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NO LONGER BOSS. Mil UKI'l Hi ll \N ORGANIZATION IH > W N S K<M )SKV K LT. ? ...I. i-.ii; n.-i. .1 I?. -|?ir? I iK ln? of tin* Former l'rv*ddeut ami of liovernor Hughe*?\<4!?>mbly Balks. Albanv. N Y.. June 30.-?Theodore Roosevelt was beaten decisively to? day. Whatever may be the final outcome or his nrst a.lw nt in polities since his retirement from the White House, he met defeat flat-footed at the hands of the Republican organis? ation In the assembly. Anothor defeat at the hands of the aeaate is regarded as probable. The senators sat u ? most of the night de? bating whether they should accede to the ex-president's wishes and Anally voted to adjourn sine die at 2 o'clock tomorrow. This la taken as an Indi? cation that the senate will agree with the assembly. The Cobb direct primary bill was tolled in the aeaembly after a long hard fight by a vote. SO to ?3. The Republican* in the senate held a cncue tonight but only 23 senators were there. They voted to make a * party measure of the Cobb bill with the amendments proposed by Lloyd C. Ortacom. chairman of the New Tora county Republican committee and favored by Col. Roosevelt. But it mkea 21 votes to pasa a bill In the senate, so that the situation was not cleared. There Is Ulk of still another special suasion . The assembly this afternon voted to adjourn at 2 o'clock tomor? row afternoon, and the senate concurred. If the legislature quits work with no primary bill pass? ed and without having provided for necessary financial measures. the leaders any Oov. Hughes may call It hack again. Roosevelt was the potent figure In today's contest. It was a clear-cut Issue between the ex-presldent and I the ??organisation" leaders and the lenders won. It was a long, hot, tense day. From the moment that Col. Roosevelt sent hie telegraph to Mr. Orlecom urging the paaaage of the bill, things hum? med. The situation suddenly became eess which was regarded of national elffntf cnnce. The question was wheth? er Mr. Roosevelt of Sagamore Hill was as mighty as a Roosevelt of Wash? ington. Those who had previously onpperted the Cobb measure, Includ? ing even Oov. Hughes, slipped Into the background In front of them all was the commanding figure of Theo? dore Roosevelt. Speaker Wadsworth was frankly glad at the turn things had taken "The action of the assembly today," Hpeaker Wadsworth said, "should not he construed as a gratutlous slap at the ?*x-pre*ldent or at the governor. The assembly feels that It gave the fullest and most deliberate consid? eration to the primary reform at the regular session. "The supreme issue is whether the aseembly shall swallow its convic? tions and deliberately reverse Its hon? est Judgment and thereby announce to the legislatures of the future that the legislative branch of the govern? ment, supposedly Independent, can be coeswad and forced to occupy a sec? ondary position in our system of go\ - Comment. It Is a question far be? yond that of the merits or demerits of direct primaries." After a debate of sev? ral hours the senate tonight voted 24 to 23 to ad? opt the assembly res dutlon to ad? journ sine die tomorrow at 2 p. m. ?Soreness of the muscles, whether induced by violent exercise or Injury, la quickly relieved by the free appli? cation of Chamberlain's Liniment This liniment is equally valuable for muscular rbeumntlsm. and always af fords quirk relief. Sold by W. W. Beert Foley Kidney Pills What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor I rect urinary irregularities, build op the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid that causes rheumatism. Pre? vent Bright's Disease and Dia. bates, and restore health and Strength. Refuse substitutes. w v. unit. killthec Such 1 wmDR.KSNC'S NEWDlSCQVERY I HI A11 TWO <17 P ; /^GT^OUJlSj ' < ACTOR* V SEE Miss ROOSEVELT A BRIDE. Oygtflf BftJ Folk Find Fniratfctnent Hint in Reception She (?Ivos J. T. Williams. Jr. (From the New York World.) Miss Ethel Roosevelt entertained as her personal guest at Sagamore Hill. Oyster Bay, yesterday, Jam*it Thompson Williams, Jr., a protege of President Taft and aspirant for a seal In the United States senate from tilt new State of New Mexico. They spent the day together and were so absorbed in each other as to excite the surmise in Oyster Hay that wed? ding hells will ring again for a Roose? velt not long after the echoes of the last ringing subside. Mr. Williams arrived on a train with Oen. Luke Wright, former Sec? retary of War. Colonel Roosevelt's auto was waiting to receive General Wright, but Miss Ethel drove to the station in a dogcart for Mr. Williams. She whisked the cart past the other vehicles at the platform and waited across the roadway. Several newspaper men recognized Mr. Williams. Before they could roach him Miss Ethel called to him. Considerable noise attended the ar? rival of the train, but her welcoming shout caught his ear and he ran across the roadway and leaped to the high seat besides her. They clasped hands for an Instant and the next moment tho horse was off at a live? ly trot. The two strolled off together after luncheon and remained away until it was time for Mr. Williams to leave, when Miss Ethel drove him to the station for a late afternoon train. Mr. Williams is a son of the Bish? op of South Carolina. At one time he worked for the Associated Press in Washington and corresponded for a Boston newspaper. In the last na? tional campaign he served Postmas ter-Qeneral Frank Hitchcock as con? fidential secretary, and made the swing of the country with Mr. Taft. After the campaign he became a member of the United States Civil Service Commission, from which he resigned on account of ill health, tak? ing up a residence in New Mexico. There have been reports that Presi? dent Taft would appoint him to an Important Federal office, but his ac? tivities in behalf of the new State? hood act Indicated that he would be I a candidate for the senate from New Mexico. INHIGKSTION GOES. DeLorme's Pharmacy Sells Rest Pre? scription on Earth on the Money Back Plan. Almost everybody knows that sick head ache, nervousness and dizziness, are caused by a disordered stomach. Upset stomach and indigestion hap? pen Just because the food you eat does not digest?but lies in the stom? ach and ferments or turns sour. You can stop fermentation and stomach distress in five minutes by using Ml-o-na stomach tablets, a pre? scription that has done more to cure indigestion and put the stomach in fine condition than all the specialists on earth. A large 60 cent box of Ml-o-na stomach tablets is all you need to get quick and lasting relief. Mrs. Altie Etson of 93 Dun Road Battle Creek, Mich., used Ml-o-na and within two months was in as good health as ever, and has a good strong etogggnh and ea*s anything she likes, h' attributes her present good health to the use of Ml-o-na." If you have heartburn, belching of im>\ heaviness or any stomach trouble no matter how chronic, try Ml-on-a ItOflMM h tablet! on money back plan. Bold by druggists everywhere and by DeLorme's Pharmacy, who guaran? ty SI them. I - If?5-10-20?W. *Foley*i Kidney Remedy win cure any rase of kidney and bladder trouble nut beyond the reach of medi? lne. No medicine can do more, sibcrt's Drug Bton . If they want a square deal, whv don't Jeffries and Johnson get Ilooee ell tO umpire the fight? 'Whan the stomach fails to per? form its functions, the bowels be? come deranged, the liver and the kidneys congested causing numerous istw. The stomach and liver must bg restored to a healthy condition and Chamberlain's Stoma? h and Liver Tablet! can be depended upon to do it. Easy to take and most effective, Sold by w. w\ Blbert It VrOtlld appear, front the govern iim ut's activity, that the OOttOn bear ; are all Republicans. ?Those Pies of Boyhood. How delirious were the pies of boy h.i. No piee now ever laste no k.i. What's changed? the pies? No. its you, Tou'vs lost the strong, healthy stomach, the vigorous liver, tin- active kidneys, the regular bowels ot boyhood, Your digestion Is i.r and yotl llano- tin- food. What's needed? ^ complete toning up by Electrl Bitters ol all organs of dl? g< it Ion Stomach, Liver Kidneys, Bowels Tr) Ihegg? They'll restort your bojhood ? tion of food a d fairo i b?e)y nIth nev v ilth, J \ Ik ?r. 50?\ at Bib< i MK. LANG ON ROOSEVELT. Can The Historian Be Both Truthful And RemdaDlC? Asks the Famous Fssaylst. (Andrew Lang, in the London Morn? ing Post.) Mr. Roosevelt, in his Romanes lec? ture at Oxford, "spoke of many things," as the walrus proposed to do, and especially of why empires "go to the demniition bow-wows," in the words of a countryman of Maehia- | velli. Personally, from my own read? ing of history, I think that empires "go to the crows" in the Athenian phrase, because they are apt to bite I off more In their early days than they can assimilate when they develop in- | to democracies, as they mostly do. | This was the opinion expressed by AI- | cibiades in a Romanes lecture of his j own, reported, with manifest sym- I pathy, by Thucydides. Mr. Roosevelt touched a chord that ) woke a deeper and fuller response in I my soul when he spoke of the nature of history and of how it ought to be written. If the facts reported by the historian be r?ot facts, be not true, he said, then the book, however, at? tractive and entertaining, is not his? tory at all, though It may hold a re- | spectable place on the crowded shelves devoted to fiction. This is very certain, but it is scarcely less true that, as Mr. Roosevelt added, if history be not entertaining it is not literature. Now, Mr. Roosevelt de? manded from history that it shall play a double part, and be both true and diverting, both science and liter? ature. If it is not "readable" it is not literature; If it is not true ("at least as far as it is able") it is not science. Though this be a view pop? ular enough in itself, to construct a history both literary and scientific seems a task beyond the powers of modern intelligence. Mr. Roosevelt's demands try the historian too high. Nobody asks other scientific charac? ters to be at once scientific and lit erary; and few ask other gentlemen of letters to be scientific. The alge? braist, the chemist, the biologist (not that I know exactly what the biolo? gist does), are not expected to be entertaining, and but few, and these deeply mistaken souls, expect the novelist to be scientific. A person who set out to write an entirely agreeable history of England, beginning with the Norman conquest, found himself unable to proceed. He could not In conscience deny that the battle of Hastings was not a victory for the English Army; yet the fact was disagreeable and depressing to young students, dampening their In? terest. After turning over In his mind the propriety of making Harold re? vive in the arms of Edith Swan-neck, recover health and turn up as Here ward the Wake, the avenger of his country, the would-be historian re? nounced his task. Naturally a con? scientious man, he could not bring himself to be Interesting and agree? able at the expense of truth. Yet many historians?readable his? torians?do in a milder way wha: this author could not persuade himself to undertake. Their only limit !n the way of fiction is the generally known, the common memories of the school? room. They must not deny that Charles I had his head cut off, but, with Lomhroso, they say that Henry VII cut off the heads of his six wives, because at this point the general memory is rather hazy. In fact, the accurate historian is (as Mr. Roose? velt appeared, to this listener, to sug? gest) to accumulate large masses of tacts, materials, to be handled later by an Interesting and readable his? torian, who will give us his own lit? erature blended with the science of his unreadable predecessor. More, i!' his work be science, it will be popu? lar science, the mother of mischief. As Raaselas, Prince of Abyssinia, was convinced by his tutor "that no mar. can be a poet," I am Inclined t<? think that no man can be a historian. "Is Life Worth Saving." ?Mrs. Mollle McRaney, Prentiss, Miss., writes that she had a severe case ?>! kidney and bladder trouble, and that t??ur bottles of Foley's Kid? ney Remedy cured her sound and well. She closes her letter by saying: ' I heartily recommned Foley's Kid? ney Remedy to any sufferer of kid? ney disease. It saved my life." Sib crt's i>rug tSore. Many a man who stood at the head of his class is unable to foot the bills In later life.?Charleston News and (tourler, ? Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets gently stimulate the liver and bowels to expel poisonous matter, cleanse the system, cure constipation and sick headache. Sold by \v. w. Blbert Thinge seems to be coming Taft's way at last. He Is Betting ;>n the leg? islation that he a ked for, \ l ew Short Week*. * Mr. J, H llurtell, Kduards\ llle, Ind., \\rit<s: "A few months ago mj kidneys I.me. congested. I had I severe bneknehe and pain across tie J kldn< ?.h and hips, Folej KIclney ( PHI; promptly ? ur< tl m bu< knche , and uorrn< ted the a< tlon of my kid The Practical I se of Polar Rcsearrch. Captain R. P. Scott, the famous Polar explorer, makes an interesting statement in the Juy Standard Maga? zine relative to the main object in undertaking his forthcoming expedi? tion in search of the South Pole. If my only object, he says, were to reach a certain geographical point, that would hardly be worth the ef? fort, endurance and privation it would entail. The future work of exploration consists in the systematic intensification of geographical know? ledge and in the endeavor to appre? ciate and explain the mechanism and organization of the globe. The age of exploration, in the sense in which the discoverer is the first comer, is drawing to a close. The age of the scientific study of the earth in its completeness has already begun, and the results of this form of discovery it is impossible yet to foresee. Ge? ography has almost accomplished its task so far as the extension of Its area is concerned. When the Terra Nova leaves Eng? land's shores and turns her prow southward, it will be for scientific purposes, for the results of science are the most important an expedition can reap. The scientific objects of the expedition may be briefly stated as follows: 1. To explore King Edward's land, to throw further light on the nature and extent of the Great Barr.cr ice formation, and to continue the sur? vey of the high mountainous region of Victoria Land. 2. To examine the entrleiy un? known region of King- Edward's Land and continue the survey of the rocks of Victoria Land. 3. To obtain synchronous observa? tions at two fixed stations, as well as the weather records of sledge jour? neys. 4. To duplicate the records of the elements made by the Discovery ex? pedition with magnetrographs. The comparison would throw most im? portant ligt on secular changes. In addition, attention will be paid to the study of marine bJology at both stations and in the ship, and the ex? amination of physical phenomenon will be continued. ?A Frightful Wreck of train, automobile or buggy may cause cuts, bruises, abrasions, sprains or wounds that demand Bucklen's Arnica Salve?earth's greatest healer. Quick relief and prompt cure results. For burns, boils, sores of all kinds, eczema, chapped hands and lips, sore eyes or corns, its supreme. Surest pile cure. 25c. at Sibert's Drug Store. That wireless telegraph concern couldn't have been any greater fail? ure if Tom Lawson had been In charge of It. ?Teething children have more or less diarrhoea, which can be controll? ed by giving Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. All that Is necessary is to give the pres? cribed dose after each operation of the bowels more than natural and then castor oil to cleanse the system. It is safe and sure. Sold by W. W. Slbert. Opinions of Wefght. "I have long felt that the Young Men's Christian Association was the most promising agency for promoting industrial education in a general way. Now I know it. You have the right spirit, and are on the right track. I hope to see a great deal more initia? tive on the part of the employers and the articualtion of systematic educa? tion with an enlightened apprentice? ship system."?Leslie W. Miller, Pres? ident, Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art. "In the new American movement for industrial efficiency the Y"oung Men's Christian Association ar Mcipat ed the demand, and offers most em? ployers and labor unions some fea? tures of its educational work. More? over, it has laid more* emphasis upon the human element in industry than has been piven by most others In providing for technical training." ?Prof. Graham Tyalor. "The future of the Association's educational work depends upon two things: First, the large Ideas of what can and must b? done; second, the large ideas of the means which n vxst be provided to realize them. 1 ..is means liberal Ideas on courses and other features and vigorous and hear? ty support. As we put the money In we get results, but they are tre? mendously multiplied. This is the best kind of investment I know for making men out of money."?Walter L. Hervey, Ph. D., chairman board ef examiners, board of education, New York. Must Be Above Suspicion. ?Kidney and bladder ailments are so serious in their consequences, and if unchecked so often fatal that any remedy offered for their cure must be above suspicion. Foley Kidney Pills contain no harmful durgs, and have successfully stood a long and thorough test. Slbert's Drug Store. CLEMSON AGRICULTURAL COL? LEGE EXAMINATIONS. The examination for the award of scholarships in Clemson Agricultural College will be held in the County Court House on Friday, July 8th, at 9 a. m. Applicants must fiH out prop? er forms, to be secured from the County Superintendent of Education, before they will be allowed t ? stand the examinations. For detailed in? formation, apply to the Superintend? ent of Education, or to the President of Clemson College. Applicants for admission to the College, but not seeking for the scholarships, will also stand entrnnce examinations at the court house July 8th. The scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session of the college opens Sept. 14th, 1910. COST AND COURSES OF STUDY. (1) Agriculture. (2) Agrlc 'lture and Chemistry. (3) Agriculture and Animal In? dustry. (4) Chemistry and Geology. (5) Civil Engineering. (6) Mechanical and Electrical En? gineering. (7) Textile Industry. Cost per session, Including Board, Laundry, Heat, Light, Uniform and all fees, $118.70. Books and all ether miscellaneous supplies, about $20.00. For students who pay tuition. $40.00 additional. For catalog and information, apply to W. M. RiGOS. Acting President. B-23-ltaw I. & W. Hay Fever and Asthma. * Bring discomfort and misery to many people but Foley's Honey and Tar give ease and comfort to the suf? fering ones. It relieves the congest? ion in the head and throat and is soothing and healing. None genuine but Foley's Honey and Tar in the I yellow package._Siberfs^ Drug St ore. Headquarters ??m?*mm*m?m??mmmmmmm^ For Hay, Grain, Rice Flour, Ship Stuff, Mixed Cow Feed and Chicken Feed. - We Sell - Lime, Cement, Shingles, Laths, Fire Brick, Acme Wall Plaster, Drain pipe, Etc. Our usual assortment of Horses and Mules. And a full stock of Buggies, Wagons and Harness to select from. Booth-rlarby Live Stock Co. Sumter, ... South Carolina. HAIR WHITE AS SNOW Restored to Natural Color with One Bottle of WYETH'S SAGE AND SULPHUR HAIR REMEDY Jho Only True Hair Restorer, Tonic and Rejuvenator ALMOST A MIRACLE .My hair was as white as snow when I commenced using Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy. One bottle re Stored my hair to its natural dark brown color. As I am now 70 years old, I consider the result most remarkable. It is an agreeable and refreshing hair dressing, keeping the hair soft and glossy, without being in the least greasy or sticky. WM. WESTLAKT2, 210 West Main Street, Rochester, N. Y. R WYETHS SAGESULPHUR MAIR REMEDY I! '?BC ( 11 h :i's I? M AN IDEAL ;Hair Tonic and Dressing) lmp&rt. color to f.drd u>4 fra.j ?Immt. Stimulate, th. rrow^ ?* 1 tuur. H.nh, dry umI MtUm r*.t \ |n\?d* tort, bnfht *nd thorny 'Allay. lUhmg ?nd ?c?rp huroor.J I Durllenl (or UV.ng rUIT. I PRICE 50c. AND $1.00 'the v^teth chemical cc NEW YORK CTTV Why hesitate when WYETH'S SAGE AND SULPHUR HAIR REMEDY is daily producing just such results? After years of study and analysis of the hair, we have been able to produce an ideal Hair Tonic and Restorer, which contains an actual constituent of hair, combined with ingredients of recognized merit for treatment of hair and scalp diseases. It makes and keeps the scalp clean and healthy, gives life, Strength and lustre to the hair, and restores faded and gray hair to natural color. No matter how long and thick your hair is, WYETH'S SAGE AND SULPHUR HAIR REM? EDY will make it longer and thicker. It will re? move every trace of dandruff in a few days, stop falling in one week, and start a new groyv th in from one to three months. These are facts that have been proven in scores of cases. WYETH S SAGE AND SULPHUR HAIR REMEDY is guar an*eed to do all that it is claimed to do or the price will be refunded. 50c. AND $1.00 A BOTTLE AT ALL DRUGGISTS If Your DrvitUl*t Doas Not K*?? It Send 50c. In Stamps fend Wo Will Send You ;n Largo lijttle, Expres* Propedd \VI? IH'l ? fit ik i. i