The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, September 21, 1917, Page 2, Image 2
I
? 'J ? ?
Most Old People
Are Constipated 1
The wear of years impairs the
action of the bowels. As people
grow older they restrict their
activity, neglect to take sufficient
exercise, and indulge a natural
disposition to take things easy.%
The digestive organs Decotne
more sensitive to the demands
made upon them and rebel more
quickly.
It is of special importance to
the health of elderly people that
the bowels be kept normally
active. A mild, yet effective,
remedy for constipation, and
one that is especially suited to
the needs of old folks, women
and children, is the combination
v? oiiiiptv acuvaiaw iiwi ua mill
pepsin sold in drug stores under
the name of Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin. It costs only
fifty cents a bottle, and should be
in every family medicine chest.
A trial bottle, free of charge,
can be obtained by writing to
Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 456 Washington
St., Monticello, Illinois.
Too Hasty.
"Mr. Crowley, car. voti lend me
?" "No, sir I can't. And if 1
could I wouldn't. I have been lending
you money for a year, ami you make
no effort to return it!" "But 1 wanted
to know if you wouldn't lend me
." "And 1 tell you beforehand 1
won't I" "Well, then, don't. I wanted
to borrow your fountain pen to n^e
out a check for what 1 owe you, but.
If you're In no hurry, I'm not."
*
Check a cough or cold in the lungs
before it develops a serious case. ,
BALLARD'S HORKHOUND SYRUP ,
is an effective remedy for all soreness
or congestion in the lungs or (
air pasages. Price 25c, 50c and $1
per bottle. Sold by all dealers In
medicine.?Adv.
Heron's Foot for Bait.
So gr ?at Is the heron's repute as a
fisher that It has long been thought
that it's feet, owing to some peculiar
scent or oil which they were supposed
to possess, attracted the fish, more
especially eels, to within easy reach
of Its beak. In some plnces the rustic
angler still believes that If a heron's
foot Is placed with his worms the latter
are more eagerly taken by fish.?
London Outlook.
*
WOMAN* CURES HORSE COLIC.
The men were away as usual. The
horse was bad. A lone woman could
not "drench" In the old way. She
called up a neighbor and her men
were away?but: "We have Farris
Colic Remedy that you drop on the
horse's tongue," says Mrs. Neighbor.
So she came over and dropped Farris
Colic Remedy on the horse's tongue
and the horse was well when the
men came home. Moral: Get Farris
Colic Remedy so the womten can
cure horse colic. We sell it at 50
cents a bottle on the Money Rack
Plan.
LANCASTER MERCANTILE CO.
"Potter's Field."
"Potter's field," the graveyard In
which are burled those who are In
terred at public expense, comes by Its
name legitimately. In F.nglnnd and the
continent the clay used to make pottery
was dug up In long trenches, which
were left unfilled. Common consent
soon made It possible for these unsightly
stretches of ground to be put to
the useful purpose of Interring the
bodies of those who were cared for as
a charge upon the country.
*
When the bowels feel uncomfortable
and you miss the exhilarating
feeling that always follows a copious
morning operation, a dose of HERIJINE
will set you right in a couple
of hours. If taken at bedtime you
get its beneficial effect after breakfast
next day. Price 50c. Sold by
all dealers in medicines.?Adv.
First Newspaper Woman.
It la snld that the first newspaper
woman was an Amer.can, Mrs. Anne
Boyall, who was not only the first
woman Journalist, but the first wotnan
to own and edit a newspaper. It is
also curious that she Is said to have
originated the Idea of "Interviews."
She was born In Maryland In 1709, put
her first printing press on Capitol Hill
In Washington, D. C., and published a
small weekly, first called the Washington
Paul Pry and later the Huntrasa.
No. 666
This to a prescription prepared especially
lor MALARIA or CHILLS A, FEVER.
Fire or eiz doeee will break #07 caae, and
If taken then aa a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acta on the liver better thao
Calomel and doea not f ripe or sicken. 25c
Lost Hie 8weetheart.
Harold, aged five, was visiting his
aont In the city, and the little girl
next door was his sweetheart till one
day when she came over with her I
little pink rompers on. Mortified, Har""**
? ? -? ??? wnn fret home
THE LANCAE
The Lancaster Eqi
"We Shall Fight for the Things Which
Hearts?for Democracy, for the I
thority to Have a Voice
momc \
/
L MDAHQ WYO.
V (^[WHIcoUk
?
Will They Use the liullot'.' New York vo
Will the women use the ballot "8 men. Cole
ivhen they have it? The vote pol- of its men
led at the presidential election of
1H16 casts some interesting light ?
rn this question. Nev
In the twelve States where worn Saratoga s s
11 could vote?Wyoming, Colorado, *ias enthusi
Idaho. Washington. California, 111 i- furthest cornei
nois. Oregon, Kansas, Arizona, Ne- Strong hearts li
vada and Montana--there were an<' hearts
7,683,500 men and women. Of as a r*1811'! ?f
these 6,024,189 voted, or 6ri per ''n,e State worki
cent or in all the ru
?? ? . State has there
In the 36 States where women A. ... ,
stir as lifted and
could not vote there were 22,205,- . ?
. . ? ing. r or one
8<9 adult men. Of these 13.177.- ... , .
? ? ? ,, , standing of the
9 80 actually voted, or 59 per cent. . , ,
tested bv the p
A larger proportion of the posible , _ . ,
. v ses of official
voters went to the polls in the equal ... ,
^ ? ... . standing of no
suffrage States than in the rest of .. ,
convention has
the country. .. ..
another, the en
The suffrage State which made mateiy a millio
the poorest showing of public in- a8 wanting the
terest in that election was Arizona. no(e of aohleve
It stood on the same level with suffrage lei
Massachusetts. Massachusetts vot- gta(e wero insj
ed 52 per cent of its adult men; ance8 H 8f
Arizona voted 52 per cent of its to- the 1917 camps
tal adult population, men and wo- With a (jepth 0
men together. cess that was s
Rhode Island voted 53 per cent truiy attained
of its men; the State of Washing. paicn Then e
ton voted 53 per cent of its men was ..jn thp knn
and women. forward ap
Vermont and Pennsylvania voted of <iefeat Nov
56 per cent of their men. Wyom- Hvln,. fr>r?.orH ?
ing and Nevada voted 56 per cent lpatlon to what
of their men and w omcn< dained success
Then every suf
?^ _ a "There must h
Corn Pain r;. i::
Stopped Quick ''or>
let Ci
Corns Lift Eight Off With "Gets-It" There has he
Blessed relief from com pains is spnnse among v
simple as A B C* with "oets-lt.
When you've been limping around for food cons*
for days trying to get away from I ?
a heart-drilling corn or bumpy cal- sp?ns* would I
lus, and everything you'vo tried has | if everybody ha
nation. When
suffers from flr
people are shell
(ML n" tho noiKhbo)
jjSOk '' I" turn themselves
JHRi i
^ v.
HHtt\ f n^jPB^BI a mu( h l,i
HH^Hk \
happ
^K, ^f5',1 even to oui
order to
Rut many ml
anemone, with
| fill out only a
only made it worse, and then you 1 ?,__. ?lVl,t ?.
put some "Gets-It" on and the pain spot where it SI
eases right away, and the corn peels vanre of civil
right off like a banana skin?
"ain't it a grand and heavenly feel- lengthening of
illK ?"
"Gets-It" has revolutionised the itual tentacles,
corn history of the world. Millions world-wide synr
use it and it never falls. Ladles ...
wear r.maller shoes and have pain- tunes ago. the
free feet. V/o old fellows and ,ii?l n^t ovon P
young fellows forget our toes and nHI nm PVPn K
feel frisky as colts. Bverybody on In '|Europe
with a corn or callus needs "Gets- ? . ..
It." We will all walk about and flashes the nei
enjoy ourselves as we did without globe. Rut sM
corns. Get a bottle today from your .
druggist, or sent on receipt of price without really
by K. iawrence (k Co.. Chicago, III., t
2Rc Is all you need to pay. snow.
Sold in Lancaster and recommend- f,et us use tl
ed as the world's best corn remedy nation to see
by Lancaster Pharmacy and J. P. means?to hrln
Macfcey & Co. the hollow ej
limbs, the skelt
brawn-out agon
A Healthy 8pot. the,r a?ef1 Pare
Llsvane must be a healthy spot ('ren wasting ?
Within a small radius there are reald- 'or 'a^k of . fot
log In the pretty Cardiff suburb seven world facing a
t
3TKR NEWS FRID
lal Suffrage I
i We Have Always Carr
^ight of Those Who Subr
in Their Own Government
I
AH
arkan.|H^^H
B|^^v
tod 60 per cent of so small a
irado voted 60 per ishable 1
and women. . and to le
A. S. II, those who
ours?
r York.
uffrage conference i
asm thrilling to the An OI?.ie<
s of the State. "Anyboci
ave grown stronger self-goverr
have grown strong iuls to fli
that meeting. Old- world. T!
ers declare that nev- cause is c
ffrage history of the where of
been so rousing a mains."
I impelled that meet- go sny?
thing, the political ^w visitii
convention was at- stitute "w
resence and addres- (j1P staten
New York, as the ery jntelll
other State suffrage equal
been attested. For only quest
rollment of approxtn
New York women
vote sounded a long
ment. For a third,
.? . Htateme
iders of nation and
tired in their utter
, .u_ ... H OPI"
\\uni nits ia.il lap UI | JL Ul 111
linn is entered upon rmx
f conviction of sue- I. 1 li
triven for but never , . ,
Located
in the 1916 cam_
, close of
very suffragist who 191-.
w" had to drive her;ainst
the prescience
' , , Loans anc
f every suffrapist is _ . ?
J , Overdraft!
n the wings of antic. ... ,
Bonds and
seems to be foreor- .
by the
on Novomhor 6. Fur?,|ur<!
fray!.. won Myinn. llankln|,
e education before
lng acc
letory. Now oyory Q|h,.r ^
.yinif. "All hall to Du> (ron.
bankers
Currency.
< All Help. Gojd . .
en a widespread re- Silver an<
romen to the appeal coin . . ,
srvation. The re- Checks an
ie almost universal,
d the gift of imagi- Total.,
any American city
>od or fire, and its Capital st
ierless and starving, Surplus fi
lng cities and towns Undivided
Inside out for their current
sympathy varies in- taxes pi
tance. A small dis- Dividends
tirs us more acutely Individual
gger one further off. nnsits so
part of the terrible to chock
s happening In Eu- Savings
en'ing in the TTnited posits,
e should be willing Time c
rselves on rations in rates of d
Cashier's
nds are like the sea Checks
tentacles that ran
little way from the Notes ar
lands. With the ni- counted
ization conies the Hills pay
our mental and spir- certlflci
and the growth rf borrowi
ipnthy. A few cen_
i people of America Total.,
now what was going STATE 0
Now electricity County
vs all around the Before
11 most of us know Cashier o
feeling what we who, bein
foregoing
le eyes of our imagl- tion of s?
what semi-starvation books of i
g home to ourselves
res, the trembling Sworn
ton forms?the long me this
iy of those who see 1917.
nts and beloved rhlliway
and perish'ng Correct i
>d. With half the W. F
ctual famine, when A. J.
lied unon to help to W. I
BSL""11 11 1 1
AY, SEPT. 21, 1917,
mm '
-eague- &l
ied Nearest Our I*
nit to Au- 1[
Vl
J. f
I SwIXUM1
r Th* LUZf
Guaran
after us
oontenta a >
ara
aver/ reaps<
grocer
Dionojr.
The Peil
Paya
Great hooks need
ed study, nnd nre
over like current
thing as to eat the pel - *lnU>, ^vhl<^ I1Mlst 1
. , , , . , pended on the masi
?f ,00d oi?rselves. |s Rubtracted ft mf
ave the other kinds for the language does
se need is greater than very formidable an
A. S. B, ??
l
t Lesson From Ireland. ,
Iv who wants to defeat v
iment for Ireland now J
eht not Ireland hut the *
lie world has spoken, tne1
lecled. The when, the
home rules alone re-1 *
i a prominent Irishman
ag the United States. Sub- *
omen" for "Ireland" and *
tent is equally true. Ev- We 1
gent poison now knows . ,
suffrage is coming. The * ( '
lion is how and when. ! } OV
a. s. b.! > sound
1 money
BANK No. 222. y VOU. "'
nt of the Condition of y J)l'OOf '
ers Bank and : ' ' 1
* We;
ist Company with w
.1 < u . .u * cially ?
at Lancaster, S. C., at the *
business September 11th, J ("UStOII
RESOURCES. ' ('i!(
1 discounts ..$192,305.94 J VOlir I
j 2,863.?2 ! >1 Cei})t f
I stocks owned V kcepill
Dans 6,000.00 y
and fixture* 4.752.94 '' ^ '
house, build- ! Oil do])
ount 13,867.93 V m
I estate owned 3,600.00 J' .* ,
i banks and !j! ' Gl'tlfK
19,218.76 ; terly.
7,598.00 V
1,272.50 ?
1 other minor i V r?H
1.036.96 y "I'll IV
id cash items. 76.67 J1 I IIP
J262.492.72 >;
LIABILITIES. y
ock paid in... $50,000.00 ! ! pUAC
md lo.ooo.oo
profits, less V
expenses and >?
ild 1,706.55 I" ????>* "
unpaid 4.00 _
deibject
* "
$45,107.17
de*
. .. 7,062.02 {
ertifl- J
eposlt 41.058.22 All
f\
... 1.554.76 94,782.17 f
_________ / J tke upbui]
id bills redls- A
1 6,000.00 MX.) ^
able, including Y }
ites for money \ ' mm? of
90,000.00
j murrra
I rrvlccj a
$262,492.72 y* To
F SOUTH CAROLINA, j C SjJSJ
of Lancaster?ss. ( <4
rae came Max O. Brlttaln,
){ the above named bank. >
r duly sworn, says that the *'
statement Is a true condi-1
ild hank, as shown by the MAX
O. RRITTAIN. "
to and subscribed before I v
18th day of September. 1
R. TIIOS. BEATY,
Notary Public.
Gregory,
Hr? - Soutl
. .
""" 7 i, f , ,,,
bE^It^Gcrt to
Make Good
**? \ with You v
... u.?'
?or your grocer will make good to you,
to the last penny. We knew you expected
ANNE something unusually good in a coffee when
fee.* we first had Luzianne in mind. So we
ing thm made Luzianne so good that it will stand
can, you 011 *ts own feet, without apologizing, withtfiod
in out acknowledging any rivals. YOU buy
bt, your a can of Luzianne. If you can't honestly
rotund Uy that Luzianne tastes better and goes
farther than any other coffee at the price,
then you are entitled to your money back.
And your grocer will give it to you upon
request. Ask for profit-sharing catalog.
:XANNEcoffee
Taylor Company, .New Orleans
Dividend*. Male Wasp* Not Hardy.
hard. close repent- There Isn't n mule wasp in existence
not to he skimmed when winter ends. Lute the preceding
fiction. When the fall the wasps mate. The coming cold
n any case be ex- weather kills every worker and male,
tery of the thought while Mrs. Wasp hies herself to-o conulnct
tn,.M.|.ul,.? . .
iii ycuieui inner nuu uiuernaieH, reuay 10
not represent ?*> come forth In the spring and lay eggs
i extra Investment, to replenish the race.
- - ? ^ ~ ^ * * * * iThe
*
st National Bank i
V
??
scant your banking business, no mat- I
v smaii. We are prepared to extend f
ery aeconmiodation consistent with >
banking. Should you wish to send I
out. of town, we will attend to it for I
We furnish you storage in our fire- I
vault, absolutely free of charge, for
aluable papers.
also have a writing desk equipped >
riting material and stationery espe- ;
set apart in our banking room for otir
lers. I
:>sit your savings with us and pay all >
>ills by check, thereby having a re- R
or all money paid. "We do the book
g for you.
accept your checks on outside points I
osit without charge. >:
pay you four per cent interest on
[ ates of Deposit, compounded quar
First National Bank 1
LANCASTER, S. C.
D. JONES, President. >
ft. M. CUOXTON, V. Pres. hnd Cashier. K
m w m w 9 * wmmmwmwmwmmwwwmmmmmm
Ambition and a Record i
needs of the South are identical with the needs ! ?^\ A
e Southern Railway the f rowtb and success of one nnuu ' \ f
Idlny of the other. J I J
out hern Railway aaka no fsrors?no special prlrlleye not \ jr
o others. I /
mbkion of the Southern Railway Company la to aee that t
itereat that la bora of co-ope ration between the public and ' ?<v
alii to aee perfected that fair and frank policy In the atanaye- ' J
railroads which Ineitet the conSdence of yorernmental , \ he
to realize tba t liberality of treatment which will enable It , i
he additional capital needod for the acquisition of better and /l
facilities incident to the demand for Increased and better S I
nd. Snail;? J
kc Its nirbe In the body politic of the South alonyalde of J
it Indaatrlea. with no mora, but with equal liberties, equal
equal opportunities.
rhe Southern Serves the South."