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# \ * Women as Weil as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. SOUTH UHOUA NEXT TO MASSACHUSETTS ‘THE SCIENCE OF FEEDING-" % KkJney trouble preys upon the mind. d»^ Wurages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble haa become so prevalent that it is not uncommon , for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid- ' T - neys. If the child urin- »ates too often, if the ofWe scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age ^hen it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afilicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause cl the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the firs* step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and bo‘h need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- tent and one dollar izes. You may have a •ample bottle by mail ree, also pamphlet tell- Home of swara^Root. ng all about it, including many of the housar.ds of testimonial letters received I 'om suffercs cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer t c Co.. Binghamton. N. Y., be sure and i leotion this paper. Don’t m&ke any nrrstafce. bn*, 'w ruenaber the name. Swamp-Root. Dr Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad dres«, Bingbampton, N. Y , on even bottle. VISIT TO ONE OF THE MILLS IN COLUMBIA DESCRIBED. “The sunset gleam had left the sky, The moon rose calm and fair, As low a little maiden knelt To breathe h«r nightly prayer; And thus her brief petition rose, In simple words and few, ‘Dear Lord, please send us blessed dreams, And fet them all come true.’ Oh! have stood In temples grand. tVIhere ’mid the twilight gloom, Rose' pompous prayer from priestly lips, Through clouds of dense perfume; But never one has seemed to me, So guileless, pure and new, As ’Dear Lord, please send us blessed dreams And let them all come true.’ Ah! little maiden kneeling there, Beneath the sunset skies, What need have we of other prayer, Than yours, so sweet and wise? Henceforth I’ll breathe no studied pleas, But bow and pray with you, ‘Dear Lord, please send us blessed dreams, v And let them all come true.’ ” Schoolteacher a Growing Giant. Greene county, Pa., has produced a prodigy in Stanley Wright, its youn gest schoolteacher, who for height and avoirdupois, It is believed, stands with out a peer in the state, says the Phila delphia Record. Young Wright Is a product of Rlchhlll township and, al though only seventeen years old. , atands six feet seven inches In his frliose. tips the beam at 250 pounds and Is still growing. He wears a No. 18 shoe, which he has made to order. The young giant will teach in one of the schools of Rlchhlll township, and the foolish Rlchhlll schoolboy who un dertakes to lick the teacher will need to lie a David and know bow to throw stones. A Card. This is to certify that all druggists are authorized to refund your money if Foley s Honey and Tar fails to cure your couch or cold. It stops the cough, heals the lungs and prevents serious results frnn a com. Cures ia grippe cough and prevents pneumo nia and consumption. Contains no opiates. The genuine is in a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. Chero kee Drug Co. It’s an easy matter to sympathize with the poor when your pockets are empty. * No home is so pleasant, regardless of the comforts that money will buy, as when the entire family is in per fect health. A bottle of Orino Lax ative Fruit Syrup costs 50 cents. It will cure every member of the family of constipation, sick headache or stomach trouble. Cherokee Drug Co. Conceit may puff a man up but it can never prop him up. In most cases consumption results from a neglected or improperly treat ed cold. Foley’s Honey and Tar cures the most obstinate cough and prevents serious results. It costs you no more than the unknown prepara tions and you should insit upon hav ing the genuine in the yellow paok- age. Cherokee Drug Co. Men and women should look during jourtshlp ami overlook after marriage Take something now and then to help the stomach. Kodol will do this. It is a combination of natural diges- tants and vegetable acids and con tains the game juices found in a healthy stomach. It is pleasant to take. It digests what you eat. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. E 1 About the only money that the raa- _ Jl Jorlty of men never spend foolishly pCTy Is that they never gf* hold of. If you take DeWiitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills you will get prompt re lief from backache, weak kidneys, In flammation of the bladder and urin ary troubles, a week’s treatment for 25 ceats. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co ‘ Pin Money*' probably so called be cause H stick so closely to the aver age husband's finger*. DeWltt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve Lt good for little burns and big burns, small scratches or bruises and big ones. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. People in the South Know Little o* the Daily Life in Textile anj Oil Mills. (The State, Sept. 22.) “There are some people living here in the best part of the great cotton producing belt of the world who have never seen a hale of cotton ginned, said a representative Columbia busi ness man yesterday. “Few people, in deed, excepting those directly or in directly interested, who know much more about the treatment of cotton, other than to see it in the fields and later wear it as a part of their rai ment. With South Carolina standing next to Massachusetts in the manu facture of cotton goods, and as a lead er in the manufacture of cotton seed products, there are thousands of peo ple who have lived here all their lives and have never seen the inside of a modern cotton mill, or of an oil mill. Nearly all of the visitors to these cotton mills prove to be visitors either from the North or from some State other than South Carolina. “Nothing can prove more instruct ive to any one than a visit to one of these mills. Take for instance, the modern oil mill. Here in Columbia there are three of the biggest and best oil mills in the South. At times they find it indeed difficult to get enough seed to supply their capacity. “No one need find time hanging heavily on his hands for want of something to see in a town where there is a cotton seed oil mill. And within the mill the visitor will stay even longer than he had expected, for the appetite-exciting smells of the cooking of the oils in the seed will make many linger, even those whom indigestion had long since caused to dislike the odors of copk- ing fats. I made a visit to one of these mills a few days ago and I was greatly Interested in the processes. It i€ marvelous when we think that a few years ago the cotton seed was an outcast and today It Is one of our most valuable products. “Even as a mere matter of process It is Interesting to know how this tiny seed I s treated, aside from the contemplation of the wonderful use fulness it has become. Every day new experiments with some one of the products of the cotton seed prove successful. At the mill visited a few days ago the season had Just opened. This mill has a capacity of handling 200 tones of seed a day, 24 hours’ run. “As the seed are received they are placed In a large central room. Here they are put on an endless conveyer which carries them to the Hnters. The lint that covers the seed after the ginning is removed. There are about 47 pounds of this lint to a ton of good seed. Even this by-product— the linter—is now used for making cotton hatting, mattresses, etc. “After the seed pass through the linting machines they are conveyed to the crushers. The kernel of the seed is mechanically taken out and the hulls are carried one way and the meaty little kernel another. The hulls are used as a forage feed for cows and stock. “Following the kerne] of the seed, they will he found in a sort of roller mill machine—similar to a wheat flour roller. Then they are put into a steamer and cooked thoroughly. From the cooker they are put—a lit tle at a time—into a powerful press. Th*- oil is thus pressed out through a thick cloth made of camel s hair and the hard cake Is left. “The oil Is put into large tanks and the cakes are ground up into the yel low meal or shipped in cakes for feed This big mill turns out dally f l’ r ing the season enough crude oil to fill a big railroad tank—about 8,000 gallons. “With the immense cotton produc tion this year—12,000,000 bales, there will he ginnotf about C.500,000 tons of cotton seed. From this amount it is estimated that 4.000,000 tons will he crushed, the remainder being need ed for seed next spring. With this amount of seed worked by the va rious oil mills the cotton seed pro ducts will net the South something like $00,000,000 this year, so I have learned since. ‘IThe uses to which cotton seed products are being put now astonish the map who a few years ago used the cotton seed as a fertilizer or threw the seed away, having no use for tr e» n at all. Recent experiments show tnat by feeding the meal and hulls to cattle and stock the cattle ion or more flesh than from any other feed and at the same time, the rna nurp left contains about 90 per cent, of the fertilizing values found in the original feed. The oils are refined and used for cooking oily and butter fats of every description, the fine r oils even rival ing the best imported olive oils. Soaps of rare delicacy are made from the dross taken from the refined oils. Some of the best doctors are now pre scribing cotton oil as a treatment for all stages of tuberculosis. I was also Informed at the mill that the meal will some day become a popular breakfast food when it Is combined w’th some other cereal. Well, won ders never cease.” Arrival 0 f Mall Tralna. The following is a correct schedule of the arrival of all mall trains In Gaffney- NORTH BOUND. No. 38 due 1:08 A. M. No. 12 due at 4:20 P M. No. Sg due at 7:08 P. M. SOUTH BOUND. i No. 39 due at .. .. .. .. 9:46 A M. , No. 37 due at 12:4J P. M No. 41 due at 10:41 night Mall* for above tralna close thirty minutes before train la due, except No. 4S which closes nine o'clock at 0I3I1L Importance Of cotton 8 ee d a Nutri tive fo r BeaeL (The State, Sept. 21.) Atlanta. Sept 20.—Commiaaioner of Agriculture T. G. Hudson and State Chemist John M. Met landless have just issued from the press “Fertilizer Bulletin No. 44,’’ which is declared by the officials at the State capitol who have seen it to be the most complete yet sent out by that departmenL There are 25,000 ^>n hand and they will he maNed to any one upon appli cation. The distinctive feature of this bul letin is the series of letters written by Dr. McCandless to “Georgia farm- <-rs.” In this third letter on the “sci ence of feeding’’ he uses as his topic, “Importance of cotton seed: how the progressive farmer may calculate the best rations for his stock,” he writes: “As I said, we have been raising cotton seed for the sake of its fiber, to be spun into cloth, when we should have been raising it chiefly for the sake of the protein and carbohydrates of its seeds, to he transmuted by wonderful alchemy of the brute cre ation into beef, milk, mutton and pork, with the lint simply thrown in as a by-product. When we consider the wonderful nutritive value of cot ton seed meal aud hulls, after the oil, another by-product, has been extract ed from them, and the further fact that this rich, nutritious food may he passed through the domestic animals, giving them life, growth and develop ment. and yet in that process lose only about 10 per cent, of the rich fertilizing constituents found in the original food and yielding a manure of the very best quality, it does seem as though nature had been too lavish and generous in her gifts to us of the South.” In addition, the bulletin gives the complete pure food law and the stan dard of pure food values as allowed under the law in Georgia and how registration shall be accomplished for the sale of these articles so as to comply with the State regulations. Notes from Timber Ridge. Timber Ridge, Oct. 1.—Mr. ami Mrs. W. G. Webstdr and little son, Carlisle, of Gaffney, spent Sunday here with Mr. C- W. T^te and family. Mrs. M. M. Anthony, of Zion Hill, Spartanburg county, spent a few days here last week with relatives. Quite a number of young people from Corinth visited our Sunday school Sunday afternoon. Mr. A. M. Littlejohn, who has been working at pacolet for some time, is now at home. Rev. Mr. Harrison, the new pastor for Corinth, preached at that piace Sunday morning. Quite a number from here attended the services, and were well pleased with the new pas tor. Mrs. H. O. Tate and daughter, Miss Olive, spent Sunday with the former’s mother, Mrs. J. Alien, of Corinth. Mr. J. Bridges and daughter, Miss May, of Clary Line, spent a short while here Saturday. ere is a lot of cotton to be pick- t e i In our section now and the farm- ki s are in a rush to get it out. Messrs. J. D. Caner and W. W. Coyle carried a bale of cotton to town Monday. t Mrs. R. M. Littlejohn Mr. Henry Evans and family and Mr. Robt. Kir by. of this place, attended the inter ment of Mr. Echols Phillips at Corinth today. The relatives of Mr. Phillips have the sympathy of a numner of friends In this community In their bereavement. • Miss Katie Tate spent Sunday here and attended religious services at Corinth. W. B. Tate, our secretary, hafs been quite ill and was unable to attend Sunday school Sunday. R F Tate spent Sunday In Gaffney. We have been having some cool weather recently and the fires are vej-y comfortable these mornings. The hoys in pur neighborhood are beginning t„ ’possum hunt They are usually lucky, so we leam. D. W- Tate has been quite sick hut Is much better, we are glad to report. Success to The Ledger, its editor and all its readers. Blue Eves. Murdered an infant. Elvira Powell, a very old colored woman was placed on trial In the j superior court at. Raleigh Friday, be ing charged with murdering the infant of Rosa Johnson, white. Rosa has been in Jail since last spring on the charge of killing the child. She tes tifies that the negro woman tool? the child and that she did not know what became of it afterwards. As a mat- D'r of fact the child was killed by be ing thrown against a box in a vacant lot. a young man who fled a day or two later, hut who afterwards sur rendered, was alleged to be concern ed in the crime. Feed Your Nunes , Upon rich, pure, nourishing blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and. you will be free from those spells *of de spair, those sleepless nights and anxious days, those gloomy, deathlike feelings, those sudden starts at mere nothings, those dyspeptic symptoms and blinding headaches. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done this for many others — it will cure you. Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as 8af >t»bS. 100 doses >L LOG OF THE U.S. S. CXLAHOI/.A Satirical Byplay on the Fleet’s Trip ta t!-.c Pacific. (‘uptiitu Salt, thirty-live years in the service, isn't going to command the Ul.lahotau on her ’. ovago to the Pacific. Very young men are to be in charge, according to the Oyster Bay pro gramme. Captain Salt, who can han dle a battleship as easily as you would a dingey, has been appointed to the Brooklyn- navy yard ns chief of the carrier pigeon, son ice. His job will he seeing that the pigeons g“t fed properly and that no one sneaks the eggs. New captain Joined today. Said to he a wonder at sailing model yachts, having won two cups in the eighteen Inch class in Central park pond. Captain Golfhall is a corker. He has livened up things a lot. Set off a fire cracker under the chaplain yesterday and laughed fit to hurst when the holy man took the companion ladder iu three humps. Roller skating parties aft every night. “Condensed Milk,” the boys call the new admiral. He’s even younger than the captains. By the new plan the *iuore important a mint's job the young er he ■must lie. Condensed Milk Is eighteen, and the ship's l»oy Is fifty- seven. The fleet is now on the ocean. Con densed Milk got mixed up. hut finally came out all right by signaling each captain to shake dice for first ship out. There was some argument over a tie. hut the lads straightened It out In time to catch up with us. The New Mexico went hack to New port today, her captain having forgot ten his song Ixaik and banjo. We sighted one of the Royal Mail packets today, and our captain said she made such a ripping target he couldn’t re sist it. Johnny Blake put six six-inch shells into her iu fifty seconds, and the blame think sank. “Good sport while it lasted,” said the skipper. The captain is organizing a Greek letter society on board, the Alpha Beta Dingbats or something like that. The Massamlchigau sank yesterday, hav ing engaged iu a ramming contest with the t ’aloregou to settle a two dollar wager between the skippers. Reached Callao all right. Five bat tleships lost in Magellan trying to race through at night, and two more wan dered off somewhere on tlielr own hook, t'ondensed Milk got a telegram today saying the Ruritamari lleet has been mobilized and will he please come bark with the navy and defend the country. Telegraphed back he would huiT.v home by Suez and asked to have the UuritunmriK enjoined from declar ing war for four months. Home again. New York doesn't look the same since the Ruritamaris bom barded it. but otherwise the const Is i perfectly good. Condensed Milk sent ashore as too old after Ids year at sea Well, we showed the world we could • put our licet where it would he uo use to us if we wanted to.—Wex Jones iu New York American. Henry E. Jones, of Tampa, Fla., writes; “I can thank God for my present health, due to Foley’s Kidney Cure. I tried doctors and all kinds of kidney cures, but nothing done me much good till I took Foley’s Kidney ■ Cure. Four bottles cured me, and I have no more pain in my back and shoulders. I am 62 years old, and suffered long, but thanks to Foley’s Kidney Cure I am well and can walk and enjoy myself. It is a pleasure to recommend it to those needing a kidney medicine.” Cherokee Drug Co. There*8 Exceptional Style in 'this” Yale Suit for Young Men TT’S another of the Ederheimer-Stein garments we’ve ^ selected to demonstrate in every sale we make that this is, in fact, a superior clothing store. t G.The Yale is the smartest Young Man’s style—striking in the weave and rich colors of the fabrics — combines good taste, service, satisfaction —lends the air of true refinement — is fashionable without being fancy. ©.The young fellow who exercises com mon sense and good judgment in the selection of this style, cannot be com monplace. It s a suit for college men or any others who are par ticular. Let us show it j Kicker—Why do you prefer serial ; stories? Flatterer—Because It* the only thing on the Installment, plan they can’t take away. VALUABLE INFORMATION. Somethinq Every Person in cattney Should Know. Nearly three hundred years have passed since the medical, curative elements known to exist in the cod’s •Iver were first discovered and recog nized by physicians as a specific in the treatment of pulmonary and wast ing diseases, and as a body-builder am] strength creator; but how to ex tract those medicinal elements from the oil in which they were enveloped, has been the study of some of the most expert chemists in the world. Now, the process discovered by two eminent French chemists. Morgues and Gautier, should Interest every 1 person In Gaffney.' By an extractive concentrating process they discover ed a way to separate the tonic, body i building and cnratlvt? elements con- j talned in fresh cod’s livers from tlielr useless oil. By this process Vlnol Is made. Because Vlnol contains no oil, but embodies all the medicinal value of cod liver oil, with tonic Iron added, it Is fast superceding old-fashioned cod 1lve r oil and emulsions. As a 1 body bullde- and strength creator i for old peonle, weak women, delicate children, after sickness, and for all pulmonary troubles, nothing has ever been known to excel Vlnol. We ask Gaffney people to try Vlnol on our of fer to return their money If It does not give satisfaction. The Gaffney Drug Co., Gaffney, g. C. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup is a safe, sure and prompt remedy for coughs and colds and Is good for every member of the family. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Womenoften wonder if men have as much real pity for a piano-playing boy as they have for tom-boy girls. Take DeWitt’s Little Early Riser Pills. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. V*L lift i 1 I THE YALE to you. Superior tailoring reaches its climax in the Yale. Each garment is mace separately by skillful hand needlework throughout. Trimmings and fabrics all match. Every operation of the tailor con tributes to make it distinc tive, individual. THE “YALE”.—Coat >• long and full chested; cuffs on sleeves f open seams down back of coat and sides of trousers. Trousers full at waist. Sizes 30 to 38. Prices $18 to $35. Carroll & Byers, Gaffney, S. C. JOKES’ ENORHOOS SHOWS I And Trained Animals GAFFNEY, TUESDAY, Monster Parade Daily 12.30. Two Performances Daily, 2 and 8 P. M. The Largest, Best and Only Big Show Coining Unprecedented and vast assemblage of entirely new f e a - tures, feats and won ders from all parts off the world. Enormous collection off priceless wild beasts. The most instructive zoologi cal exhibition on the road. Tours of the wonders of creation in wonderland. Matchless In all That Makes It- Mighty! A sweeping and overwhelming monopoly of all that is novel, amazing, heroic and fascinating in the realms of the arenic. Performing elephants, eamels, dens and cages off wild beasts. S Spectacular Street Parade a 112.30 Two Performances Daily—2 and 8 P. M. SHEET METAL WORKERS Catch a man In a lie and he will say that he told It just to see wheth er you would believe it or not. Notice t 0 Our oustomers. We are pleased to announce that Foley’g Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles Is not affect ed by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recom mend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. Cherokee Drug Co. Whether flattery is pleasing or not depends to a large extent upon the flatUNr. Foley’s Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney trouble that Is not be yond medical aid. Cberobee Drug Co. When a man and hi* wife say to their guests and what they say about them after their departure are differ ent. quite different. DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pill* relieve backache, weak kidneys, and lnflammatioD> of the bladder. Bold by Cherokee Drag Co. We are ready for business. We do all kinds of Sheet Metal work, Cornice, Finials, Cresting, Tanks and anything else you need. All kinds of repair work. We make a specialty of’ Roofings. Slate, Tin and Metal Shingles, and are prepared to do all work promptly. All work guaranteed. We ask you to share your busi ness with us. Phone 200. : : : : : Yours for business. O. C. WILSON A CO Opposite Lodgor Office. »r <lr / . ih', fir', i»r', i U, t»r', (!■ , lir', (If', iir, Or',