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Cool Why be without an Electric Fan any longer? It is a mistake to swelter when the twitch of a switch will fetch cool, refreshing breezes in an in stant. An Electric Fan is an inexpensive joy these hot days. You can use it in any room in the house. Why let children fret and older folk suffer when for less than a cent an hour an Electric Fan will make any day tolerable and insure restful, unbroken sleep through the long, hot nights. You really should ORDER your Electric Fan TODAY. Southern Public Utilities Co. PHONE 223 JUNE Enjoy That Trip By Equipping With "firestone TODD AUTO SHOP Exclusive Dealers DEATH .UK. HIM H Mill. Occurred tn N?rrin-Bodj Sent to Lowndesrlile. Th? body of Mr. H. L. Huckabeo, n merchant at Norris. S. C., was brought to Anderson Tuesday morning to be taken to his home at Lowndes villi- on tho afternoon train on the Charleston and Western Carolina railway. \ Mr. Huckabee'n death was very sud den. Ile was formerly ut Lowndes^ ville and ls well-known in this sec tion. The funeral Borvicoa were . dueted yesterday afternoon ut Lo wu desville. I>e?ttli of Child. Mellie CU.son. the three weeks old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. (Jib son, died yesterduy afternoon at their home on S;i Rast street. Anderson mill. Interment will be made today lu Silver Brook cemetery._ TAKE SALTS FOR THE KIDNEYS IF YOUR BACK HURTS We Should Drink Lots of Water "and Eat Less 4 Meat/Says Noted Authority on Kidney V Disorders r ^ Recommends a Spoonful of Jad Salts In Glass of Water Before : Breakfast to Stimulate Kidneys and Eliminate ^- - the Uric Acid Uric ?cid Sa meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked, get sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of lead. Tl't trino becomes cloudy, tba bladder is irritated, a?id you may be obliged to seek relief two or three times during tb*?n:ght. "When thc kidneys clog you must help them flush oft Ino body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feel a dull misery in tho kidney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets ?oar, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges r/hen the weather is bad. .? Eat Kees meat, drink lots of water; also get bom any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act Tine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutralise the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of ii ti tat ion, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney ? trouble while it ia only trouble./ u ? ? T HAD A REASON. We have jiiBt h eu rd about a lake wood ladv ?ho advertised for a girl to do general housework and got a Jewel of a personal reply. The young woman wbo answered tho ad was strong, eulabie, Intelligent, neat and possessed of training for tho position. "You'll do!" cried thc lady of tho bouse, bapblly. "Now let's see your ; references." "Ay eut ?ot no reffrensus, mum," confessed Hilda. "Ay ??an tore 'em up." "What? Tore them up? Why, you must hu ve been mad!" "Ay was, ven ay Kaw 'em. Dot'* vy ay bau torn 'ein up!" Taking No Chances. Jack-Th? ring doesn't seem to flt very well, Ailee. Hadn't I better take lt back and huve it iu.nl-. ?maller? Alice- No, Jack; an engagement ring is un engagement ring, eveu if 1 had to wear it aiound my neck. NOT MUCH SHOW. He-Uon't you think wo could happy on $20 per week? She-Well, I couldn't bo happy with my first husband on $30. 'Twas Ever Thus. You cannot satisfy sume men. No matter how you try; Olva them the bread they ask tor And they will kiek for plc*. H la Type. 'The writer you introduced to me was very stoopet md awkward. And he has such a poor carriage." ? "Ot course. He's uothing but & hack." No Inferior Place. "Did you select your son's college ] for Its curriculum, Mrs. Comeup?" "Of course, we did. The boy's al ways been accustomed to the best kind of a one at home." lt's a Hurry Call, Officer! Boozy wooz - Nature must have | picked the camel for a sure winner. Blinky wink-What'B the reply? Boozywooz-Because that is the only animal she backed up. Mermaids Plentiful. Bill-It has been '.-stlmated that ev- I ery square mlle of the ocean Is inhab ited by 120,000.000 living beings. Jill-Then, of course, there must bo a lot of mermaids in the bunch. Dressy Collegians. Patience - An automobile repair j course has been added to the curricu lum of an Iowa agricultural college. Patrice-Now In speaking of college togs don't forget the overalls. Legal Talk. "That fellow muBt be a lawyer." "Are you a resder of character?" "No," said the walter, "but when I asked him to repeat his order he said a ham sandwich as aforesaid." Homely Girl. "Glasses improve Maud's looks a good deal." "Naturally; they conceal part of her face." BUT NOT CALLING MAYhAP. Big Sister-Fred says if I don't keep you out of the room when he calls he will stop calling. Willie- Well, Bis. day's others, you know. Premature Joy. \ He popped; the malden answered. "Yee"-^ With Joy he thought he'd smother; But she'd not finished: "Yee-terday . I asid "Yee." to another." The Latest Thing. \j "Now, this one ls stuffed with anti septic sawdust and dressed In thor* ouably sterilized clothes." "I see. A eugenic doll baby."-Puck. Shame en Yew, Paw. Little Lemuel-Say. paw, the good of war, anyway? Paw-Well. son. it takes a lot brass bands to the front. what*? l'hune 37. To Kiitertuin. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harton will entertain this evening, in honor of the Trlbble-lVessley bridal party. Al rr.. J. H. Godfrey has gone to Cheraw to visit relative?. MTS. lt. B. Crisp o? Laurens, and Mia? Dorothy Wells of Columbia arc visiting Mrs. G. Ii. Greene on North .McDottie street. Mrs. S. D. Brownlee ha J returned from a visit to Asheville, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Jay. and Miss Lillie Wktson of Greenwood, Miases Hortense and Uoyal Peake of Edge Held, M4ss Carrie May Prentiss of Dalton, Ga., and Miss Ada fe'asey and Nettle Richardson of Pendleton are the guests of Mrs. Frank Barton lor the 'Prlbble-Pressley weddiug on Thurr/day. Misses Annie Lauri? Colyer and Sara Bigby returned to tiieir home at Willlamstou yesterday after a visit to Mrs. Frank Barton. Mrs. S. E. Carter went to Hart well, Ga., yesterday to visit Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Eunice Cater. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, who have been visiting Mrs. R. J. Ramer. left yes terday for Greenville to visit their son before returning to their home in Winston-Salem, N. C. Miss Kathleen Watson, and Miss Hester Johnstone of Atlanta are the guests of Miss I '.ith 'Brownlee. A Pretty Party. Little Miss Leila Sullivan was the attractive young hostess to about fif ty of her friends on Monday after noon . The children gathered on the beau tiful lawn of lier handsome home on South Main street and a very happy afternoon was spent playing games. It was the eleventh birthday of the young hostess, and all Joined very heartily in helping her to celebrate it. Later they were invited Into the house and a dainty sweet course serv ed. For tf.'.ss Tribble. Another pretty shower for Miss Eva Tribble was given yesterday af ternoon by Miss Ruth Archer at her home on North Main street'. It was a china shower and each guest brought a dainty piece of china for the bride-elect, also a recipe for a cook book that had been made for her. Mrs. Rosa McCully in a few bright and appropriate words pre sented the book and china to Miss Tribble. Tho hostess assisted by Misses Nan Foeney end Ola Tribble served delightful refreshments. About twenty guests were present. Mrs. J. M. Bell has gone to Wil liamston for a two weeks' stay. St amps-Crisp. Miss Blanche Stamps of the Orr Mill village and Mr. LaFayette Crisp, of Calhoun FallB were married Mon day afternoon by Mr. John E. Wlg gington. notary public. Common Mistakes in Curing For Mu li 'ii e. We believe that tuc best placo for stable manure is uu or in the laud just as soon au it can be put there, but anyone knows that in wet weather it io not always practicable to put out manure as soon as it ls made, and wo have often stated that fact. Moreover, we have advised against putting manure on land, that washes without promptly mixing it with the top soil at least. This is not to prevent evaporation, as some seem to think, but for no other purnose than to prevent lt washing away. Of course, if manure is put on a hillside that ls hard, its value will leach and wash away, Just as it will from the barn lot that is on a sido hill. On the oth er hand, if there is a growing cover crop on the land, or if it is fixed iu any way that the manure and soil do not wash away it ls likely to lose less on the lsnd than anywhere else, ex cept possibly in a deep stall where lt is tramped down hard and enough bedding and phosphate rock are used to absorb the liquid manure. Another error which ls popular and which seems to be shared by our cor respondent ls that best reBults are obtained from manure when well rot ted before being applied. Better im mediate results are obtained; that ts, most good 1B obtained from it shortly after being put on. But the total good ls likely to be less, for as a rule well-rotted manure means manure that bas lost considerable of its plant foods. Get the manure in the soil, if lt is likely to wash away or on it,, es pecially if there is a growing crop on the land, just as soon aa practicable after lt is made, is-the safest rule. The Progressive Farmer. Road Law Is Unjust. A viciously unjust law ls that which compels young men-who oftentimes do not own a foot of land or a horse and do not directly need the roads, to build and keep up the county roads, while men who own thousands nf acres or have bought lang along these roads on speculation and never do a stroke of work on them, will get the fruit of this com pulsory labor of these poor young men. Also big fanners and mer chants who haul heavy loads over, these roads, some every day, but have passed the ag? limit, need not do a lick of work on these roads. It seems to me that lt should and not the individual.-Otto Johnson In The Progressive Farmer. ? Thompson Cuts The Price: We're closing out some broken lots of Women's Pumps at a big reduction in price. One lot Women's $4.00 Patent, Cravenette and Satin Pumps at $2.85 the Pair One lot Women's $3.50 Patent Sand Cloth Top Colonial Pumps at $2.45 the Pair Women's Rubber Sole and Heel White Canvas Blucher Oxfords at $1.50 the Pair Thompson's The One Price Shoe Store We SeU For Cash Only. He Couldn't Give Up His British Title. Sir Edgar Speyer, great London banker, hao Just arrived in" the United States, a baronet in spite of himself. He can't get rid of his title. He may drop lt and ask his friends and the public to forget it. but the British government will not forget. Once you get a British title lt will stick so-they descend to posterity. The baronet is of the great Ger man banking family of Franwfort on-the-Maln. His brother, James Speyer, ls the head ot one of the greatest banking houses in the United States, it not in the world. So great has been the feeling in England recently against Germans and naturalized Germans thal trea son and all kinds of charges were made against them. This ls a copy of the letter the banker wrote to Premier Asquith Just before he sailed on the liner Phila delphia for the United tSates: "There is nothing harder to bear than the sense of injustice which finds no vent in-expression. For the last nine months I have remained silent, treating with disdain the ?nany charges of disloyalty and the charges of treachery? made against me by the press and private Indi viduals. But I* can remain olleat no longer, for these charges and Insin uating suggestions have been re peated by men in public office, who have not scrupled to rae their posi tions to Iname '.ne over-strained feelings of the people. "I am not a man who can be driven or drummed by threats and abuse into an attitude ot- Justification, but I consider it due* tl my honor as a Lady Speyer. British subject and to my personal dignity as a man to retire from all public positions. "I therefore ask you to aceent my resignation as privy council .or and request that my baronetcy be re-, voked." At the' death of his fati or, Gusta vus Speyer, Mr. Speyer waa a mem ber of the three great Speyer flnnsY Speyer Bros., London; Speyer & Co., New York, and L. Spcyer-Elllsnen, Fraakfortron-Main. He resigned his active participation in the New York branch last year and discontinued his active connection with the Frank fort-on-Main branoh In 188?, when hs assumed control of the London firm. Here's a Tip That Means Money to You We were fortunate ?nough to be able to purchase sprue Roof Paints of different grades, and in ali colors at EXCEPTION ALLY LOW prices. For the next thirty days we will give our customers the benefit of our good for tune. We can and will save you any whet* from 20 pe? cent, to So per cent, in th painting of your metal roofs. * NOW ?S THE time to do this work, an WE are THE people to do it. C M. GUEST PAINT CO. "Guest Sells the Beat"