University of South Carolina Libraries
1 1 i / J That our A moncan rore.M'* abound In plants which jHisness the inust vaiiittblc medicinal virtue* Is abundantly attcsicd by scores of the most enuuent medical writers and teachers. Even the untu tored Indians had discovered the useful ness of many n -tlve plants before the advent of the white race. This informa tion, Imparu d freely to the whites, led the latter to continue Investigations until to-day we have a rich assortment of most valuable American medicinal roots. O Dr Pierce believes that our American for- ■ts adhere: In most valuable medicinal roots most obstinate and fatal dls- ^properly investhrate them; of this conviction, he the almost mrn-vt-loua yprec ■ ffti tt -1 h;,- ; ^ "finTdon M. DIs- .i. i-- jroYvn-Jts^jf to yiyst < < i.7.ent. .1, i,.->rh tonic. Uvyr Invlgor- Ctnr. h> art tonic and regulator, and bloi'd Cle- uvu knuw:. to medical scicnctv Dyspep- *' or Ind.gcstion, torpid llferT^unctional 110 PERliy Iff SEA ON WOMAN SUFFRAGE. Mr*. Snowden, Champion of the C*u*», _______ Visiting America. New Yor’i. Set»t, 24.—The beauti- Bark Star of B'. r gal Wrecked ful young English worker for woman suffrage, Mrs. Phillip Snowden, wife on Ccron .liou Island. TWENTY-SEVEN ARE SAVED While Being Towed to Sea by Tugs •hip Was Caught in Fierce Gale and Blown Ashore of the mem her of parliament from liiaokburn, is in this city, the guest of Re\ . Dr. Charles F. Aked, of the Fifth avenue Baptist church, and his wife. It wa« through Dr. Aked that she tirst became aterested In public ques tions in England, and for the last COLLMJ A FOG Fifty Persons Injured, Several Probably Fatally. ACCIDENT NEAR CHESTER, PA MD A WOMAN'S WORK "-"1 Story of Disaster as three years, she has given her time _ , _ : entirely to the suffrage propaganda. Given by Sailors. . „ ^ . In Hngand and Scotland she has made Serttle, Wash., Sept 2i.—Advices I a reputation for eloquenoe. Mis. received from Alaska, by the United Snowden has made two effective and even valwilar and other affections of fAtate* signal corps, say that 110 men, I speeches in favor of woman suffrage reL h r, 1 11*^Cbn's 5 1hese U a V nd*miTy other i tocltidlng nine whites, were drowmvd in Diehonse of commons, affections. Is clearly shown In a little took •f extracts from the standard medical works which Is mailed free to any address by Dr. R. V. Pierre, of Buffalo, Ji. Y.. to all sending request for the same. -Qy Not less marvelous, In the unparalleled Cures It Is constantly making of woman's many peculiar affections, weaknesses and dlstf€tfs;mr denTr^ments. is Dr. Pierce’s •aVoriie\Prescrlptit)hKas Is amply attested By thousands pf-wijtbWcltMjtestlmonlals con in the wreck of the American bark Speaking of her work, Mrs. Snow- 6tar of Bengal, on Coronation island, den said: west of the Prince of Wales arehipel- "It is the fundamental question of ago. the times. I do not mean that wo- Twenty-seven of the vessel’s crew-; man suffrage will accomplish a great and passengers wore saved. deal at once, that the millenlum wdll The Star of Bengal belonged to the arrive. Things will go on such as Alaska Packers’ association, and was they do at present, but I do think It | on her way from Fort Wrangle to San I will alter the relation of the sex and trlbuted by\c*!<i-ful paTtPnfe who have been fYanci-too with a cargo of 46,000 all that moans an improvement in »' * ainion - -x •« <• wo^kness^ ulc r; addition to her crew, she carried duties are regarded by men. There 100 Chinese and Japanese, who were: is so great difference between the employed in the canneries of the com- i American and the English point of view in this regard that the latter can ajlon of urtros a^rkhit by weakness. TrodaTr^ct ion^. ofi i-n fter iriany othci advertised medicines, and physicians had failed. pany, taken aboard at Fort Wrangle. iwth the aiwve mentioned medicines are The Star of Bengal was being towed I hardly be understood here. The idea ve. u“. d db-b^a f rrS)U e to sea by two tugs and was blown In England that the woman Is the . ' ag h oreon thewest side of Coronation property of the man dies hard and it ployco m lliolr manufacture were original With Pi. Pierce, and they are carried on by ■killed chemists and pharmacists with the aid ot apparatus and appliances specially designed and built for this purpose. Both 2 edi< ine.s an-entirely free from alcohol and 1 other hirmful. habit-formlnK drugs. A ill list of tiirir InuredienU la printed on •act bottle-wi upper. Island. The tugs were obliged to aban. j is shown every day that the absence don her in order to save themselves. ; of political power In women gives men The captain of the tug Hattie Cage a feeling of contempt for them.’’ gives the following story: V Kodo! For Indigestion Our Guarantee Coupon "As we came within reach of the gale we could see we were making lee way and drifting toward Coronation Island. The tug Kayak was light and could do nofning. The Hattie Gage could not handle the ship alone. We could see the vessel dimly. We EMBLEMS ON BALLOTS. Two Cars on the Southwestern Trae. tion Company’s Line Ran Together j In Heavy Fog with Most Disastrous Result*. Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 24.—Fog | wa* responsible Wednesday for a head- j on collision between two cars on the Southwestern Traction company’s line! between this city and Chester, in; which about fifty persons were injur ! ed, several probably fatally. The car leaving Philadelphia with 1 workmen employed by the Baldwin Locomotive company at its out of town plant, and known as the “Baldwin tripper,” was speeding along the sin gle track with seveirty-two men on board when suddenly a car coming from Chester loomed up in the fog. Before brakes could be applied there was an awful crasn. Men were hurled in every direc tion and both cars were wrecked. The Baldwin tripper had waited on the siding for the regular Philadelphia bound car to pass and then proceeded toward the Baldwin works, the crew unaware that an extra car was com ing toward them on the same track. ■Opened iSept. Otli 1 LIEUTENANT OSWALT BURIED. Prohibition Camel, Democratic Don key and Republican Elephant. Chicago, Sept. 24.—The prohibition camel has been entered In the nation al race against the republican ele- It ttfier Qiii..- tw->ti.ir4> of a fi oo bottle of | Ko<iol. yon can honestly say it has not bene Med yc-u. we wi!' refn; <t your money. Try | kodo! »nday on this -.'iiarant-e. Fill out and 1 • i.T. i ne following, present it to the dealer at l- me of purchase If iMaos to satisfy 7ou 'he botiV containing one-third of the *ut the row linos and steamed out Into phant and the democratic donkey. In open water but could jiot see anything a number of states, the law requires In the driving rain except one blue that each party have an official em- llght burning on the ship. Tlie storm blem printed on the ballot, that no Increased in its fury and the tugs voter may mistake his ticket. ■teamed to Shipley bay, 28 miles dls- Alonzo E. Wilton, state chairman tant.” i of the prohibition party, has announc- Survivors Muir and Olson sai*d the ed that the prohibitionists have decid- j ship .-ank about 0 o'clock after break- ed to adopt the camel as their mascot, u.3wVwia r e H fu«ay,7u7mone“ y0U bon ‘ U ' ln K into three pieces. The surf was "replacing the emblems of the fountain full of cases of salomn and gasoline i and rising sun, which formerly have drums. indicated the prohibition column. Miie i Mu j r savs ll( . aril oison got a boat 1 Among the reasons advanced by go Per* —____ l off and went ashore through the mass Mr. Wilson lor the selection are that »■ . ^ xV U' l w, ' eo * <a ‘ i,> They helped several the camel is the original water wagon; LljS^SlS | Ott£,ai Mh<>re and pulled Captain Wagner out that it can discern a fresh supply of Sweef tne - H‘* could not speak, water further than any other quadru- The breeches buoy was rigged to a pod: that ii ran travel faster than the tree, but the ship was swaying so elephant or donkey, and that it is un. that the line was alternate!, kxtse and '!<*r no n< eessity of getting a hump tight, making it impossible to use it. The ship's books and papers were found on thi wreck. One man had Notice is hereby given that on Wed- matches and a fire was built on the nesdav September 30th next, I will wrecage. The fire undoubtedly saved apply tc the Hon. J. E. Webster, Pro- the lives of the .-uirvivors, as it kept fa. C. L«\VSTT A CO.. Chfcaao. I1L F*r Ml* By •afflMy Dnw CO- NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Army Officer Was Killed by Live Wire in Manila. Tuskegee, Ala., Sept. 24.—-The re mains of Lieutenant Bernard P. Os walt, of the United States army, reached here Monday from Manila, accompanied by his wife and brother- in-law, Captain Haskell, also an army officer. On July 2'3th last, while Lieu tenant Oswalt was taking an electric al bath, he came In contact with a live wire and was electrocuted. His remains were shipped fivmi Manila o” Aug. 16, r« ached here Monday at 11 o’clock and were buried in the after noon. Lieutenant Oswalt graduated at West Point, in the summer of 1806 and reported at Seattle, Wash., the fol- lowdiig September tor duty. In 1897 h.e was married to Miss Rice, of Se attle, and shortly after his marriage was ordered to Fort William McKln-1 —Those school bags at Gaffney % LYDIA E. PINKHAM Nature and a woman’s work com- i bined have produced the grandest; • remedy for woman’s ills that the ! , world has ever known. j ^ In the good old-fashioned clays of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herns of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St., T/misiana, Mo., writes: Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering W'om<-n I am willing to make my troubles public. “For twelve years I liad been suffer ing with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two year« ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women.” What I.ydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women. on itself. AGED PLANTER ARRESTED. ley, P. I., about seven miles west of Manila, w here he was stationed at the time of his untimely death. Drug Co. are peaches, all colon, styles and shapes. We want every school boy and every school girl to corne in and see the big line of school supplies which we have here at your disposal. Everything that the scholar needs can be had at our store. : : Pen*, Pencils, Inks, Rulers, Book Straps, Note Books, Scratch Pads, Pen Staff*, Erasers, Pen and Pencil.Holders, Drawing Colors, Companion Sets, Composition Books, Examination Paper, Pencil Sharpeners. See our large window for items we do not enumerate. : : : Cherokee Drug Com’py BIG GUN BURSTS. bate Judge, at his office at the court them from fiiM-/. 4. house in Gaffney, S. C., at 10 o’clock, a m , for a final settlement and dis charge as Administrator of the estate of W Scott Hill and Sarah Hill, and Laura L. Hill, Ruth Hill and Rochelle R. Hill, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate cr interest ed therein, are required to present the same at or before said time, or he forever barred. W. W. Gaffney, As Admr. Estates W. Scott Hill and Sarah Hill, and W. W. Gaffney, D. C. Phillips, Adinrs. Estates Laura L. Hill, Ruth Hill and Rochelle R. Bill, deceased. Pub Sept. 4, 11, 18, 25, 1908. NOTICE TO BRIDGE BUILDERS. Notice is hereby given, that seal bids will be received at the office of the Cosnty Supervisor until 10 o’clock A. M on Monday, October 5th, 1908, for the erection of a steel bridge across Buffalo creek on the road leading from the town of Blacksburg to Buffalo church, at the site of what was known as “Morgan’s bridge;’’ also sealed bids will be received for the construction of a first class wooden bridge, same to be covered and protected from the weather for the same site. Plans, specifications, and surveys may be seen at the office of the County Supervisor. All parties of fering bids will be required to com plete the bridge by December 1st, 1908. AH bids should be sealed and endorsed thereon, “Bids for Buffalo Bridge,” and addressed to “E. F. Lipscomb, County Supervisor, Gaff ney, S. C.” By order of the board. E. F. Lipscomb, Supervisor Cherokee Co. EPIDEMIC OF SUICIDES. Several Persons Take Their Lives In New Orleans. New Orleans, la., Sept. 24.—-A •mall epidemic of suicides deveb>ped in New Orleans Tuesday. Theodore Marraro, a young street car conductor, *hot himself through the head in a gambling house. He •aid he had lost his money and could not provide for his wife and two chil dren . Newsom Hill, forty years ryf age, end a private watchman, w«*nt to his home and shot himself after a quar rel with his employer. The body of U. L. Wellington, twenty-two years of age, son of the manager of a local chemical manufac. luring company, was found In hit room at the Hotel Rush. He had taken chloroform, and left a note say- fng that he was tired of living. Mr. Wsllingtoif wa.- a Tulane university student, ami for a time was a cadet at the Annapolis naval academy. Chargco With Sending Night Rider Notices Through Mat.3. Winona, Miss.. Sept. 24.—Bud Mortimer, an aged planter, has been arrested near here charged with send, ing night rider notices Mi rough the mails. The arrest was made by | United States marshals. The notices were sent to a cotton gin owner and Mortimer declares that he was forced to -end them by a band of armed men who threatened him with death. Near his home a notiee was found posted reading. "Ginning must cease until cotiou has reached 12y» cents Little Texas Night Riders.’’ STAR Gliicken Feed and Wheat —AT- V. Kyle Davenport’s 1TTH ANNUAL MEETING. international Conference on Tubercu losis Meets. Philadelphia. Sept. 24.—'Men who fight in tiie foremost rank In the world wide war against the “great white plague.” gathered here to at tend the seventh annual meeting of fh* international conference on tuber culosis at Horticultural hall. The conference is a distinct body from the tuberculosis congress which will open In Washington next week. The conference is made up of mefil- sal experts appointed by national as sociation s from seventeen countries, while the congress Is made up of all persons, whether physicians or not, who are Interested in the prevention and cure of the dreaded malady. Actor Seeks Divorce. Reno, Nev., Sept. 24.—Nat O. Goodwin, actor, it is said, has filed a sealed complaint for divorce against his wife, Bessie tioodwln, better known as Maxine Elliott. The nature of the allegations made by Goodwin will not be known until the papers in the case are unsealed in court. Attor- neys for Goodwin refused to discuss the case. It is thought that Mrs. Goodwin will contest the suit filed by her husband. It was definitely an nounced a short time ago that she was about to file suit for divorce. Orville Wright Improves. Washington, Sept. 24—Orrf!le Wright, the aeronaut, who has been St the Fort Myer hospital since the aeroplane accident, continue* to im- prov*. He slept practically through out the night and the benefit from the rest was apparent Wednesday. Anson’* Daughter Wed*. New York, Sept. 24.—'Mia* Doro thy Anson, the daughter of Adam C. Anson, of Chicago, the former base bau captain and until last May the county clerk of Cook county, quietly left the home of her sister Mrs. Walter H. Clough, in Montclair, N. J. Tuesday night and was married at Hoboken to Arthur C. Dodge, a clerk in a Montclair bank. The mar riage took place at the office of Jus tice of the Peace Samuel Bugler early la the evening. Thirteen Men Killed on French Ar. rr.Jred Cruiser. Toulon, France, Sept. 24.—During gunnery drill Tuesday one of the big turret gun: on the French armored oruiser Latouche Reville exploded with terrific violence, completely wrecking the after turret and killing outright the entire gun crew of thir teen. A number of men were seri ously injured, some of them probably fatally. 'The accident was similar to that aboard the gunnery schoolship Cou- ronne, off Les Salins d’Hyres, Aug. 12 last, when by the bursting of one of the guns, six men were killed and eighteen injured. YOUNG FARMER ASSASSINATED. Body Found in Wagon Riddled with Bullets. Columbia, S. C., Sept. 24.—Press- ley Reeves, twenty-four years of age, the son of A. M. Reeves, who lives about six miles below Branchville, in Dorchester county, was assassinated )wt after dark Monday evening. Reeves left his home about dark to carry a load of ootton picker* to thsk home. A host an hour later the mules returned home with young Reeves dead In the wagon, having been shot In the head with buckshot It 1* Mid the wagon did not go 9* the field with the ootton pickers. Store’s Slayer Arrested. Mobile, Ala., He'pt. 24.—Alexander Johnson, alias Alexander Brown, want ed for the brutal murder of John Sto- er at Gulfport, Miss., in July, 1906, was arrested here Wednesday after being surrounde'd in a house in the outskirts of the city. He will be taken to Gulfport at once. Johnson went up to Stoer without warning and shot him dead in a saloon. Indictments Against Six. Los Aageles, Cal., Sept. 24. —After trsefltf of careful* investigation of an sHsged plot to sinuggle Chinese across the Mexican border the federal offl- cess have succeeded in obtaining is* dfetments against three Los Anftlti men Sod three Mexicans who former, ly lived near lx>ng Beach. The man tSdletsd are Jesse D. Button, G. J. Latch, A. H. Hatch, Francisco Oavo, Ignacio Barrios and Salvador Armen- tat. The last three have been under arrest for several days. The Ameri cans were arrested Tuesday night. Americans Wed in London. London, Sept. 24.—Harry Darling ton, Jr., of Chicago, was married here Tuesday to Lefrada, the daugh tar of Levi Weir, of New York. The seremoay occurred in it. Georges ehaash. Haaover fiqoare. Prominent Politician Dead. Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 24.—Colo nel Thomas L. Williams, formerly state railroad commissioner for East Ten tier see, died at bis home in this city Wednesday morning. Colonel Williams was a well known lawyer of abl lty and a prominent democratic politician of this state. Old Coast Pilot Dead. Mobile, Ala., Sept. 24.—Captain PBtef Johnson, who was perhaps the dMast living coast pilot in the south, glad here Wednesday at the age of tlghty-five. He was pilot of mail staamers between Mobile and New Or. leans before tbe Louisville and NAsh- YlBa railroad was built. Disastrous Floods in MsIsqa Madrid, Sept. 24.—’Dispatches re- osived here state that there have been heavy floods in the province of Mala ga. A number of bouses collapsed and several parsons were drowned. COLLAR LABEL >y\/vV v'VVv'v'-'WV''/ /'v'Vv'W- ■: hisp ; ; W E L Irii (Wears I Well 5 >^vVvvvvv/vVvA/y,/./v / /yvv while the iron is hot. S elect your Cloth ing now, and later you will not complain that you did not get the pat tern or style desired —nor of the quality, either—if you buy “Shield Brand’* for it’s built good and stout. Just the Cloth ing for good all round wear, every day and Sun Jay too Stylish Enough (or a King and Strong Enough (or a Working Man. Better Still is the price on sleeve— SIO Tin Lowest $18 Tin Highest Jhiek A. S. LIPSCOMB, Gaffney, $5*o Carolina. Fire Insurance! We represent some of tbe larxeet and most subetantlal com panlee and woulu like to write your buslneee. 5-14-tf Smith Ik Lipscomb, Agents. Money to Loan! I am prepared to ne« tiate loans in amounts from I300 oc, up for a trrm of years on improved fi-niih Inter est 8 per cent Call on 914 08 6m J. C. Jefferies, Ally ,G~ffney S C. 6te! How Qaicklir and Neatly We Can Do Job W b; <\