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&he Darlington Jiens. PUBLISHKD EVKRT THUHSDAT Morning. alkx. (1. KOLI.OtK. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS—fl Per Annum in Advance; 50 cents fcr six months; 25 cents for <j mouths. Advertising Rates; One Square, first insertion $1.00 Every subsequent insertion 50 Contract advertisements inserted upon the most reasonable terms, The editorials in this paper are writ ten in the singular number, the editorial ‘we” having been discarded. JOHN WRIGHT HANGED TWICE SOMEBODY'S AWFUL CARELESSNESS The News does not believe in going into the horrible details of a hanging, but merely desires to call attention to the awful bungling in the execution of John Wright last Friday. Sometime between twelve and one the * ap was sprung and the cor mned man is reported to ha o hung several minutes whe’ he was cut down and pro nounced dead by several physi cians present. Soon signs of life oecame manifest and in or del that Wright might hang by the neck until dead, he was hauled up on the scaffold and hung a second time. This time he was allowed to remain hanging about fitteen minutes at the end of which time he was pronounced really dead by the attending physicians. The News does not know who is responsible for the terrible man ner in which the thing was conducted but, for the sake of humanity and the credit of our State and county, let us hope that no criminal will ever be hung twice again in Darlington county. The cotton manufacturers of New England have come at last to the conclusion that some radical change must be made to save them from ruin on ac count of Southern competition. A reduction in wages is talked of, but it will have to be a pretty large one in order to en able them to compete success fully against tno Southern mills. Little did Massachusetts know, when she was fighting slavery, that South Carolina would outstrip her in cotton manufacturing in the next half century. And yet why is it that her statesmen could not see into the future? Sound principles of political economy- demand that cotton shall be manufactured as nearly where it is grown as possible, but our New England friends could not see then that the abolition of slavery would bring the to the fields. Possibly some ef them wr Id not be such persis tent r litionist if they had it to d over again with the pres efit dghts before them. time of the hanging and noth ing was left undone which might have saved the life of the unfortunate man. County News. (Continued from 1st page.) ENON. It is reported that there was a numerously signed petition sent to the Governor from this county asking him not to com mute the sentence of John Wright. It is very easy to un derstand why people should re fuse to sign a petition to save a man from the gallows, but it is most extraordinary that those calling themselves Christians should be willing to sign a peti tion to hang one of their fellow men. It . ■ even said that a preacher signed .the petition against commutation. Let us hope there is only one such in this section of the State. A young attorney in Orange burg by the name of McLauch lin is going to test the new anti lynch law. A negro by the name of Sutton was lynched in that county about a year ago and McLauchlin is going to sue the county for $‘2000 the money to go to the negro’s relatives if the suit is successful. This is certainly a good hiove and one which should be made in every county where there has been a lynching. Enforcing this law will not of course stop lynching entirely but will have the tendency to diminish the number. Tin 1 town of Dornstetton, in Wur temburi;, lifts its funds ho well inves ted that the inhabitant., instead of paying taxes, receive a bonus of 25 each annually, besides free lire wood and free use of land for raising vegetables.—Charleston Critic. What a paradise—that is cer tainly the place to which the tax ridden people of South Carolina should emigrate. If Ben Tillman could get charge of that town for four years he would have each individual paying $25.00 in taxe r, annually and there would be nothing to show for it either. A prominent citizen of Dar lington said the other day, that ho thought capital punishment ought to be done away with al together in South Carolina if we arc going to hang negroes only. The News is in hearty sympathy with this idea and believes l.i the repeal of any law which is enforced against any particular class or race of people, while other classes or races are allowed to do as they please. This community is outraged at the refusal of loverner El lorbe to commute John Wright’s sentence to life imprisonment. Several prominent Tillmanites have expressed themselves free ly, and, if Ellerbo expects to gain anything in a political way on account of his action, the News is of the opinion that he will he most grievously mis taken. self with goods. About one hundrad people surrounded the store while several went in armed with Colt’s repeating rifles, revolvers and etc. The Mr. John Rials, of Sumter, thief was captured without any came over and spent a day or trouble His name is Old Tom two of last week with us. ' —a white cat. Miss Liller Hill, of Carters- ville, was among the fair visi tors to this place last Sunday. Mr. Leon Isgett is spending a week or two with his uncle, Mr W. W. Isgett, of Mechanics- ville, G. Wash Brown is now lay ing a foundation for the erec tion of a large; and splendid pack house. Mr. J. O. Farmer, a promi nent citizen of Lyra, Florence county, came on the 10th to see his old friends and relatives around he r e. OUSLEY, Chesterfield County. We are having fine weather now for sowing small grain. The chain gang is now at work in the lower part of the county. Mr. John B. Brown was mar- THE OlD FLYEOOK. Any Some latter day Saints have been conducting an experience meeting near here for the past week, which resulted in eleven or twelve conversions. Mr. Saul Phillips drove away down to Darlington last sab bath We suppose on no other business than to tell her the chord of paticence had not yet broken. Mr. E B. Mims, one of our prosperous farmers and a splendid citizen, who has re sided in this commnnity for a number of years, will hereafter make his home near Carters ville. We have all retired from the laborings of sowing and reap ing for ninety seven and nestl ed down around our warm and cherished fire sides where we will spend the frozen evenings of haughty old winter, and dream of blissful spring and her swallows. Orders filled Coggeshall’s. promptly at Fine and cheap candies in large variety at G. O. Mertz. Kalamazoo celery is shipped to Jarlington and three or four light that whil stalks are sold for 25 cents.' Uf course the express company gets a large amount for trans porting the celery, but, if peo ple will buy celery shipped from such a long distance, why will they not buy that raised at home? The writer has eaten celery raised in Cheraw by those who had no experience in cultivating of the plant. Thev followed instructions laid down in a book and made celery which tasted just as good as that which comes from Kalama zoo. Let us stop thinking about the low price of cotton and give our attention to many other things which we can cultivate just as well as cotton. When we begin to diversefy our farming extensively we will find then that the price of cotton will go! )h up and stay up as long as we 1 ' j , , continue diversifying. | / ' on al " ^ ,K Investigation has brought to there are only three survivors of the war of 1S12 on the pension rolls, there are 2000 widows drawing pen sions. It is said that these wo men married old soldiers in or der to get the pensions. There is talk of introducing a bill in Congress to put and end to this abuse. Mr. J. J. Ward expects to make arrangements with anex- porii-nced truck farmer from New Jersey to raise vegetables on one of his farms the coming season Diversification of crops is what we need in this section and Mr Ward b showing most commendable enterprise in the move which he is about to mak -. Deans Bros now 1 ave good coffee at ten cents a pound. Am as pickles and preserves at Coggeshall’s. OATS, Several of our citizens are at Florence this week attending the S. C. Conference. Rev. P. F. Kilgo preached his farewell sermon last Sunday, Dec. 5th. His theme was “The Rights of Cliristain Ministers.’’ This was a striking 'sermon, and it was forcibly delivered. After services, a church con ference wns held and appro priate res dutions were adopted expressing regret at Mr. Kilgo’s departure. One ef our oldest and most esteemed residents, Mrs. Ann Oats, passed away quietly Saturday morning and was in n-rred at Wesley Chapel ceme- tary Sunday morning. She could truthfully say when the grim messenger was hovering over her, Oh, death where is thy sting, Oh grave where is thy victory.” Mrs. R. E Huggins hand some new residence is about comple'-'tod and she hopes to be numbered with us by the 1st. of Jan. We welcome her most cordially. An ideal family such as hers is a blessing to any community. Our gain is Cypress’s loss. Our farmers are now preparing to plant a very large tobacco crops next year. Several farmers in this vicinity mane money this year on tobacco and next year there will be an increased acreage of tobacco. The goats, worms a ml other animals will have a good time chewing tobacco. Thousands of Xmas present* at Coggeshall’s. . -*#. If you want to buy a sack of cocoanuts or a box of oranges see Deans Bros. I Fine fruits, nuts and candies i at Coggeshall & Co’s. Dolls of every description from 5 cts. up, at O. O. Mertz. Buy your Xmas fruits, nuts 1 and candies from Coggeshail & ! Co. 1 SOCIETY HILL 1 Capt. W. A. Carrigan con tinues quite unwell. Read T. II. Coker & Son’s Xmas advertisement. Messrs J. W. Jamison and T, II. Coker Jr., are taking in Gala week at Charleston. Dr. H. H. Griffin, of Darling ton, spent a portion of last week with his friend Mr. T. II. Coker Jr. Society Hill now has a Mag’ istrate. Mr. E. W. Burns hau ing been recently appointed to that office. Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Coker moved in town last week from their country home at Green Plains. Mr. Coker will enter the brokerage business with T H. Coker & Son and will also be employed in the store of the above firm. Mr. T. J. Brooks Jr , of At lanta, was in town Saturday collecting data for a “writeup” of Society Hil. Mr. Brooks is deaf and dumb and secures his information by writing. He holds a letter from a physician and Notary Public of Atlanta, testifying that he was taken sick with scarlet fever while studying medicine, • causing him to lose his sense of hearing and speech. His object is to raise money to go to Paris to undergo special treatment The article will appear in next week's issue of “The Constitu tion.” TTne Hams at 10 cts per lb at Coggeshall & Co’s. London Layer Raisins and IGgs at G. O Mertz. We will sell you a bbl. of Buckwheat flour cheaper than you can buy ordinary flour. ('oggeshall <fe Co. Florence District. Presiding Elder — E. T. Her It Ifl Dearer to the Angler Than Other roAHosition. Is there anything closer to au angler's heart than hi> flybook? 1 know of a ease i where a burglar, ani'-nv, other things, | took a fly hook'. He was arrested and • rn- ■ !•> J -U i couvituxl iiml imprisoned. Ho 1 ned to Miss Tipnie Perdue, the things out pretty well in the I Ceremony taking place at the Jninse, tint the owner seemed to euro for i residence of the bride’s father, sothinn about tho missinf- fur coats, ’ The groom is about 60 years old (ealskin sacks, silverware and other and tbe bride about 20. 1 valuable Lares and Penates, hut ho did , ,, r- bewail the loss of his hook of Hies. Tho ... . other things ho could buy an..iu, but to b me Xmas gifts at Cogge K(!t together such an assortment of valu- shall’8. ( able flies seemed to him an impossible *•*' - *’ thing. He had be*n years collecting Fresh Butter and cheese at them, pifkiiiK-up odd ones hero and Coggeshall’s there, until, for quality and variety, — his hook could not be excelled. It was a My storehouse, as it were. No matter where he intended fishing, or whether for trout, bass or salmon, he could always find a choice assortment to draw from with which to MU up a supplementary* book. Although it was some time ago ho yet bewails the loss of that flybook. Many have been the efforts to get track of it, but all in vain. He has gone to tho expense of sending to tho prison in a distant city and endeavoring to pre vail upon tho convict to divulge the , hiding place of the book, but without I success. A persistent search of tho pawnshops and periodical advertising have produced no better results. There w ere flies in that book for trout and salmon in Irish waters, flies for the salmon and trout of the Scotch lakes and the English streams and flics for the salmon of Norway. The favorites from Maine to California and from one end of Canada to another were collected in that wallet—anyth'ug and every thing, from the feather down m.dget with cobweb gnt to tbe lordly salmon fly, absolutely irresistible to tho lurk ing salmon deep down in the icy pools of the Cascnpedia. There were flies in that book on which famous bass, trout mid salmon had been hooked, each tty carrying with it memories of battles fought from ca noes among the rushing, swirling wa ters.—Forest and Stream. Hodges. Florence Station—W. I. bert Darlington—R. A. Child. Cheraw—D. M. McLeod. Cheraw Circuit—R E. Mood Hartsville—G. F. Clarkson. Clyde—J. S. Abercrombie Darlington Circuit--W. S Martin. Lamar—J. M Boyd Timmonsville—R VV Barber. Claussen—M. H Pooser. South Florence—R. M. Du Bose. Scranton—J. W. Harris. Lake City—W. H. Kirton. Kingsiree—A B Earle. Union—G W Davis. Lane’s—J. A. White. Sellers—R C. Boulware. Georgetown—A. J. Stokes. Georgetown Circuit—O. Durant and J B. Weldow. Johnsonville—A. E. llolle r •v hat Typhoid Fever Coats. A correspondent of the Wash: Post gives the following appalling phoid statistics: Every year in United (states 400,000 people are with typhoid fever. Forty thousand them die. They are sick 28 days cn average out of every 865 days, we have 11,200,000 days of si< from this disease. Every ea e of this sickness means month, generally two months, of ness. If tb< wages of the patient only 50 cents a day, there is a loss #15 a month. Generally this means a loss of wages in two mom time of #68^.r #80. The average lots wages for six weeks would be $50. to this the doctor’s bill, which is where from $60 to $100—we will $60. If the patient lives in tho city has a trained nurse for only three there is another $45. Ten dollars the prepared f'Kxi, ice, milk, brings this moderate hill np to Multiply this by the number of sick, mid we can see every year United States $66,000,000 lost ticuts by the inroads of this one di idle- ; any- - weeks, Li Russia women householders v<J fee all electivi oilicers and on all lo matters. TO RENT. 1*711.1, RENT !»0 ACRES LAND 1 W * with all liuildings &c. there on, good farming lauds, rent low to a Hiiitalde4>arty. also for sale Va mil* cow and c.lf, at a bargain 'pply O. H. DeLORMK Dovesville, S. C., Dec. 15, 1897. L. ^resh nuts at Coggeshall’s. BUTTERWORTH’S THEORY. Hlf Lenient Way of Treating For Reforma tion Embryo Criminals. Commissioner of Patents Buttenvorth is one of the men who bolievo that a prosecuting attorney is better engaged in side tracking embryo criminals cn the road to perdition mid getting them on the road to righteousness than in corralling them for shipment to the penitentiary, where they are thrown into association with professional crooks. Several years ago Major Butterworth was prosecuting attorney in southern Ohio and he had the opportunity to test his theory regarding tho discrimination that should be used in dealing with men newly launched into crime. A young farmer was arrested for passing counterfeit sbinplasters, as tho 50 cent note was known, and tho ease was put | in tho hands of Major ~~ MOONSHINER IN REAL LIFE. Quite Different From His Confrere as Seen on the Stage. The Kentucky moonshiner in real life does not resemble his counterpart, de scribed in novels and impersbuatod on the stage, in the least. He does not wear top boots mid a slouch hat. As a rule he is too poor to possess the former, ami he is more apt to go ban foot or to amble along in a pair of woniout bro- gaus than to wear top boots. His hat is usually a torn straw “Jimmy” and his clothes are yellow and faded with age. Regularly, on days when the grand jury meets in Louisville, a dozen or more of the moonshiners uro presented for in dictment. They present a woeb.-goiin Butterworth. appearance as they pass along the streets •S'751 TE <)E SOUTH CA ROHNA C'liinti/of Darlington. Ex Parte ) Sallie Herron. ) Application having been mu me by Petition this day fl have a Homestead apprai-ed i off to the Petitioner, as the head i family against whom no process 1 been lodged, out of the real and pef-s sona! estate of her late husband ' limn Herron deceased. These are therefore to admonish all i persons of the mention of the Peti,, tioner, to the end that they may, I so minded make eompl • int'a^aioa ^ the sauie, According to the provision^ of the statute. R. K CHARLES, Master. December 13, lsl)7. Ex Jtbl”(! James S. Cothran, who died m New Y. rk Sunday ■rood soldier citi ami a yreat to South Carolina. At the time PHILADELPHIA. Early jrrain is looking well. Tho school at Oats is pro grossing finely. Mr. Sam Truitt, of Oats, has bought a new horse and buggy. Mr. C. W. Stewart killed three hogs that netted him 800 pounds. Who can beat that Mr. W. A Rogers, one of Cypress' young sports, paid a flying visit to friends at this place. Mr. Maxy King and Miss Lilly Register were married Dec. 5th. We wish them a long and happy life. Almost every farmer in this section is going to raise more meat, corn, wheat and other things next year than ever, in order to keep out of debt. Mad dogs have been at large in this section. Dr. J. J. Par rott was bitten by one on the 2nd. A tine should be collected for every dog that has not a cohar on. M rs. M. J. Oats died at her home near Oats Saturday last. Her remains were buried in Wesley Chapel cemetery. Sim leaves three children, two sons and one daughter and a host of friends to mourn her death. The young man told Ins story. He had saved several hundred dollars, had left his wife and little children and had taken a boat down the Mississippi rivi r, purposing to settle on a new farm he was to buy with his hard earned sav- i in charge of the marshal. In their own i poor homes in the mountains they are hospitable, hut of the stranger ever sus- I picious. The latter n ay make his bed j in the one room where the entire fami- i ly sleeps, hut Ids request for a taste of 11 1. BY THE MASTER STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Darlington. ings. On tho boat he met an extremely | liquor Lriia.- forth a statement that pleasant and well dressed stranger, who none is to l.e had tins side of “the learned of his mission and pnx'eeded to store. ’’ At the same time a still mav make himself agreeable. In a moment j bo in operation wiiliin ten feet of his of extreme confidence the stranger told j whereabouts. the young man of a large quantity of I “The store ’ represents to the moun- money he had which was made from | tainecr all civilization. On winter plates that had formerly belonged to the | mornings he will tramp to it through government and which the government ’ ' Toy Wagons, G. O. Mertz. LAMAR. There were about 2000 pie in attendance at •Revival’ last sabbath. peo- tho Judge Spears formerly of this place but now of Darlington, was in town Sat onlay on some legal business. Several of our citizens will take the advantage of the cheap rates and visit the “City by the l)SS !Sea” this week. ('< 1500 His fin ggeshal 1’s. Great efforts were made hv of his <h the white people of this vicinity lor the to save John wriglit from hang position ing. When all the efforts of i him hand his attorney, Mr. R. L. Dargan, and others had failed, a com mittee, cousisting of Capt. H. T Thompson and Representative A. J. A. Perritt, was sent to Columbia to plead with the Gov. They could accomplish at Coggesha nothing, however, the Governor telling them that he had already ,n '‘11 decided to allow Wright to hang. Telegrams, too, were, Coggeshall’s ith he was attornev X ma- Buy your ' oggeshuii’s Mint Bent to him on Friday up to the are the best. Miss Perry, who is conduc ting the Revival, at this place, Southern Railway, a j is a good consecrated woman, which probably paid and wo are not suprised at the <l(lni ,| v glorious success ot the meeting. The tent meeting now in pro gress at this place, conducted by Miss Mattie Perry and bro thor, has been a wonderful blessing to our town and vicin ity. There have been about 150 conversions and sanctifica tion* and still tbe good work goes on. Some what of a sensation was created on Main street Coggeshall’s, rv— I last sabbath evening, by a re-! — wine sap apples port that a thief was in Mr. O •! 2000 cocoanuts Xm audios at 'll ee at, fruit cake S. X-e Fine maple syrup and buck wheat at < oggeshall Ac Go’s. Raisins, currants, citron and pulverized sugar at Cogge shall’s. Currants, seeded and seedless raisins and citron. G. O. Mertz. CYPRESS. There will not be very many had Iour sinco aounht to recover, etc. Tho yonng mail was struck by that re markable method of acquiring wealtli when he had toiled and saved for years to get his few hundred. In a burst of generosity tho stranger offered to ex change some of his money for green backs belonging to his new found friend, so that tho latter should have two dollars for every ouo ho possessed. The bait was tempting and the fish bit. At the next landing the well dressed man disappeared from the boat and tho dupe became alarmed, lie became sus picious of his new money and was afraid to offer it in payment of his pas sage. Ho, tno, left the boat, determined to go hack home. He started to walk and became footsore. Ho began shoving the money to buy something to cat, tho counterfeit was discovered and the ar rest was made. Major Butterworth took iu tno situation. • “I told that young man,” ho said, iu cold and snow to sell a few stiff rabbits and swap yarns not ovorhrilliaut. One of the mountain' rr’s chief sources income is ins honey, and this linds ready sale al “the store.” Tho moon shiner seldom receives money in pay for his wares, hut is paid iu a bit of bright calico for his wife or a shoulder of ba con. If he can add to this a few pipe fuls of tobacco, he is well satisfied with tho results of his labors.—New York Commercial. Looking llackward. “Y’ou must feel very happy iu this lovely cottage you call you own. ” "How can I when I think of my fam ily that owned an estate of thousands of acres, with a castle and a whole regi ment of servants.'” “Why, when did they lose it?” “During the eleventh century.”— Brooklyn Life. By virtue of Decretal Orders issuing out of the Circuit Court eif Common Pleas in I hancery I will sell at pub- lie vend ie at tne door of the Court House of the County of Darlington on the first Monday in Januaryv- ISas, between the hours of eleven o'clock in the forenoon and five o'clock in afternoon the following property. Albert I.. Richardson, Plaintiff vs Robert A. (Smith, et al, Defendant*. All timt lot or tract of laud lying in “j i the Count) of Darlington and State of South Carolina, described a* fol lows, to wit; One hundred and fifty- four (1«l) acres, more or less, with such metes and boundaries as follows: Commencing at a stake near the junction of John Brown's and Silas Wines;lands|running thence N 84$, E. eighteen (18) cliaias to a pine knot corner of Simpson Jones land, thence along said Jones’ land N. 12, E eighty five and seventyone hundredths (85.70) chains to the run of Swift Cieck, crossing the Darlington and I Kelly Bridge road at a ditch and run- i ning diags.ially across said ditch and i along an old hedge row to Swift i i' i. Stockport, England, boasts ouo of the relating tbe story, “that if God had largest Sunday schools iu the world, made him a dishonest man he had failed | The total number of scholars at present to put a sign on his face. I told him to 011 the books is no fewer than 4,8.14, go home to his wife and children as an I while there are 238 male and 195 fe- honest man. He could scarcely realize j teachers —a grand army of over that he had escaped tbe penitentiary. He went home, and a more honest or better citizen I do not know today. That man had not tho heart of a crimi nal, tint if lie had been sent to tho peni tentiary his children would have boeu disgraced for life aud probably he would have belonged to the crimiual class for life.”—St. Louis Republic. ('reck, thence up swift Greek to aa Ash tre>-. thence 8, 12, W. to the I ginning corner, the same being a p tion of the original tract on whio M. M. Smith resided in 1S94, all < which will more fully appear by re erenee to a plat made by G W Earle November 9th, 1891. Term* of sale One half cash, 1 tun e in one year, seemed by bond < purchaser and mortgage of premil with privilege to purchaser to paj, cash R. K. CHARLEfl Ma AnU With Pluck and Bralut. To the intellectuality of nuts, which men like Sir John Lubbock have always delighted to point out, a new proof has boeu added by the observations of a well known scientist, Professor Bona- from this place to attend Gala telli, who has communicated it to tho Week this year. | Venetian institute. He noticed that the Among the visitors from this VZ* , , , ., . winr’i touched a house thev \) ere desir- place to Annual Conference, were S W. R. DuBoso and wife, J. B. DuBoso and wife, Mrs. Lizzie DuBose and Miss Sallie B Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Avery Floyd, of Nichols, paid their daughter, ^ANDY CATHARTIC jabcoAeto CURtCOHSTIPATlOH TE T ous of reaching. He accordingly cut off : the end of the twig so that it was im- ; possible for them to get across aud then watched. After the lapse of half an hour, how ever, he found that the procession which ho hud stopped had reformed itself. He proceeded to investigate the CANDY CATHARTIC Mrs. C. F. DuBoso of this place matter, and he found that tho little nuts a short visit Monday. They were on their way from tho An mini Conference to Gala Week where fffey will spend tho re mainder of the week in sight seeing. Dr. B. L. Harris, who has been practicing medicine at this place this year, with his brother Dr. C. W. Harris, will locate at Elliotts, Sumter Co., nuder the cirrnuistances , in January, we wish for him the best of succes. In our loss is the people of Elliotts gain. had discovered that there was another twig which, when it was blown by the ^, breeze, touched the wall now and then. The army of ants had formed up in line to this twig, and whenever the breeze blew it against the wall the fore most members of the bund took advan tage of the opportunity to get across. i Man, witli all his boasted genius, could do nothing more, for not only did .' the operation require clever timing, but absolute confidence iu mukiug what, j must have been a veuturesome leap.—Strand Mag- ,' azine. . CASCABFT9 tdstecuod. Eat them like candf. They re move any bad taste in ti t* mouth.lenvlne the ore itu sweet and perfumed. It is a real pleasure to take nil fhom Instt-nd of nau seating liquids or c&uuon-i>all pills. CAftCARFT* I npurely vegetal)Ie and ouiiir'.n no mer curial or other min eral p-lson. They are made of the lat est remedies di«cov- ered a nd are a seten- never before put toKetherln any form. I i are antiseptic. That ANTISEPTIC i digested food from I s.mrlng in tho etoru- I AYiTIVP 9 fteli, prevent fir. LMARilVK. | mentation In the _ t bowels and kill (Us- oaso germs of any kind ihnt breed and feed in the system. CA8CARFTS Dmetliestimirtch and bowelsand stimulate the lazy liver, mak ing it work. They strengthen the bow els and put them Into vigorous healthy condition, making LIVER STIMULANT their action easy and natural. j* Don't jud arc new, un! CABCAKKTB increase the ttow of mtlkln »ui slug moth ers. A tablet eaten by the mother makes her milk mildly purg ative and has a mild but certain effect on the baby, the only safe laxative for the babe-ln-arms. .... CASrARETS are liked by tbechtl* dren. Thev taste good and do good, stop wind-colic and cramp-, ami kill and drive off worms, and all kinds of para sites that live In the BOON FOR MOTHERS PLEASE CHILDREN GUARANTEED bowels of the growing child. ...CAflCARETfl, n i i ■ ■ ■ i ■ t taken patiently, per-A Mstently.nregunnin-1 fttlBE teed to cure any case X wUltk of constipation, no f matter how old and f obstinate, or bur* f chase money will be f cheerfully ref untied by your own druggibU .... CA SCAR RTS are soul by nil dt ug- K i-ts for lOc, S«>c, 50e a box, accord ing to siio. A lOc box will prove their merltnnd put you on the right road to per fect and permanent Don r health. •t risk delay. I B, Jon.lan’8 store, helping him-, shall’*. “Did you bear what Whimpton’s lit- 35 Cts. fine Florida oranges at tie boy said when they showed him the — i twins.” j “No; what was it?” nt Crarcra " He ‘ Tllere ' mamma's been get- at GOgge- t j n g taj-gaiuo a g a i u ,— Collier’s I Wsvkly. ee CASCARETS by other medicines you have tried. They | dike anything else that’s sold, and infinitely superior. — Try a 10c box to-day, if not pleased «»«♦ Tho only genuine Beware of Imitations I l ■l ^ ^ m cure* Tobacco Habit or moan I flU I t# B DAw StTODf. Sold »od euarantwd by pleased get our money back! Larger boxes, 25corSDc. ample and booklet mailed free- Address 4 STfRLINO KEMEOV OO.. WMM.I MONTStAL. MAI Ntw VMK. M* Sold »»d gubruMwTV all WugliW