WHY DRINK. AN IMITATION WHEN THE GENUINE BOTTLED IS ONLY 5c CHEAP INSURANCE. You can buy a bottlo of Dr. Hilton's Life For Tho Liver and Kidneys No. 2, and cleanse your system from all impurities of your body, and save lots of sickness and lost time. Price 26 and 60 cents. For sale by all druggists. Drlstrlbutod by Murray Drug Co.; Columbia. S. C. Wedding Presents for the June Bride We have a very large assort ment of everything pretty, and serviceable that you would expect to find^ at a first class jewelers, suitable for wedding presents. Drop in and let us show them to you. lt will afford us great pleasure, whether you purchase or not. LYON The Cash Jeweler ?-????I IHUIH ll I The Sanitary Market (Successors to O. P. Fowler) Fresh Home Killed Meats, Fresh Fish, Dresed Poul try? tend Country Produce. Rouda ?nd Dobbins are tho. s Two Heat Cutters; both are ex ? perlenced butchers, and know their buainess well. Tender, Juicy and Nutritious Meats, killed and handled In the Most Improved Sanitary meth ods will insure the best of neats. We havo secured the ser vices of B. L. Rouda, formerly with Mr. W. A. Powers; and . Mr. Rouda wishes to announce to his friends that he will bo . sled to welcome them at the " Sanitary Market. Sanitary Market Cor. Whttncr ft McDuffle Phone 766. Ff!ESH FISH ALWAYS FRESH -Last evening we received a shipment of fine fish, including the following: Shad, Red Fin, Crokers, Butter Fish, Black Fish, Salmon Trout, Sheephead, Span ish Mackerel, Red Snapper, Pom pano, Shrimp, and Whiting. fish Dressed Free of Charge, and De livered Promptly C. F. POWER & SON Phone 117. Cor. Benson and McDuffle i 1 --- ?'? j Ks??!??!?aaamas.? j; OPEN NOSTRILS! cND : A COLD OR CATARRH : I Hew Ta Cet Relief When Head \ and Hose ere Stuffed Up. ^s?o?eooostf Education J. ll. Kelton, the uum of $3,021 has bc*n secured for several specially needy schools In tin- county of An derson. Tills money is ser tired from tlie contingent fund for specially needy schools provided for In Sec tion 1. Item 0 of the appropriation of ?'.?l.i. The money has been forwarded to the treasurer of Anderson county, and will he paid out hy him upon the ordt Bethel.55 Honvordam.56 Wllllford.?2 I'alrvlew.?3 Airy Springs.fit Barkers Creek.67 Mt. Creek.70 Contrai.r?8 13.621.00 THE WEARY WAY Baily Becoming ?/v fifi Wearisome to Many In Anderson. With a back that aches all day. With rest disturbed at night, Annoying urinary disorders, Tis a weary way, indeed. Doau'8 Kidney Pills are especially for kidney trouble. Are endorsed by Anderson citizens. Mrs. M. E. Hanks. 67 E. River St.. Anderson, says: "Exertion weakened my kidneys and brought on a steady, dun Qatn In the small of my back. When I was sweeping, sharp twinges soiled me. My kidneys acted too freely and the kidney secretions dis tressed me. I felt tired and languid and often my feet swelled so badly that I could hardly got my shoes on. After suffering about two months, I read of Doan's Kidney Pills and got some at Evans* Pharmacy. They made me feel better in a couple of dayn and one box Axed mo up In fine shape.** Price 50c, at ell dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy-get Doan's Kidney Pills-tho same that Mrs. Hanks had. Foster-Mllburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Uric Acid in Meat Clogs the Kidneys Take a Glass of Salts if Your Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers. If you must have your meat every doy, eat it, but flush your kidneys with sals occasionally, says a notod authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which aimost paraly ses the kidneys In their efforts to ex-' pel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney re gion, sharp patna in the back or sick headache, dizslness, your stomach sours, tonguo ls coated and when thc weather ta bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging yon to seek relief two or three times during the night To neutralise these Irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinons waste get four ouuees ot Jad Salts from any phar macy hare; take a tablespoonful In a e'.aaa of water before breakfast for a' few days and your kidneys will then act flue. This famous salts ls made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, corni ned with, Uthla, and hss been used for generations tc flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralise the acids In urine, so lt no longer Irritates, thus ending blad der weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; csa not Injure, and makes a delightful effer vescent Uthla-water ?Link Received ois of County O'NEAL ORATORICAL CONTEST LAST NIGHT NELLIE WILLIAMSON, BELTON AND HERBERT HAMMOND, WILLIAMSTON, WINNERS LARGE AUDIENCE Gathered Despite the Rain and Thoroughly Enjoyed the In teresting Program. Despite the Inclemency of thc weather, a large crowd of people from linne;' Path, WillianiBton, Anderson und Melton gathered at the opera house i ri Helton last night for the fifth meeting of the O'Neal Oratorical As sociation . This contest was postponed from last Friday when the bad weather made lt undesirable to hold the con test. The contest was a close one. and the spirit of rivalry among the schools; was manifested in the cheer ing of each school as Its candidate took the stand. The winners of the contest were: Girls. First Prize-Miss Nellie Wil liamson, representing the Belton High School. Her subject was "Thc lilack Horse and His Rider." Girls, Second Prize-M?BS Llewlec French, representing Honea Path High School. Her subject was, "Hagar." Hoys, First Prize-Herbert Ham mond, representing Williattiston High School. His subject was, "Cassius to Brutus." Hoys. Second Prize-Eugene Moore, representing thc Anderson High School, lils subject was, "The Folly of War." Judges of the oratorical contest were: Rev. Robert G. Lee, of Green ville, C. T. (Jause, F.-. C. Montgomery, and II. C. Husch, all of Atlanta. Ga. The medals were delivered by Rev. Lee, who made a very appropriate little talk before awarding the medals. All baseball and basket hall gnmes were called off on account of the bad weather. This ia the first of these contests that has ever been held with out having the baseball and basket ball games fought out by tho schools before the contest, which ls held at night. Tbc Jitneys Are Coming. In tho .May American Magazine Hugh S. Fullerton writes an exceed ingly interesting little fact article en titled, "The Jitneys Are Coming." Following is a brief extract: "Today Jitney busses are running In almost every large city in the West and Central West, and lines are being started everywhere. The lat est reports indicate Mi.it thero arc between 8,000 and O.Oou licensed Jit neys operating in these cities. There am 200 in Los Angeles alone, nearly BOO In San Francisco, New Orleans ls in the hands of the Jits-Denver, Washington, Salt Lake, Milwaukee. Toledo, and nok Chicago and Wash ington. The conquering hosts of Jitney busses, have swept eastward, overwhelming the entire country and. incidentally, bringing with them new municipal problems that may prove as hard to solvo as wero the old ones. "The two big problems are conges tion of streets and danger of injury. In Kansas City the traffic police and others declare that the Jitneys do not congest traffic as much as street cars do, and arc easier to handle. Los An geles already is complaining of con gestion of the main x down-town streets and danger to pedestrians and hsoppcrs. "It is evident that before the Jit neys are received as an established public service factor some liability in surance must be arranged. The Jit neys are operated chiefly by persons of small means, and the danger of personal Injury of passengers Is to be considered. The street car companies declare the proportion of pasrengers injured will be larger than in any other form of transportation, and that it will be practically impossible for injured passengers to recover damages." Ca? There F.ver Be Too Many Apples 1 In tho current issue of Farm and Fireside a contributor, writing about the apple market, says in part: "Ever since I waa a boy I have heard this overproduction talk, yet I can hot recall a single Instance v'uere any great calamity has resulted from too much of any one staple, especially If lt ls good to eat. "During my boyhood days back in Kansas I made a solemn vow that when I became a man I was going to raise all the fruit I could eat aad bavo a surplus for thone who do not ordinarily get lt. It seems like the 'older I get the more fruit I want. I believe it true with most of us. "What if we do raise 125.000 car loads of apples In 1919? Counting 600 boxes per car, that gives us 62. 500.000. Thia is a whole lot less thsn a box apiece, not counting what Will be shipped abroad. "The poor are obliged to do wim ont fruit most of tbs year, ead Utat isn't right. "I expect to raise better fruit than the other fellow, and I believe that well-colored, fine-flavored apples will alwaya sell. There may be lota of them, but we shall learn how to dla trlbutt them." THE XI?VIE TO THINK OE YOUR HOME AND OFFICE FOR THE OFFICE SPEED UP WITH AN ELECTRIC FAN Sir, you can do more business and do it better if you provide electric: fang for yourself and your clerks. The cost is really trifling com pared with tho net profit In com fort and actual buBlnccs accom plished. Heat saps vitality and slows up work. Others are cool-you ought to be too. Our fans havo buzzed Into rapid ly increasing popularity. FOR THE HOME KEEP YOUR HOME COOL A household electric fan ls very economical and very refreshing. You can operate it for a very small amount. It blows away the depressing ef fect of hot weather. All the members of your family will be healthier and happier if you buy one for your home. Everything In electrical comfort for thc household and office. Prices From $10.00 to $27.00 Southern Public Utilities Company 118 W. Whiner Phone 223 German Chancellor Grows Fat on War. Chancellor BctHinann.lio'.'tweg. This la tho last authentic photo graph of tho big German chancellor, showing violent contrast with those tsk-n of him before tl t war. Then said to be six feet four inches tall he was a thin fMant man-bis body much resembling that of Abraham Lincoln. - But this photograph was taken very recently., lt 1B a snapshot of the met important man in 'Germany, with the single exception of the kaiser, at the heed ot a para.la In the recent Bismarck birthday cele bration. It proves be bsa flited out much and now mutt weigh consider ably over 200 pounds. Such has neon the effect ot war on Germany's leading statesman. He has not grown thin and worr'cd by the strain. The kaiser in recent photographs shows tbe strain In whiter hair and deeper lines in bis face. While Bethmann-Hollweg has ared a little, he has not worried His photograph proves that. . ?... .I^I.