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MUS. L. S. ADAMS. OJ IJalvmton, T.ih. "Wine of Cardui it indeed a blessing to tired women, having suffered for seven years with weakness and bearing-down pains, and having tried scv> cral doctors and different remedies with no success, your Wine of Cardui was the only thing which helped me, and eventually cured me It seemed to build up the weak parts, strengthen the system and correct irregularities." By "tired women" Mrs. Adams means nervous women who have disordered menses, falling of the womb, ovarian troubles or any of these ailment* fhat women have. You can cure yourself at home with this great women's remedy, Wine of Cardui. Wine of Cardui has cured thousands of cases which doctors have failed to benefit. Whv not begin to get well today? All druggists have 81.00 bottles. For any stomach, liver or bowel disorder Thedford's Black-Draught should be used. ForaSTloesn4 literature.kd'lrrw. irlrlnir symptom., Th. La.1I-*' .Vavtsory I cnuut, Th* Chatt.nooir* Mrdiolno ( ^ Clatfamoog.. Tcnfi. g j' WINE<"CARDUll \imii nai?mb? niasiiii sisiii? ii ~t LET THE SOUTH ALONE, MR. ROOSEVELT. c W R Hearst in New York American C President Roosevelt has sue- a ceeded in exciting the whole South. By his ostensible at- t tempts to bridge the chasm which separates the whites and blacks t there he has only widened it. c WR6 that his intention? A v politician caring everything for i negro delegates to the National t Republican Convention and noth- t ing for the peace and progress of 1 the South would not scruple to c incite race antagonism in order p to accomplish his purpose. A t statesman sincerely desirous of i furthering the welfare of both the 1! whites and blacks, or one es* e penally anxious to advance the ( interests of the blacks, would not o set about his work by inflaming d each race against the other. d Intentionally or otherwise, that 9 is precisely what Presideut * Roosevelt has done. Professing 0 ? 1 the noblest motives, he has started a fire whose heat is now being 8 felt by the whole country. c Proclaiming that the door of f hope and opportunity shall be closed to no man on account of f his color, the President chose to open a door which has led not to a hope and opportunity, but to bit- n terness and strife. * Mr. Roosevelt's theory is exalt- 8 ed, of course, but why did he lay his opening hand on a door in a L section of the country where, as * he must haye known, benefit to * the negroes could not attend his 1 act, however fruitful it might be ^ in delegates ? Conditions as well as theories B have to be kept in mind. When theories are applied without regard to consequence, the consequences are invariably disastrous. ? v The government ascertains the ^ quality o/ kerosene by means of t the flash tent. Would Mr. Koose- c elt think it wise to have the 11 hash testing done in a powder " magazine? He favnra target a practice for onr soldiers, but he f hardly would approve the aetting a up of the butts in a crowded city. c If President Roosevelt is not ^ imply playing politics with ref- g erence to the presidential nomi- g nation in 1904, and honestly IC eants to open the door of hope have not been bron ind opportunity to the negro by them. Elsewhere i ;iving him office, he can do it ?including New li without insulting and agitating sheer race prejudic he entire white population of negroes of ability a he South. to be discriminated Dr. Crum is not the only edu- cally ; in the South :ated and reputable black man fear. The whites t n the United States, nor is Char- experience of negr eston the only city where and they are resolv legroes who are his equals in dergo a repetition c ibility and character can be ence. Will any ound. man who is acquaii Boston has a custom house as history of the I veil as Charleston. If, in order era blame them ? o assert the equality of the races, With all genuine i black must bo made a Collector vate the negro >f the Port somewhere, why not morally and indi lelect Boston instead of Charles- Southern people i on for the honor? sympathy. That ci Moreover, there is no law to pnted. No man c< jrevent Mr. Roosevelt from open- thoroughly respects ng the door of hope and oppor- or more cordially e unity in Washington, and ad- his great work for nitting some colored citizen of education of his listiuction to the Cabinet. There Booker T. Washing s no law to restrain him, either body who has rom surrounding himself, with knowledge of actt legro secretaries and clerks. in the former sla^ Such support as the President question for a mon eceives in his efforts to thrust Booker T. Washing :olored officeholders upon the more to his race thi vhites of the South comes, of of every Collecto :ourse, nearly altogether from Union to negroes * he North, and when sincere and Fair tnen througl lissociated from mere political try sympathize wit mrtisanship is accorded by men ment which the So o constituted that when their sure to express wh nind. Rive hospitality to a line- jn eeekjng their ow oundiog general principle they lhe quiet and men a lave no room left lor facts which e ., .. . , a . _ of the section by si ounsel against the enforcement , , ,. , , ,f the principle in human affair. "nd fooll8h ho',eB it any given time or place. discontent among "The door of hope and oppur- ,na8se8 simple bl unity must not be closed against yet advanced menti iny man on account of his color; yond the plane of c herefore negroes must be given President Roos< iffice"?. 80 runs the logic, but deavoring to apply ve do not observe that the men where the negroes 1 rho assent most enthusiastically principle of equal o the argument are at ell mmf ..... ?ignores mai priucij; o give it reality near at home. mai[1jer of the cout to. too1. official.^ are not dark ne(,roea are f omplexioned. Massachusetts'* ir ... ... ... , Hauna, with hia bi ;overnor is a white man, and ,, , . .... .all ex slaves, rend< legroes are not elected to seats ' n any of the legislatures of the DO 8erv,ce *'*ie *ew England States.' Their do them ?rave harn enators and representatives in same time harass a Congress, strange to say, are all whites, who are bu if the Caucasian race. The Mid race problem that ii lie States, the States of the Mid enough without the lie West and of the Far West additions. eems quite as reluctant as the Delegates to the louth to have the negroes hold publiCan Conventio /v ce* taut, of course?pre Long-distance megaphoning . .. .. .?f * . .A . * v * portant from the W bout the rights of the oppressed * . osts nothing That, perhaps, is Ohio standpoints-t rhy it is so popular an exercise. and Pa,ri?tic Ai It isonly in theSouthern States, con8,der the repose rhere the negro population is paramount to the q arge, that the African repesents shall get the Itepi race problem. Outside efforts, dential nomination oilitary and political, to solve playing with fire hat problem have failed. The seems wicked and i ober judgment of the country Au 8Uch American! as arrived at the conclusion that hopo that they fo h. solution h.d beet be left to m,jorit of the ime and the people of the South , ...... , ry.? j .. . . public?hold that, t amooiwqd i ^ - ..Viuaoivo. iUOjr UU IJUt Utile " be negro end they underet.nd of eTer-" man who c ,im. Id their pereonet relatione believed that h rith the blacks Southern men as negro well?whethc rule are far more kind and con- j? the Senate Cham iderate than are Amreioans who ? . House, or in any c of power and iuflue thie sane and friend Disturbances of strikers are Let the South alo iot nearly as grave as an indi- . ldual disoider of the system. )verwork, loss of sleep, nervous ? ension will be followed by utter Everything is in th< ollapse, unless a reliable remedy it comes to Witch i immediately employed. There's E. C. DeWitt <fc Co othing so efficient to cure dis- discovered, some ye rders of the Liver and Kidneys to make a salve s Electric Bitters. It's a wonder- Hazel that is a spec ul tonic, and effective nervine For blind, bleeding, nd the greatest all ronnd medi- protruding piles, inn for run down 14 1 ! 1 .jDKwuin, Ii UUIUtl, urUIHOK RIIQ ispel* Nervousness,Rheumatism eases, DeWitt's S od Neuralgia and expels Malaria equal. This has gn arms. Only 20c, and satisfaction morons worthless uarantoed by J. F. Macaey, & Ask for Do Witt'sJo., and Crawford Bros. ?Crawford Bros. ght up among 172 Miles in 152 n our country mgland it is Atlanta, Ga, Mi 6 cau.seH special to The Const: nd education , , it .... Savannah says thai against politi- .... , , the motive is Gould> who reach< here have had v,1,e' Fla? this af,er' o domination t0 catch the train ,0* ed not to un- secured a special tra >f that experi- est that the Atlantit unprejudiced could supply, paying ited with the $1500. The special teconstruction 0f Jacksonville prepi record time and < efforts to ele- traiu which Mr Goul 1 ao t n 1 1 ? jq actual runniu ustrially the oording ^ the officia lre \n k 172 miles between innot be die- , ? , mid be more a,,d Savannah were id among them 152 minutes, hn, incouraged in shitted at Savanna the practical train started northwi race, than ia In the Gould pari ton. And no- multi-millionaire b the slightest wife and children ai lal conditions others. They expe re States can 22 at Weldon, IS lent that one M ?ton is worth Xr?ir??iy Atc sn the giving **Ju8t in the nick rship in the jmje b0y waa Haved rould be. W.Watkins ofPleasi lout the coun- "Pneumonia had pla ill the resent- oc w,th hino and a t? , . , set iu besides. Do< utli is always he grew woi en politicians At length we tried n ends disturb New Discovery tor ice tho safety ?nd our darhng was now sound, and w ^reading false ought to know, 1 and sinister sure cure for Cough the ignorant ack men not yrOH> druggists. Pi illy much be- $1 00. Trial bottles t ihildhood. avelt by en- The Western in the South, Memphis, Tenn., ire many, the 'pije river, after re ity, while he tionary for two day >le in the re- rj8e slowly again itry, where the gauge tonight marl and Senator an(j more water is c 11 to pension levees retnain intact ir Klnntn * -? ??v ]arge area of low lai contrary, they Memphis is submerg< i, and at the (jen an(j Lee counties nd alarm the are inundated and so rdened with a reported from ther b quite' heavy among negro farmers .. serious difficulty the )se gratuitous . . eJ .. ? experiencing from tl ing waters is the deli National lie ules, many trains ai n are impor* 1 to 2 hours late. bably all im Thousands of peof aahingtcn and blufl8 he,e ,od?y ** vast expanse of wa >ut to thought- Bjon ^oats were run ] mericans who land. of the nation . Cairo, 111., March uestion of who server at the weathe iblican presi- sent out warnings to in 1904 this of Cairo t0 P'opa ,, 0 fifty feet of water in the South \ A A , 4 yesterday and laet n unpardonable. | watersheds of the Ol i?and let us Tennessee and Oumh rm the great and in many placei pie of this Ke- riv?r8 were falling vc he first duly ?rB r.i("n? "Kai" tu(| territory around and lesires to have -8 nQW COvered e wishes the many of the families >r that man be forced to abandon I ber, the White j While there is nc l(Ko, I dancer at Cairo tl?n rvnu i UUOItlUII I . *7" ~ "" r ' I " . i in the lowlands be nce-i. to do alid Memphu. xhe y ,n^' are expected to stan< ne 55 feet as they have and strengthened du !*? ?. few years. The gj s name when "bows 45.8 feet. Hazel Salve. . ? ? ? : . of Ohicjgo, ... ars ago, how from Witch P. A.Danforth of L ific for Piles, suffered for six mo , itching and, frightful running soi eczema, cute, but writes that Buel all skin die- Halve wholly cured il alve haa no For Ulcers, Wound ren rise to nu- the best salve in the counterfeits, guaranteed. Only 21 -the genuine. J. F. Mackeydt Co., s Bros. f " BEST FOR THE BOWELS i it nt inn trnm WW HWi w A ItUllOIl irom ^ h%Ten'? ? nfgltr, healthy motrmml of tfca ~ . . ? I rVnwola every day, you're lit or will be. Koep your U ueorire J , bowelaepea.andbe well. Force.In the nlmpaof vioteat phyelo or pill pollen, la danceroua. The emooUw sd Jackson- ot^u* lho ared to make EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY >vertake the b p?r bo*. Writs for trrm a*in|>U, ?nd booklet on ft hail miflHAli health. Ad,'rem, WS u unu IU1HBWU. IUUT cosnsT. rairir.il *r nv long. ? time, ?c. KEEp your blood glean ,1 figures, the ? ZZZT"""""""""*""""j;::? southern ry Schedule In effect Jan. 13, 1003. gines were . h?a .1 ? Read Down Rend Up ana tne No.33. Dally No. 34. Dally ,rfl 1 M)pm Lv Charleston Ar 3 30pm ,IU* 22 pm Ar Sumtncrville Ar 3 11pm lv wnrn th? 4 Ar Klngsrllle Ar 12 80pm i,y woto mo These trains, Ni-s. 33 and 34, will atop only at limoolf Rio Summervllle, llranchvllle, Orangeburg and SV liraseil, nie Matlhewa. lid some 20 Between Klngsvllls and Blacltsburg Read Down Read Up >ct to catch No. 83, Bally No.34, Dally ^ r _ 6 00pm Lv Klngsvtlle Ar 12 80pm I. L. 0 16pm Ar Camden Ar 1130am 8 00pm Ar Catawba Jet Ar 9 40am _______ 8 2'ipm Ar Rock H1U Ar 0 16am 8 69 pm Ar'l'irzahAr 8 64am a rted* 9 09pm Ar Yorkvllle Ar 8 42am ^ 9 22pm Ar Sharon Ar 8 27am r\f lima r?nr 9 38pm Ar Hickory Grove Ar 8 16am Ui 11UJO our Phopm Ar Smyrna Ar 8 08am Writes Mrs. 10 ispm t Ar Blacksburg Lv 7 4iam lnf pit,, ( 1 hirt Trains Nos. 33 and 31 stop at all Important tut, v>itj,v/uiu Ktutions between Klngsvllle and Blacksburg. yed sad hav- Between Rock Hill and Marlon srrible couch Read Down Read Up . . . No.36, Dally No.3U, Dally store treatea r5 u)ttm Lv Rock HUl Ar I0 rse every day 0 19am ArTirzahAr 10 llpm TA fr , 0 3lam Ar Yorkvllle Ar 1001pm lJT. King 8 0 10 vm Ar Sliaron Ar 9 40pm Hnnmimnlinn 7 uoam Ar Hickory Grove Ar 9 35pm COUHUmpilOll 7 10am Ar Smyrna Ar 9 26pm Saved. lie's 7 30ain Ar Blacksburg Lv 8 40pm I ? . 10 4 mm Ar Marlon Lv 6 60pm ?. Kvery- Nos. 3? and 30 stop at principal stations belt 8 the Only tween Rock Hill and Marlon. 8 Colds and Between Marlon and Blacksburg ' . . . Read Down Read Up jaranteea by No.00, Dally ex Sun No.07,Dally ex Sun ind Crawford 9 00a m I.V Marion Ar 8 60pm fift .4 2 (Xlpm Ar Blacksburg Lv 2 60pm rice ;>uc ana Train No. 33 will connect at Rock HUl with pee. Savannah division No. 34 for Charlotte, Washington and New York. ______ Train No. 34 will make connection at Rock HUl with Savannah division No. 33 from CharFlood lotte. Washington and New York. * Nos. 33 and 34 handle through PullmanDraw. Ing Room sleeping cars between New York and March 8.? Charleston, via Camden and Rock HUl, and Dining Car between Rock HUl and Washlngmaiuing sta- lou- 'or further Information address, R. W. HUNT, DP. A., Charleston, S. C. '8, began to w. H. TAYLOK, A.G.P.A, Atlanta, Ua. \ ? ? S. H. HARDW1CK.G.P.A.,Washington,D.C. today. The is 34 4 feet LANCASTER A CHESTER oming. The RAILWAY# ^ although a RAfwoan flknoi?. ??4 7 4 0 ? wvfr wu aiiu ?d8 80Ulh of Schedule la UOeci November 9th, 1908. ed. Critten- Dally Except Sunday. I in \ rlranaaa Southbound. Northbound. i in .ftritansas No. la No. it. n&i^no.u me distress is p. m. a m. . ' ??. p m . a m ... lu 00 8 15 qTt ...Chester Ar 6 80 8 00 e, especially iu u t? <w orr? ? 6 ie 7 a . Tl.n 10 24 8 A3 .... Kno* .... " 0 10 7 40 I. i ne most 1037 8 45 "...Klcuburg.... " 6 00 7 80 rnilrnnrin ?r? 1047 H M d ?..Baacomvllle.. 4 60 7 *0 raiiroHus are ,, ^ g ^ . "...Fort Uwn..." 4 3o 7 10 10 encroach- " ' v 16 " Uraccs... . " 4 15 7 00 encroacn ,, ^ w 30 d Ar.. Lancaster.. Lv 4 00 0 46 ay to sched _ ^ rriviMg from P. M. A. M. P. M. A. M ... . . * No. 14. leaving Lancaster 6.45 a.m., makes lie lined tne close connection at Chester with Southern ?l.? Hallway No. 36 for Charlotte and points north; Zing On me and Seaboard Air Lino "Atlanta Special" for .l' Atlanta and points west. Also with Carolina Iter. LSCUr- ^ Northwestern Ky. No. 10 for Lenoir, N. C five milfis in- ARd Intermediate points, and Southern Kali union iu way No. 33 for Columbia and points south. No. 17, leaving Chester &00 a. m . connects with Southern Ky., No. 36 from Columbia and Q Til ft oh- points south; Seaboard Air Line "Atlanta Hpe clal" from Northern and Kastern points and r bureau hap Southern Ry, No. 33 from Northern and klast , , ern points, and at Lancaster with S. C. AO. IC. places south for Uluckatjurg. ^ / , , No. 16, Having Lancaster 6.16 p. m.. connjcla IOr &L least at Lancaster with S. C. A U. K from Camden 11 - /11 and Marlon, Southern Ky. No. 34 atChoster for . xvaill ieil Charlotte and ikilnls north. icvLt nnoii il,a No. 16, leavlng Chenter 10.00 a m.. connectstl IgUl Over I lie Chester with Southern Hallway No. 34 from liO Wabash Columbia and points south. erland rivers LEROY SPRINGS, V enanu rivers J>H HEATH| President 9 where the Gen'l. Pat. A rent. ssterday they ____________________ ay. A vast below Cairo Qp. ?. S. McDOW i watAr anfi I , have bo.nl PHYSICIAN ANn <nnr.rnu _ VVHWMVMI their homes, houtli Side Catawba House, ) ) immediate Up-Stair*. t t t J ^mm re is danger i?hon? ?k \ Offloes Open Day tween Cairo al2,lyr hone jand Night. Cairo levees ___________??? i a stage of been raised MA* &o YCAns* ring the last ^WHEterEXPERIENCE luge tonight b I V. J |J ^ L 4 xJf idK ^ lil I j k K 3b^| IB ! k B ?-? , ' - m-??Gr?n?..a?.. nth* with a . rjTn . Co^wiomt# Ac. o on hi* leg; ?a 1 'j5T"ixniSn5rr??^'id thi^lS ISWsX BfflSSpWggE -Jnt TSSSffmAm. ' >Cl*. Sold bv A l??<l^.*ij#ir miwtwU* Wr. t.?rr?t #r , ' . UJ sJUilon of any sctantir,; louraal. T?rnm. M nd UrAWiord liVm li' ^^byS^wedwSL %**