The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, May 15, 1908, Image 3
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK ?
OUTLOOK
Possibility
IN KENTUCKY.
of ftoad
Wdne;
:y Trouble Makes You Miserable.
)
J Almost everybody who reads the news-
^ipers is sure to know of the wonderful
jj irv cures made by Dr.
L Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
I 1 t ^ ,e S reat kidney, liver
10 ff'V&'J an< ^ ^* a ^ er reniedy.
ti u IrkSl irp H is the great medi
^ cal triumph of the nine
teenth century; dis
covered after years of
l yyi scientific research by
O* 'oH Dr. Kilmer, the emi-
w li * JJ V- - 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
lorm of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec
ommended for everything but if you have kid
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found
Just the remedy you need. It has been tested
In so many ways, in hospital work, in private
practice, 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 toi
Dr. K"mer&Cc..Bing-l
namton, N Y The
reeula< fifty cen. ana
doTar sizes are soid Dy •
nr„n*, or Swamp-iiuor-
v-c druggists.
I 'iiu i n.itv iii>
j member the name,
K.lrm ■ waiiap-Kooi,
dress, Binghamptou, N
Hurtling For Better Highways.
CJoo! roil sentiment is sweeping
the rininloii (O » siH-tion of the rotin-
try as nevci Uofort*. and if farmers
keei> tip the work they have started
all roads from Chardon will be verir
table boah'vards The Chardon board
of trade has offered $300 In prizes for
good roads, dividing the requirements
In such a way as to excite much com
petition More money for prizes will
■oon be raised \V B Ballard has of
fered to Improve a long stretch of
road free of charge if the council will
famish him a machine.
of a Big Era
Building.
With the passage of the Bosworth-
I Wyatt bill at the last session of the
: legislature the proposition of good
roads becomes a possibility In Ken
: tucky. No state of the pretensions of
this commonwealth in all the Union
has such inaccessible roads, and in
some cases a veritable canal of rand
binds two important little hill or moun
tain towns together. To get from
Mlddlesboro to Harlan, in adjoining
counties, one has to take a taWroad
train through Virginia and then scram
hie on horseback over the most pre
cipitous road in the south to the seat
of Harlan county.
The bill provides a constitutional
amendment to be voted on at the next
legislative election in 1909. It gives
each county power to assess 5 per cent
of its total valuation for road repair
aud building in distinction to the pres
ent law. which provides only 2 per
cent. In the case of Shelby county,
which uow has but $32,300 for its 500
miles of highways aud pikes, it would
thus have si;30,(K)((. though for $200.-
000 its roads could be well kept up
The appropriation from Jefferson aud
Kenton would he enormous.
Nothing is more serious to the
itinerant merchants or the immense
rural population of Kentucky than
roads Any politician who, like Gov
ernor Willson, traveled 40,000 miles on
roads during a campaign, knows that
the hardships to be undergone are
really tremendous. Often Willson was
so sore from the jolting on some moun
tain cow pa;li that he would fall from
his horse and, lying down on a rock,
refuse to ri le a step farther until his
aching back wms at ease. Once in
coining down a steep hillside in Letch
er county, made unendurable even by
the sure footed horse because of its
disrepair and roughness, the animal
stumbled.
“Gosh,” gasped Wtllsou, “there near
ly went the wbole campaign!’’
Sheer below ran a rock wall down to
a valley 500 feet.
Should the people ratify the Bos-
worth-Wyatt bill thebe will begin an
era of road building such as the peo
ple of Kentucky have never known be
fore. A sta.e highway association
will be appointed and competent civil
engineers put in charge of the work.
A Fowl That Won a Battlo.
A singular story is told of a gallant
cock whooe moral influence at a crit
ical moment during the battle of St.
Vincent helped to save a British man-
of-war from the hands of the enemy.
The fowl in question formed part of
the live stock of the Marlborough, a
vessel which had suffered so severely
that her captain was considering the
advisability of striking his flag. Tlib
ship was entirely dismasted, while the
chief officers had been carried below
severely wounded, and the crew, with
out anybody to cheer them up, were
beginning to grow sullen under the
beavY Are of the enemy, to which they
were hardly able to respond. At this
emergency a shot struck the coop in
which the fowls were confined. The
only surviving occupant, a cock, find
ing himself at liberty, fluttered up
and perched himself on the stump of
the maiumast and surveyed the scene
of carnage around him. Then, flapping
his wings in defiance, he began to crow
vociferously. lie was answered by
three hearty aud exhilarating cheers
from the crew, who all had a good
laugh and. with spirits thus renewed,
continued the action with a vigor that
lasted until a turn in the battle res
cued them from their tight position.—
London Chronicle.
Fearful Tortures.
Some years ago I was a teacher In
Afghanistan, aud during my stay in
that country I was often an unwilling
witness of some horrible exhibitions
of torture. Here Is one they use iu the
case of women to extract testimony
It consists in prying off the Huger
nails by means of a small chisel oi
brad awl, which Is shoved in slowly,
but firmly, from the finger tip down
ward under the quick of the nail, which
is then lifted up and out.
This is another that I once saw used
in the case of a small child who would
not own up to some petty theft: Sticks
were thrust between its fingers and
the fingers then squeezed together, so
that the sticks crushed into the bones.
So much for women and children
Here is a method of eliciting iuforma
tlon from an unwilling man: The cul
prit is stripped to the Waist, and then
boiling oil is fiickcd on to his ba<-k
This seldom fails to find the man’s
tongue.
The above are the chief forms of
•‘fahana,” or torture, for the purpose
of eliciting information, but it must
be stated that such inflictions ns nip
ping of noses, tearing oat tongues o,
splitting eyeballs do not come under
the heading of “fahana.” they being
punishments rather than tortures.—
Loudon Standard.
Your Blood
Needs purifying and your whole system renovating in tho
spring, as pimples, boils, eruptions, loss of appetite and that
tired feeling annually prove.
. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the most effective medicine ever
devised for the complete purification of the blood and the
Complete renovation of the whole system.
It will make you feel better, look better, eat and sleep
better and give you the best possible preparation for the hot
days of summer, as over 40,000 people h ive testified in the
last two years. Today buy and bee in t > 1 •
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
TTsur.I form, liauid. or in tablet form, called Sarsatabs, 100 Doses $1-
BIG LUMBER FIRE.
Cigar Smoko.
The stale smell of cigar smoke i*
peculiarly unpleasant aud peculiarly
difficult to get rid of. It clings to the
curtains and to most of the articles of
furniture which present any sort of an
absorbent surface. It is not so to the
same extent with cigarettes or with
pipes. In the case even of a single
cigar books, papers and textiles reek
of its stale flavor, and the room re
^quires abundant airing before that fla
vor is completely eliminated. This ef
fect, we are told, may be traced to the
fact that a cigar produces pungent
aromatic oils In greater abundance
than a cigarette or a pipe. With the
cigarette oils are probably burnt even
if they are formed, while in the pipe
they condense in the stem. In the
cigar they seem to be chiefly discarded
into the air. In the form of a cigai
tobacco would appear to produce more
oils than in the form of a cigarette
or when burnt in a pipe.—London Lan
cet.
VALUE OF THE DRAG.
A great many people imagine they
have heart troubles when the fact is
that the whole trouble lies in the stoj q. Ward King Asserts Split Log Va
riety Has Obliterated Mudholea.
“Missouri has today hundreds of
miles of muddy mud roads, without a
single fhudhole to the mile,” said D.
mach. The pains in the side around
the region of the heart are not neces
sarily heart trouble. We suggest that
you start with the gtomach and when
ever you feel a depression after eat-
tbife statement verified after you hava
J used Kodol for a few weeks. It Is
' sold here by The Gaffney Drug Co.
Be kind; it makes your life like a
June day, attracts
founds enemies.
is yi
frle
ends, and con
ing or whenever your food seems to Ward King in opening his speech on
nauseate take Kodol. It will not be “Good Roads” at Troy, Mo., the other
very long until all these “heart pains” afternoon “A muddy mud road with
will disappear. Take Kodol now and ; out a mudbole.” said he. “is a product
until you know you are right again. | yj e rond drag. By no other
There len’t any doubt about wbat It rten) cal| mllJ ro .„|, wl ; Uout mud .
( trill do and you will Ond the truth of be maJ( . Tbe [wratJ . (onr tours
of rainfall just past has of course made
the mud roads muddy, but on my way
from Mexico I saw from the car win
dow mile nfler mile of earth road on
which in spite of the rain not a mud-
hole could be tonnd. Near Martlns-
burg and Wellsville, on each side of
New Florence and Wentzville and at
other points along the line are stretches
that to the practiced eye give evidence
of the use of 1 lie road drag.”
Mr. King went to Troy at the tevlta-
tlon of County Engineer T. ▲. Hal-
tay and represented the state high
way commission. He said that Mis
souri bad made greater progrsM in
solving tbe problem of better roads
than any other state in tbe Union.
Disturbed the congregation.
The person who disturbed the con
gregation last Sunday by continually
coughing Is requested to buy a bot
tle of Foley’* Honey and Tar. Chero
kee Drag Go.
Be Just; you never can tell how
soon the fellow to whom you were
unjust will have the screws on you.
The trouble with most cough cures
is that they constipate. Kennedy’s
Laxative Cough Syrup does not con
stipate, but on the other hand Its
laxative principles gently move the
bowels. It Is pleasant to take and It
Is especially recommended for chlld-
/ ren, as it tastes nearly as good as
maple sugar. Sold by The Gaffney
Drug Co.
Live right, and give others a chance
to do the same. Don’t underpay your
employees or overcharge those who
deal with you.
HOW TO HAVE GOOD ROADS.
Jersey Farmer Suggests a Scheme to
Avoid Making Ruts.
A farmer at Flnderne, N. writes
as follows to the editor of the New
York Evening Telegram:
I would like to call the attention of
road tnastci and automobillsts to a
matter consideration of which on their
part would confer a great benefit on
the drhing public.
/ On some of the roads of Long Island
Notice to Ou r Customers. ^ j )OStw j a uot i ce requesting persons
We are pleased to announce thaty driving not to confine their vehicles to
Foley s Honey and Tar for coughs, a 8 j n g| e j )art of the thoroughfare, thus
colds and lung troubles is not affect* | " „ ’
ad by the National Pure Food and pi ? ll J tlnK lwo u rut,, • constant wear on
Drug law as It contains no opiates or wh,(:h U8eH th <’ roadway up in very
other harmful drugs, and we recom- »kort order Compliance with the post
mend it as a safe remedy for children
sad adults. Cherokee Drug Co.
Perry’s Big Guns.
Commodore Perry had not yet elec
trifled a grateful nation with his im
mortal message. “We have met the en
emy, and they are ours.” While the
battle was in progress the sound of
the guns was heard at Cleveland,
about sixty miles away In a direct line
over the water. The few settlers there
were expecting the battle and listened
with intense interest Finally the
sounds ceased. They waited for a re
new T ai None came; the lull was pain
ful. Then l hey knew the battle was
over; but the result—ah, that was the
point. One old fellow, who bad been
lying flat with his ear to tbe ground,
soon settled that point. Springing up,
he clapped his hands and shouted:
“Thank God! They are whipped
They are whipped!”
“How do you know?” the others in
quired.
“Heard the big gnus last!”
Perry’s guns were the heaviest
Turning a Tight Screw.
4ny one who lias attempted to re
move a very tight screw knows wbat
a very *diflicij!t business It to. Aftei
straining aud twisting for a con
siderable time the operator frequent
ly ends by losing bis temper and
destroying the bite of the acrew.
which remains fixed as tightly as ever
With the aid of a pair of pinchers, bow
ever, tbe affair is quite a simple one
Place the screwdriver in position and
then catch hold of tbe blade with tbe
pinchers just above the head of the
screw Press the screwdriver firmly
and at tbe same time twist round tbe
blade with the pinchers. The tightest
screw will y ield immediately to this
sort of (tersuasion.
Were you ever In the position
where you knew people didn’t want
you and yet you couldn't get away?
Orino laxative Fruit Syrup is best
for women and children. Its mild
action and pleasant taste makes It
preferable to violent purgatives, such
ag pills, tablets, etc. Get the booklet
and a sample of Orino at Cherokee
Drug Co.
Bird Dogs.
Bird dogs have* beeu known as snch
for only about three or four centuries
So far as wc know, tbe Duke of North
umberlaud, sixteenth century, was the
flrst*tralner of bird dogs. The dukt
was followed by others who trained
dogs to “set” birds, but it was not ti!!
tbe beginning of tbe nineteenth cen
ed request on the roads mentioned | tnry that any reliable record of a dis
keeps them smooth throughout their tinct brand of bird dogs can be found
entire length and breadth and a delight The Gordon setter was founded by the
to motorists and all others using them. Duke of Gordon about 1800.—New
Union avenue In this town (Flnderne* York American.
is a favorite with motorists, and If |
the Lmg Island rule were posted and ; * Retort Discourteous,
obeyed it would tie a fine thoroughfare, j a young lady full of good deeds no-
Instead it consists of two long ruts of , tlced the tongue of a horse bleeding
from one to six Inches In depth, which g Ql ] with a use of technical terms too
require constant attention and repair. u ttle appreciated said to the cabby.
‘Cabby, your horse bus hemorrhage.”
Duchesse and Anarchist.
Upon one occasion the Duchesse
d’Uzes and Louise Michel met at the
bedside of a poor sick woman whom
they were mutually aiding They mot
here frequently for a brief period. The
woman died. Louise Michel, who was
present at the death, wrote to the
duchesse: “Madame—Our poor friend is
dead. I have looked among her few
belongings for a souvenir for you.
Here Is a small piece of passementerie
done by her hands. Accept it.” A
few days afterward Mme la Duchesse
d’Uzes. nee Mortemart, went to the
home of Louise Michel, the anarchist
—a bizarre abode at Levaliols where
the poor found Always both a good
word and a piece of bread—to thank
the “red virgin” for her letter and her
gift. A friendship so was cemcnti I
between the oddly assorted pair tli.:
was later not without result in tli
operation of the most gigantic charily
of the Duchesse d’Uzes—Boulangerism
Harper’s Bazar.
Burton Lumber Company Sustains
Big Loss Nea r ch&rieston.
Charleston, May 12.—A disastrous
fire broke out in the yards of the
Burton Lumber Company yesterday
about 11:30 o’clock and raged all
through the day and a great part of
the night. The flames were finally
brought under control with difficulty
Gaffney, spent last Sunday at Thick-
ety.
Miss Mamie Tindall, of Cowpenn,
was a visitor in the Beaverdam teo-
tion last Saturday and Sunday.
The school at White Plains taught
by Mrs. .Mary Smith, closed last Fri
day.
Mr. D. C. Correll, of Spartanburg,
was in town today on business.
We are not much of a politician
and as a common thing, don’t cam
much who is elected to fill our office*.
at 11 o’clock last night, but not be
fore some 6,000,000 feet of lumber j w e consider almost any of our South
had been consumed. The loss Is va- Carolinians competent to fill almost
riously estimated at from $125,000 to; any offlce But thlg tlrne we haye one
$140, 000. The exact figures will not man selected that we are sure will
be known for some time, as the of- flu office to the best advantage
fleiais of the company as yet do not to all. The one we have reference to
know just what grades of lumber 1 j g j^ r James Summersett, for rail-
went up in smoke. j road commissioner. Mr. Summersett
Fire was discovered at about 11:80 ls an old railroad man with twenty
o’oolck yesterday forenoon by one of
the hands working in the mill and
the fire whistle was immediately
blown. All employees were called up
on to aid in the subduelng of the
years experience. Let us
the man with experience.
vote for
Cx.
Tillman |s No Cleveland Man.
Washington, D. C., May 12.—Sen-
flames. which had broken out in the a t or Tinman who arrived here today
northwest portion of the yards. De- after his long absence from the cap-
spite the strenuous efforts of every
body the flames gained headway with
amazing rapidity, and It was quickly
ital on account of illness, and who
is soon to go abroad for his health,
said he had been misquoted in ths
He Left at Once.
He had been worshiping her foi
months, but had never told her, and
she didn’t want him to. He had come
often and stayed late—very late- and
she could only sigh and hope. He was
goiug away the next day on a holiday
and be thought the last night was the
time to spring the momentous que:-
ion. He kept it to himself, however,
until the last thing. It waa 11:80 by
the clock, and it was not a very rapid
clock.
“Miss Mol lie.” be said tremulously
“I am going away tomorrow.”
“Are you?” she said with tbe thought
lessness of girlhood.
“Yes.” he replied. “Are you sorry?”
“Yes, very sorry,” she murmured
“I thought you might go away thi>
evening.”
Then he gazed at the clock wistfully
and said good night—London Scraps.
The Power of the Whele.
If the whale knew its own power, it
could easily destroy all the machinery
which the art of man could devise for
catching him. It would only be neces
sary for him to swim on tbe surface iu
a straight line in order to break the
thickest rope, but Instead, on being
struck by tbe harpoon, be obeys a nat
ural instinct which. In this Instance,
betrays him to his death. Not haring
an air bladder, be can sink to the low
eat depths of tbe ocean, and, mistaking
the harpoon for the teeth erf a sword
fish or a shark, he Instantly descends
this being bis manner of freeing him
self from these enemies, who cannot
bear the pressure of a deep ocean, and
from descending and ascending in
small space be thus puts hlmaslf In the
power of the whaler.
seen that outside assistance was need-, recent interview which had him saj-
ed in the worst way. i ing that the Democrats could will
••• - with a man like Grover Cleveland.
Gowdeysville Gossip. He said he had not changed his opln-
Gowdeysville, May 12.—On last i°n of Cleveland since the days he
Thursday afternoon Mr. Oliver Cbil- denounced him In the senate. “I
ders came very near being killed. He • would rather see the Democrats now
was plowing and one of the traces j defeated than to be victorious with
became unfastened. He started to; Cleveland or a man like him at the
fasten it and the mule kicked him 1 head of the ticket,” said the senator.
Laugh today; you may run a nail
into your foot tomorrow.
Insist Upon DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
Salve. There are substitutes, but
there Is only one original. It is heal
ing. soothing and cooling and Is es
pecially good for piles. Sold by The
Gaffney Drug Co.
LECTRIC
1 BITTERS
THE BE8T FOB
BILIOl'HNESS
\\I> KIDNETti
Kodol For Indigestion.
* A sour stomach,
palpitation of the hjart. Digests 'vhaiyoueaL
FOUETCHONEr^TAR
Jbr thUdr«nt tafm. •arm, V" optatM
THE CHILDREN LIKE IT
KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE
COUGH SYRUP
Prizes For Good Highways.
At a nu-etlng of the Good
Ronds league for Talbot county, In
Maryland, it was decided to offer
awards for good roads. Prizes aggre
gating $3*JO will be given where the
split log drag Is used, ns follows: First,
$00 for Iwst Improved mile of road !
within a radius of eight miles of Ess- j
ton: second, third and fourth prizes.
$40, $30 and $20 respectively. A prize
of $20 will i*e paid for the best im- !
proved tin If mile of road on each of the
rnral routes originating In Huston.
Other prizes will lie $10. $10 and $5.
j
Proper Care of Gravol Roads.
In order to maintain a gravel road In
good condition It is well to keep piles
of gravel alongside at frequent Inter
vals. so that the persons who repair tbe
road can get the material without go
ing too far for It As soon aa rota or
boles appear on the surface soma of
‘ this good, fresh material should be
added and stamped Into position or
kept raked smooth until properly con
sol Idated
“It’s ’is tongue’s too large for his
mouth,” said the cabby and added sen-
tentiously. “Like some young ladles.”—
London Glol>e.
Good Tsrms.
“I’m sure we shall be on good terms.’
said tbe man who bau just moved into
the neighborhood to the corner grocer.
“No doubi of it. sir. es|>ecially.’ be
added us an afterthought, “as the
terms are rash.”—London Telegraph.
Child Management.
i don’t like punishuu nts. You wil 1
never torture a child itno duty, but a
sensible child will dread the frown of
a Judicious mother more than all tbe
rods, dark rooms and scolding school
mistresses iu tbe universe -White.
Sleepless Paris.
Parisians do not know any longer
what real deep, restoring sleep Is It
is the lark of this which is giving mod
em generations their colorless Ups.
pale faces and feverish eyes.—Echo de
I'aris.
The Popinjay.
Tbe origin of tbe application of the
term “popinjay” to a dude wao aa fol
lows: Tbe popinjay was a figure of a
bird shot at for practice. Tbe jay
was decked witb particolored feathers
so as to resemble a parrot and, being
suspended ou a pole, served as a tar
get He whose ball or ari^w brought
down tbe bird by cutting tbe string
by which it waa hung received the
proud title of Captain Popinjay for the
rest of tbe day and waa escorted home
In triumph.
Hs Had Not Forgottsn.
Artist William M. Chase told a story
of the ecceutric Jimmy Whistler. It
was at a dinner party after all tbe
guests had been seated, when Chase
gently drew’ Whistler’s attention to tbe
fact that he bad forgotten hia tie.
“Forgotten‘(’’shrieked Whistler. “Noth
ing of tbe kind. Why should I spoil
the effect of a good linen collar, with
excellent lines, by sticking on a foolish
little piece of flimsy lawn?”
And the dinner proceeded.
with both feet. He was found by
Messrs. Jeff and Joe Gibson and had
been unconscious, but when found
had regained consciousness. He was
carried to his home and Dr. Southard,
of Jonesvllle was sent for Thursday
night but they failed to get him until
Friday morning and we are informed
that the doctor doubted his recovery
very much, but said that If he could
live until Sunday, there would be a
change, and so we are glad to say
that he is better at this writing
The scholars of Rehoboth Sunday
school are practicing for Childrens’
Day which will be the first Sunday
In June.
Mrs. Lillie Hughes and little daugh
ter, Josle, and sister, Miss Mildred
Foster, visited Mrs. R. M. Bowen, of
Jonesvllle, Saturday.
“A.,” The Ledger's correspondent
st Anbury, was a welcome visitor In
onr Sunday school Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. J. A. names has been right
unwell ft>r the last few days but is
Improving some, we are glad to re
port. We wish for her a speedy re
covery.
Mr. D. R. Hughes has bought a
phonograph and la entertaining Ida
friends with music these days.
Misses Annie and Don Blackwood,
daughters of Mr. and Ifr*. J. L. Black
wood, were Jonesvffle shoppers Mon
day.
Mrs. R. J. Foster has returned from
a visit to Clifton.
Fishing seems to be tbe chief sport
of a lot of tbe people around here
now, as every chance they get they
are on the creeb and river banks.
Cotton is coming up to a poor stand
and a good rain would help wonder
fully.
Best wishes to The Ledger and its
readers. Edna.
He said the whole thing was a tem
pest In a tea pot.
Speaking of South Carolina affairs
he gaid that W. E. Gonzales, the
editor of The State, was trying to
make it appear that he was the big
gest Bryan man in the State, so that
he might control South Carolina pat
ronage In case the Nebraskan Is elect
ed. Landing on Editor Hemphill, of
tbe News and Courier, he said he had
always regarded Cleveland as a demi
god, and he could see nothing else.
He opposed Bryan In 1896, and waa .
all wrong, and now to support him
would be to admit his error.
Unff sling.
“Biiger eloped witb bis cook, tbe un
feeling wretch!”
“Well, I don’t know. Why shouldn’t
bg if be wauted to?”
“But bis wife was jnst going to give
a dinner party.”—Life.
A Pretty Bure Sign.
Mrs. Hoyle -1 believe that 1 am
growing old. Mrs. Boyle- What gives
you that Idea? Mrs. Hoyle—1 am get
ting so tbat I don’t care to go to fn
nerals. -Exchange.
In the- philosophy of some men heav
en is nothing hut a place where every
body will be able to buy cheap aud sell
high.—Chicago Record -Hera Id
Dots from Thicket/.
Thickety, May 13.—We missed our
copy of The Ledger last Friday. For
some cause we didn’t receive any Led
ger’s at all at Thickety.
and G- J. Williams,tweallSQn.FMFL
Messrs. C. E. and Victor Smith, G.
J. Williams and your correspondent
! attended services at White Plains
: last Sunday.
Misses Florence and MTytle David
son and Macy Vassey spent last Sun
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
1 Anguish Davidson’s.
Messrs. Milton Vassey and Barnle
Davidson left last Friday for a visit
to Forest City, N. C.
Miss Mary Bonner, of Spartanburg.
Is spending this weak with her par-
1 ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Bonner, of
i Goucher.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Lipscomb, of
White Plains, passed here Monday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. C. T Smith and
daughter, Miss Minnie, are visiting
In Spartanburg.
Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Guthrie, of
e
/ s ^
More News from the New England
States.
If any one has any doubt as to the
virtue of Foley’s Kidney Core, they
need only to refer to Mr. Alvin H.
Stimpson, of Wllllmantic, Conn., agio,
after almost losing hope of recovery,
on account of the failure of so many
remedies, finally tried Foley’s Kidney
Cure, which he says wag “Just the
thing” for him, as four bottles cured
him completely. He is now entirely
well and free from all the suffering
incident to acute kidney trouble.
Cherokee Dm OL
Some people are very careful not
to let their pocketbooks feel a re
ligious thrill.
Kidney complaint kills more peo
ple than any other disease. This Is
due to the disease being so Insidious
that It gets a good hold on the sys
tem before It is recognized. Foley’s
Kidney cure will prevent the de
velopment of fatal disease if takeE
in time. Cherokee Drug Co.
The baby Is taught a lot of “cute^*
things that are awfully Impudent and
saucy a few years later.
When you think of Indigestion think
of Kodol, for It Is without doubt the
only preparation that completely dt-
ges'ts all classes of food. And that
Is what you need when you have Indi
gestion or stomach troubles—some
thing that will act promptly but thor
oughly: something that will get right
at the trouble and do the very work
'itself for the stomach by digesting
the food that you eat am} that Is Kd*
dol. It is pleasant to take. It Is sold
by The G^JETney Drug Co.
Be good; It Is the only safe Invest
ment that pays ten per cent on the
dollar.
Mrs. S. Joyce, 180 Snlllvan Bt*
Claremont, N. H, writes: “About •
years asp. 1 bought two bottles of Fo
ley’s Kidney Cure. It cured me of a
severe case of kidney trouble of sev^
oral years' standing. It certainly la
a grand, good medicine, and I hearti
ly recommend It/’
Mr. John Rlha. of Vlnlng, la., says,
“I have been selling DeWitt’s Kid
ney and Bladder Pills for about a
year and they give better satisfac
tion than any pill 1 ever sold. Thera
are a dozen people here who hava
used them and they give perfect sat
isfaction in every case. | have used
them myself with fine results.’' SoM
by The Gaffney Drug Co.
DeWitt’s Uttle Early Risers art
small, safe, sure and gentle little
pills. Bold by The Gaffney Drag Oo.
s