for eign enemies have been carefully preserv ed and exhibited as proud mementos of tlie nation's military glories, wise and ob vious reas ms have always excepted from the rule evidences of past internecine troubles which, by appeals to the arbitra tion of the sword, have disturbed the peaceful march of a people to its destiny. Over twenty years havt termination of the of the prominent leaders, civil and mili tary, are now honored representatives of the people in the national council or in other enjjrient positions and lend the aid of their talents to the wise administration of the affairs of the whole country, and the people of the several states compos ing tiie L’nlon are now united, treading the broader road to a glorious future. Very truly yours. R. C. DRUM, Adjutant General. war. Even amid poverty, after his great pillared mansion had been ex changed for an old tumbledown negro hut, not lit for an outhouse or a cattle pen, he was brave enough to refuse to take ti position offering a great finan cial income, because he did not want to do another an injustice. Accepted the Decision. the sontli, for the west as well as for the east. And as In the Spanlsh-Amer- Ican war U. 8. Grant, Jr., served upon the staff of Fltz-Hugb Lee and Joe Wheeler fought under the stars and strii>es by the side of Lawton, so side by side in congressional balls and on judicial bench and in mercantile es tablishment the southeruers worked with the northerners for the develop ment of our whole nation. You could not find any difference In these men’s patriotism by the place of their birth. Like a Bugle Call. I was very much struck with this fact when my mind ran over the names prominent In our national legislative halls thirty years ago. A great army of statesmen had entered Washington from our southern states. Nearly all of these men had worn the Confederate gray or been prominent in Richmond. There were Alexander Stephens and Lamar and Harris and Gordon and Pugh and Morgan and Wade Hampton and Zebulon Vance and F. M. Cock rell and M. C. Butler and Berry and a great number of others too numer ous to mention. My, what a list there was! When we read their names It seems as though we hear the bugle call and the rattling of arms and the yelling of the cavalry charge. When we look into the United States senate of thirty years ago It seems as though the field officers of a great Confederate army had been collected for a council of war. But, though those southern statesmen assembled In Washington, they were not assembled for a council of war, but for a council of peace. Those ex-Confederate soldiers were planning and contriving for the pros perity of the whole United States and not for a part. They were working band and glove with their northern colleagnes for the success of our re united land. And, though the north, as a whole, in the early seventies did not have confidence In the loyalty of the new south, the northern statesmen emy and charge.” On and on went the line. Under the withering fire of the enemy the northern regiment broke and retreated. But the color bearer of that regiment, Thomas Higgins by name, was fleeter footed than the rest He carried high the tlag in the charge and moved straight on. He did not know that his companions bad turned back. He kept his face toward the en emy. And there he was, one northern soldier, with the old flag flying high over Ills head, charging alone a thou sand men In gray. Then there rose the cry from the Confederate ranks: “Don’t shoot him! Let the hero live! Don’t shoot!” And so Thomas Higgins, the color bearer, carrying the old flag of the Union, moved on until at last the Confederate soldiers opened their ranks and swallowed him up and theu sent him back again a free man. If the brave soldiers of old could be so merciful to each other, can we not be Just as forgiving today? The north erners have given back to the southern states tlie Confederate flags. By that symbol we say, “The war of 1801 lias forever passed away.” But today let us enter into another compact. Let the south today bring out her old tattered flags. Let the northern soldiers bring out today again their old tattered flags. And let the ragged folds of these old banners be wrapped about each other as north and south clasp hands and say: “We are brothers. We have the same government. We have the same land. And as one nation we will al ways live, blessing the common her itage of the brave deeds of the boys in blue and the boys In gray.” Thank God for the day when the northern states returned the Confederate flags captured In battle. By that act they truly and forever captured the south ern hearts In love. Yes, at last the north and the south are truly united and are one. [Copyright, 1907, by Louis Klopsch.] These flags were returned to the southern states for another reason- ; 1,1 "’ashington who came in touch with not only did the north realize that the southerners were honest men, but they found that they were reconstructed men. The southern leaders loyally and gracefully accepted the decision of the sword and regarded It as decided for ever. They were willing to confess that under no conditions would they over attempt to get their slaves back those southern statesmen learned to trust the south. When such true leaders as Charles Sumner, from Massachusetts, and Lu cius Lamar, from Mississippi, and hun dreds and thousands of men like them could strive as soon as the civil war was over to wold this broad country together. Is It any wonder that after awhile the rank and file should fall again. These great facts were the, avc elapsed since tlie inighty moans of welding the hearts of I int <> line cry, “My countrymen. .Uo < unwar. Aiany AmoHenn tno-ether even! know one another and you will love But were the people In 1887 united? No sooner did President Cleveland al low Secretary Endlcott to approve tho suggestion of his adjutant general than a great howl of denunciation arose. By one of the leading newspapers of Minnesota, Cleveland was assailed with opprobrious epithets. The news papers east and west excoriated him. the southerners deprecated the holding ! <>«» «*. p-mc !>«»,»« mum <j«-^ «■»«“•. ;>»« oral B. F. Butler, General Lucius Fair- the plantation-.’ could he cultivated child, commander in chief of the Grand without them. Yet no sooner were Army of the Republic; Murat Halstead the slaves emancipated than the plnnt- and others hurled their vituperation, era rubbed th'-ir eyes and awoke to the American people together even more strongly than they were united i before. Now, let us Impartially consider the j slave question, which was Indirectly the cause of that civil war. Way back in the time of Thomas Jefferson the Sage of Monticello advocated the emancipation of the negro slave. But, though Thomas JcTcrson was In many ways the strongest statesman the south ever produced, til! the planters rose up in arms. "Absurd! Absurd!” they cried. "You free tlie slaves and the cotton plantations will lie ruined. We must have the slaves or die.” This was the s'aiul of the south. Most of Superiulenilbul before tbe beginning of tne examination. Those taking the examination tor entrance to the Hkeshmau ciaits and not trying for a scholarship should tile their ap plication with the President Mell. Thesehol- arships are wortli $100 and free tuition. One scholarship student from each county may select the Textile course, other must take one of tlie Agricultural courses. Examina tion paper will be furnished hut each appli cant sh uld provide himself with scratch pa per. The number of scholarships to be awardeu will be announced later. P. H. MELL, President. Oiemsou College. S. 0. May iM-to-July 5-lt-a w. COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON 1785 Charleston, S. C. t 907 TAnd Year Begins September 27th. Letters. Science, Engineering. One scholar ship to each county of South Carolina, giv ing free tuition. Tuition (40. Board and furnished room In Dormitory. (II. a month- All candidates for admission are permitted to compete for vacant Itovre scholarships which pay (KM) a year. Kutiance F.xatnina- tlons will lie held in the County L’ourt House on Friday, Juiy itli. at a. m. For catalogue address Harrieon Randolph, July 5 it-a-w-pd. President. ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE. All persons holding claims against the estate of Anday Champion, de ceased. are hereby notified to present * v e same, duly attested, to the under signed administrator at Gaffner, 0. C.. and all*persons indebted to said estate are requested to mako pay ment at an earlv date. T. Robbs. As administrator estate Andy Champion, deceased Pub. in Gaffnev Ledger Mav 17, 24 and 31, 1907. the fact Unit tin* plantations were bet ter off with hired labor than when cultivated by slaves. They could make more nionev out of their cotton crops by hiring field bands than by owning them. The result was that, whereas before the war ninety-nine southern men out of a hundred wanted slavery to exNt. today, if put to the southern vote, ninety nine men out of a hundred The then governor of Ohio wrote a let ter, which Senator John Sherman In dorsed, in which he emphatically re fused to surrender the flags, saying, “No rebel flags shall be returned while I ajn governor." General Fairchild said: “May God palsy the band that wrote the order. May God palsy the brain that conceived it. and may God palsy the tongue that dictated It.” So overwhelming was the public bitter- j would refuse t > t::ke h:\ck their slaves ness at the thought of giving back tho even If they eould. This Is a soclolog- captured flags that tlie president had ! leal fact of the southern labor problem PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM CIc»n*«tg and fxtautifiet the hair. Pro UK/tiff a >jt • uit growth. .Nmv't Fall* t j K-ftore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure* fcalp i - » ii^ir ifthiog. audl. - v l)i FOimifONEMCAR Cures Cold•( Prevents Pneui Dewitt's ffitt Salve For PUm» Burns, SoTMe t 4- LECTRIC BITTERS THE BEST FOR BILIOrSKESM AND KIDNEYS. POLEYSHONEMAR stops tXs* coutfb »a4 feaolslanrfo DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY Wiki Surely Stop That Couflfi. FOR ALL COU TV NfWt, IN PORT AMI HAPPENING* IN THE •TATE ANO £tf£N' r * OF INTEREST IN FOREIGN LAND*, TAKE ANf READ THE LEDGlk. to rescind the order to deliver up to the southern states their flags on tho ground that the flags were the proper ty of the United States, and therefore the United States alone had the right to return them. Beginning of the End. Oh, the sectional bitterness which was rankling in the human hearts north and south in 1887! But in spite of that fact that letter of U. C. Drum’s proved to lie the beginning of the end. Rapidly and surely the last fires of sectional strife died away. In 18h8 the very men who had most vehemently opposed the returning of the Confeder ate flags were most anxious to see Ma jor McKinley do what President Cleve land had failed to accomplish. On Feb. 24, 1*1)8, congress passed the bill ai> thorlzing the war department to return all the Confederate flags captured in battle. Governor Foraker, who had fought the movement before, was then senator, and he was the most enthnsi-, astlc advocate of tbe bill. Yes, yes, at last tlie civil war was ended. At last by the voluntary return of the blood soaked battletlags the United States congress declared there was no north, no south, no east, no west, no conquer ors and no vanquished. The Confeder ate battleflags were given back to th# men whose comrades had baptized them with their life’s blood. Why did the north return those old battleflags of the southern army? First, tlie n >rtherners realized that the southerners were honest men and hail been honest in their advocacy of the state rights principle all through the war. The northerners realized that the same fidelity to principle which made Massachusetts and Illinois and Wis consin and California fight for the cen tralization of government drove Geor gia and Alabama and South Carolina to tight for state rights. These men. tsirn Isdow th*- Mas^n and Dixon line, were not dishonest or mercenary. They were fighting for a principle, because with which every Intelligent American student Is well conversant. A Dead Issue. Second fact: When the god of battles decided the civil strife tbe southerners almost to a man were ready to accept that decision. When Finland was con quered by tbe Russians in 1809 and Al sace and Lorraine were conquered by Germany hi 1871 and Spain and Italy and Holland and Naples and Westpha lia were conquered by France In the Napoleonic wars these people were compelled to bend the knee at the stroke of tbe sword, but they and their conquerors never became one. Finland today is no more Russian than it is Japanese. Alsace and Lorraine may pay their taxes to Germany, but You two classes of veterans have not their hearts are In the Tuilerles. No j only proved to the world that you are sooner did Napoleon abdicate than the | physical heroes, hut greater than this— love one another?” Oh. yes, the return of the Confederate flags by the north was a natural sequence to such a patriotic love as that. No sooner was the Appo mattox treaty signed than the true spirit of the north and tlie south started in to obliterate sectional strife. Lastly, I remark that the north gave back the Confederate flags because the two sections of our country, by travel ami intercommunication, got acquaint ed and learned to know each other. The northerners traveled south, and they had a taste of southern hospitali ty, including the hot breads and the johnnycakes, and they liked them. And the southerners traveled north and learned that there were chivalry and warm, loving hearts among the New England snows as well as among the Georgia flowers. And a new genera tion began to grow up which knew not Joseph. The college boys of the north would persist In falling In love with the bright eyed maidens from tbe south. The sons of the old southern brigadier generals would persist In at tacking tlie firesides of their fathers’ old enemies and carrying away the northern girls as willing captives in tlie old war called love. Cupid’s darts were flying everywhither until at last the north awoke and said, “Why, those southern boys are not born with horns and cloven feet.” And the southerners began saying, “Why, those northerners do love something besides the dollar.” Then the golden cords of affection be gan to intwine themselves alsmt north ern heart and southern heart until the same blood by the cradle was being pumped through the arteries of both. Had the north known the south and the south known tlie north in 1857 as they do in 1907 there would have been no civil war. That war for the most part was caused by the Ignorance of the different sections of each other. The Confederate Flag. Thus, brave men of the north and brave men of the south, fh the name of our reunited country before this ap proaching Memorial day 1 salute you A Feat of Tunneling. In fifteen years New York city will be drawing its water from the great Ashokan reservoir, In the heart of the Catskills. The water will be brought to the city by a huge concrete and steel aqueduct 100 miles long and the largest in the world. The most strik ing feature of this aqueduct will be the stupendous siphou under the Hud son at Storm King. This is a feat of tunneling that puts to blush all the tunnels around New York city. The subways under tbe Hudson now con structing go down about ninety feet below the water, but tbe Storm King siphon will he sunk 650 feet below the surface of the water and 1,100 feet below the aqueduct gradient. If this were built on the air pressure princi ple, used In tlie East river tunnels, all the workmen would perish from the pressure as soon ns the work had gone a little below 100 feet under the water. As the engineers found it would lie necessary to go below the fa tal limit at Storm King, they decided to build a tunnel or slnbon so far down below the river bottom that It would be in solid rock and not allow’ water to leak in. Going down over 600 feet, they calculate that little or no water will come in. ami therefore they will not have to do the work or dig under pressure from compressed air -Charles II. Cochrane in Broadway Magazine. Of Iota rest To Women. To such women as are not seriously out Of health, but who have exacting duties to perform, either in the way of house hold cares or in social duties and func- tloqp which seriously tax their strength, as well as to nursing mothers, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has proved a most valuable supporting tonic and Invigorat ing nervine. By Its timely use, much serious sickness and suffering may be avoided. The operating table and the surgeons’ knife, would, It is believed, seldom have to be employed if this most valuable woman’s remedy were resorted to In good time. The "Favorite Prescrip tion" has proven a great boon to expectant mothers by preparing the system for the coming of baby, thereby rendering child birth safe, easy, and almost painless. Bear in mind, please that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is not a secret or patent medicine, against which the most intelligent people are quite naturally averse, because of the uncertainty as to their composition and harmless character, but is a MEDICINE OF KNOWN COMPOSI TION, a full list of all its ingredients being printed, in plain English, on every bottle- wrapper. An examination of this list of Ingredients will disclose the fact that it is non-alcoholic in its composition, chemic ally pure, triple-refined glycerine taking the place of the commonly used alcohol. In Its make-up. In this connection It inay not be out of place to state that the ■Favorite Prescription” of Dr. Pierce Is the only medicine put up for the cure of woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ail ments, and sold through druggists, all the ingredients of which have the un animous endorsement of all the leading medical writers and teachers of all the several schools of practice, and that too as remedies for the ailments for which ■Favorite Prescription" Is recommended. A little book of these endorsements will be sent to any address, post-paid, and absolutely free if you request same by g istal card, or letter, of Dr. R. V. Pierce, uffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to take as candy. FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice Is hereby given to all con cerned that I shall apply to Hon. J. B. Webster, Probate Judge for Cher okee county. South Carolina, at hi* office, Gaffney. S. C., on Saturday, June 8th, 1907, at 11 o’clock a. m. for final settlement and discharge a* guardian of the estate of Miss Agnea Idelle Brown, minor, but now of age. J. N. Cudd, Guardian. Pub. In Gaffney Ledger May 17, 24, 31 and June 7, 1907. Halt! Ways of the Japanese In Business. Curious ways Ci • Japanesi* merchant has of doing liu-iness. A s^ vial agent of tla* Unite l Flat *s gove -ni:! *nt who is now in Jepao givoc some illustra tions. The liuyt**. he says, makes no payment niiUI tlie arrival of the goods. If in the meantime the market has dropped the Japanese will often go to the American and intimate that he is not prepared to stand all the loss and that the American should divide the loss with him. though to do so might wipe our :i!l the profit on the transac tion. As a merchant explained, the Japanese s-s* nothing wrong in evading the letter of the contract, because when they make a contract they don’t —at least in their minds—absolutely agree to do a ce"tain thing or to make a certain payment, hu: si nplv to un dertake to try to do it. If there ap pear certain obstacles in the way of their doing so they do not consider themselves bound to proeeed with it.— New York Sun. kings and queens whom he had de posed were gladly welcomed back by their people to their vacated thrones. Not thus was the ending of the v»vll war. The southern people are not a subjugated people. They are not a peo ple trembling at the sound of the can non's explosion. They are a people who had an issue. They said. “Let us decide this issue once for all at tbe cannon’s mouth.” And when the god of battles decided against them these people said, “The issue is forever dead.” The northerner said: “Here, men of the south, here are your flags. We have no differences today. Take that you are moral and spiritual he roes. You have not only proved to the great wide world that you have cour- tige and backbone enough to tight, but that you also have nobility of sou! “nough to forget and forgive past dif- ferermes. In this beautiful land of ours for .‘564 days out of the year we only want one flag. That flag must Ite the stars and stripes. We want It waving from every home and every school- house and every church and every leg islative hall. But on the spring Memo rial day we like to see the folds of the old Confederate flag for a little while wrapped about the folds of the stars Just stop and think one moment about your printed stationery. “A firm or ind i v idu al’s printed stationery is an index to his business judgement.” If you want something that you can be sure will make a good impression where- ever seen bring your job printing of every des cription to us. We guarantee satisfac tion and can do work in a “hurry.” The Ledger, Gaffney, S. C. them back ns Imroic emblems of your and stripes, which once battled with glorious deed > many battlefields. Take them ami keep them for your children to look upon with reverence and awe. They are yours and not ours. We are all brothers, of one race and one nation.” Oh. today thank God that it. That Confederate flag Is the era blem of many a heroic deed of the true American heart, as the United States flag is also the emblem of many a true heroic deed. Oh, the bravery of the past, when tluse questions arc all settled ami that the great armies of the north and the all the old heartburnings are over, gouth were In mortal conflict! Did not The returning of the southern flags the two armies then rcsj>eot the brav- proves it. There was still another reason why those old flags were returned. No sooner was the war over than tbe they Udloved the principle was Just, gout hern men l>egan to work side by And for that principle they were ready their northern countrymen to sacrifice their lives. f or jj,,, upbuilding of the nation. They The Work of Years. dropi»ed the sword for the plow, the But some years had lit pass before gun for the mowing machine. But the boys In blue and tbe boys In gray they did more—they liegan to work for could meet and fellowship together and the benefit of the north as well as for ery and nobility of each other and bow In reverence to the heroism of their foes? At the siege of Vicksburg, May 22. 1863, the commandtug general or- dered the Ninety-ninth regiment of Il linois volunteers to charge a redoubt occupied by the Second infantry of Texas. As the northern regiment mov ed forward to the charge the colonel gave the command: “Boys, don't look back. Keep your faces toward the en- Farm Seeds pCow Peas, Sorghums,^ Millets, Teosinte, Late Seed Potatoes, Buckwheat, Vetches, Crimson Clover, etc. Wood’s Crop Spocial, giving E rices and timely informatioa a- out Heeds that can be planted to advantage and profit at different seasons of the year, mailed free on request. Writ# for It ’Mail orders receive prompt attention. Dr.KIng’a New Life Pills The best in the world* THE ORIGINAL LAXA7IVE COUGH SYRUP KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE HONEY-TAR *•4 Ckrtr B 1mtom Hour Bee on Irtrj Boole. BANNER *8A LYE tho most hoalin* c jlvs In tho world. BaicUen’s Arnica Salve Tbe Beet Salve In The WerM. HOi.LlSTER’5 Roeky Mountain "ca Nugget* A But/ Metiici'* fir Bu>, People. Bring* Go-den He^itn -id Vigor. A specific for Constlpauno i(i(lig«‘xtirm. Lives sod Kidney trouble*. ) luicies. Kc/.< aia. Impure Blood. Bsd breuth. Sluggish BoweD. Headache sod Backache. lu Kock v Mouutulu Ten in tab let to'in. Zb cenu a box. G**ouin3 made bf Holustkh Dkcu Comcast. MaiISco. 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