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fiftffll HAIR : APPLY SAGE TO ; (. Look Young! Bring Back It Natural Color, Gloss and Attractiveness. k Common garden sage brewed Into heavy tea with sulphur added, wl turn gray, streaked and faded hai beautifully dark and luxuriant. Jui a few applications will prove a revela Gon If your hair is fading, streaked c gray. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul phur recipe at home, though. Is trou blUome. An easier way is to get bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphu Compound at any drug store all read Tor use. This Is the old-time reclp Improved by the addition of other to gre dienta. . While wispy, gray, faded hair is nc sinful, we all desire to retain ou youthful appearance and attractive gfcaa By darkening your hair wit! Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound no one can tell, because it does it s "naturally, so evenly. Tou just dampei a sponge or soft brush with it am draw this through your hair, takini One small strand at a time; bj mornini all gray hairs have disappeared, and after another application or two, you hair becomes beautifully dark, glosej soft and luxuriant. ' This preparation Is a delightful tolle requisite and is not Intended for th cure, mitigation er prevention of dis ease. ' IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE M BiyB J5ackache is a sign you have bed eating too much meat, which ' forms uric acid. When you wake up with backache an< dull misery in the kidney region it gen efally means you have been eating to< much meat, says a well-known authority Heat forms uric acid which overwork] the kidneys in their effort to filter ii from the blood and they become tort o: paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneyi get sluggish and clog you must relieve . ^ them, like you relieve your bowels; . moving all the body's urinous waste else you have backache, sick headache dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bac you have rheumatic twinges. The urim is cloudy, full of sediment, channels ofter St sore, water scalds and you are obligee seek relief two or three times during the night. t Either consult a good, reliable physi . 'dan at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; tak< m tablespoonful in a glass of watei before breakfast for a'lew days and youj kidneys will then act fine. This famoui alts is made from the acid of grapei I and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for generations U dean and stimulate / sluggish kidneys also to neutralize adds in the urine so it 00 longer irritates, thus ending bladdei weakness. ; Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effer jwmA Uthia-wi tar drink. \ j HAVE ROSY CHEEKS . AND FEEL FRESH AS A, DAISY-TRY THIS! 4 Says glass of hot water' with h ? ? l. i I. pnotpnaie D^jorc orc<iiM?oi. washes out poisons. To see the tinge of healthy" bloon in your face, to see your Bkln gei clearer and clearer, to wake up .with out a headache, backache,,'' coatec tongue or a nasty breath, In}fact tc feel your best, day In and,day out, jus try inside-bathing everyi morning fo: ne week. Before breakfast each*^ay^drlnk i glass of real hot water with a teaspoon ful of limestone phosphate in it as i harmless means of washing from th< stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels th< previous day's indigestible "waste sour blle~and toxins; thus cleansing sweeteningjf and purifying the^entin alimentary, canal before putting mori foodjinto^the stomach. The .action o hoUwater and limestone^pho'sphate 01 krfjempty stomach is wonderfully in yigorating. It cleans out all the spu fermentations, gases and acidity am gives one a splendid appetite for break fast. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate will cost very little at the drui mtnra hut ia sufficient to demonstrate that Just as soap and hot wate cleanses, sweetens and freshens th< kin, so hot water and limestone phos phate act on the blood and Internal 01 Bans. Those who are subject to cor etlpatlon, bilious attacks, acid stomact rheumatic twinges, also those whos kin Is sallow and complexion palllc ire assured that one week of inside bathing will have them both looMn ,. and feeling better in every way. .' li ii ii l! ^MOf III 11 EARLY | II I ll - ^ il ti VVVV\>VVWVVVVVV\. V V V SCHOOL NOTES. V I5, ; There will be in the near future 3 a good basket ball team among the girls of the high school. The players hope to challenge teams from nearby towns. Miss Logan, who teaches in * the fourth grade, is the efficient Ir coach. She undertook this from the ? love of it and because of her inter|r est in outdoor Sports, and the pupils K appreciate her interest in their pleasa ure. r j * * * ,? At recess one pupil remarked that Mary Louise Dargan in her large * coat reminded her of Bonaparte. An<T other girl who no doubt, is very wilI, lowy, unfeeling commented, "I don't ? see any bony part to Mary Louise." '.j * * * | Ostriches All. I. Mary Greene, to a crowd of girls: r, "Do you all know Lieutenant ? Well, he is shot full of bullets. He o has over one hundred in him, and ~ is still living and in good spirits." ?j Lydia Owen: "Well, if he can live full of bullets, it looks to me like we ought to live on cornbread." * * * I Miss Lynch: "Dickens did not like ' Americans or their ways. He thought ^ their manners were crude. On his last tour of America, however, they gave him gTeat honor. Many stood 1 before the ticket windows all night to be sure of securing a ticket to his recitals." (This last statement in a very feeling tone with the expecta* tion of the class being overwhelmed) , LeRoy Cox: "I don't blame Dick ens for his poor opinion. I'd think ? they were crazy too for standing up, f J all night for that." :i 1 . | Miss .Helen JEakm spent Thanks, giving with her parents in Green' wood. ? I I * * * 1 | The Benefits of War. i The horrors and losses in wan i 5 seem to outweigh by far the benefits, j but upon close consideration we find! I much good which comes as a direct! J! result of this war. Wilson in his ? "ourteen terms included one which j provides for a permanent league of \ nations who shall band themselves \ together to uphold the other thir? } teen terms and to up hold interna\ tional law and to act as a board of arbitration in all future disputes f among nations. The existence of this . league will make it very difficult and dangerous for Etfiy nation to go to i war without the consent of the league and that consent is supposed l not to be given unless such nation has a just cause to fight. This will | naturally make wars few and far between. Germany and her allies, 1 as well as America and her allies. ; tve acceded to this clause making' j about fifteen nations which have j , signed it. The number includes the largest nations of the morld. America before the war had a t large foreign trade, but was almost * ! wholly dependent on the merchant j ; fleets of others nations to carry her t | goods abroad and to bring foreign p goods to her shores. During the war i | \merica has built an immense fleet ' ! oi mercnant snips ana nas trained 5 ! men to man them. After the war we 3 ! may expect ?a great increase in our . trade with foreign nations. 3 America during the war took conj trol of the railways because they i I failed to be equal to the task of r j handling the immense traffic which i j resulted from the war. This result > brought about a unification of all the . railways, better pay for railroad 5 men, more prompt handling of ? freight, and has generally benefited a the whole system. In a few years we J" may expect to have the very best system in the world, the most efficii, ent and the best paid. ft ...... . . , I Military training nas oiten oeen irged as benefiting the health of 5 young men by making them take exercise, live in the open, and keep ? regular hours. This cannot be disputed. Even those who do not get the training have the example of others before them, and in that way learn something of the rules of health. They are warned to take care of themselves. The trained men are helped mentally and learn o submit to discipline?a thing which every successful man must learn. The Allied nations having fought shoulder to shoulder will naturally be more friendly toward one another for many years to come; and within our own country the stern duty of V fighting out the war to a finish has V | done much to put out inefficient poli- V I ticians in the government and to V i put better men in. The good exam- > pie of these men will help to teach our voters to continue electing trained man instead of ordinary politicians, to government positions. The result will come about that our country will be much better governed in 311 the future than in the past. War is deplorable and in many ^ ways retards progress for generations; but even out of its confusion ^ and distress one is able to see in ne this, as in many former wars, some benefits. Lois Ferguson. ? sh Nina Bauknight cites as an element ^ wi of good the birth of good, literature, thus: There are many beautiful poems ?* a+nrioa en wVii'Ia twara are Pn >eing carried on. One which grew ve out of the present war and which has been published in a leading maga- thi zine, is as follows: thi "Over the Ocean, under the sky; " dl< Here on the field I lie. W Somewhere above are the stars, I know; te Somewhere the mountains' cooling vis snow, tin And the green corn growing'row on row. 2d ?ri I look to the sky, but it all shows red? At ?? UIaa/J TMTT of ?5t3 uain as inc uiuvu uihv uij uivwuv has bled. 'os I catch at my throat, and gasp, and fei choke? There is no air?only stench and ?lc smoke, an And wounds that sicken, and drip, ^ai and soak. Be I look again! There's a gleam of light? in Of something as clean as the snow, ou and white, It touches me on my breast and v J mi head? I think it's an angel with bright wings spread ^ To bear me to heaven when I am , . dead; I kiss the cross?and the Cross is . r> J Red. On the whole, the opinion in the " world of letters is that war causes a tremendous loss in the output and In the quality of literature. In spite of the inspiration given to a certain style and sentiment in writing during war time, it seems that the best things have been produced during prosperous, quiet times. * ? Lydia had spelled "second" on the board with a usurping vowel when the teacher asked sharply, "How do you spell (second,' Lydia?" Lydia with the most innocent and open-to-conviction tone in the world, - ... ... said: "Well, you know, tftat was just what I was wondering myself." While the high school pupils miss Mr. Plaxco, they welcome Miss Magill, who has returned to her classes after a period of illness. An automobile full of girls rode out to Miss Magill's home one day before her return. The pupils showed daily their interest in her recovery. There is j :io doubt that this solicitude was very real, but perhaps it was accelerated by the fact that Mr. Plaxco assigned somewhat longer lessons than are usually assigned. V V V SANTUC NEWS. \ V V Santuc, Dec. 4.?Mrs. A. J. Morrison and children of Columbia, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. W. E. Morrison and family Miss Mary Kay spent from Friday | until Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Kay at Cold Springs. Mr. and Mrs. James Haddon and! ^aby spent Thanksgiving with Mr. rnd Mrs. Jesse Richey. ^ Mr. Henry Cochran and sister, Miss Maggie, spent Friday at Mr. M. B. Kay's. Mr. Clarence Khv sj/cnb Mondayj nitjht with his brother, W. F. Kay. Misses Margaret and Sara Abies' ^pent Sunday with Miss LoiS Morrison. Mrs. E. J. Botts spent Friday with Mrs\ Eugene Higgins of Long Cane. ?Buy W. S. S.? VVVVVVVWVVVVVV I V LOWNDESVILLE NEWS V j v I Lowndesville, Dec. 5.?Dr. Kirktrick took Mr. S. B Cook to Au- s sta last Monday, where he will en- * r a sanitarium for treatment. Mr. * >ok has been ill for several months ' d it is hoped that he will be reared to his wonted health in a * ort time. 1 Mr. J. T. Daniel has returned from * ;lanta, where he went to consult a rve specialist. !He is very much c nefited by his trip. Sergt. James L. Ellis, after a ^ ort visit to home-folks, has rep rned to Fort Oglethorpe, where he ^ 11 remain until demobilized. , 1 / The latest report from the bedside j Mr. Olin Darricotte, irtio is ill of j eumonia at Camp Wadsworth, is a ry unfavorable. ( Mr. Keys Harper, a riiember of h b Senior class at Clemson, spent g a week-end with home folks. v Mr. and Mrs. Allan Keyser of Pen- s ?ton, spent last Sabbath with Mr. t , W. Thompson and family. Mr. Lewis Lawrence, who has been * mobilized at Camp Gordon, was a , litor to friends in town for a short ie. i Mrs. Powell of Central, has arriv-1 to gpend the winter with her anddaughter, Mrs. Ernest Allen. Mr. E. J. Huckabee has gone to lanta to purchase stock for hia 1 ibles. He had the misfortune to; e a fine horse from pneumonia a v days ago. Mr. Max Below is moving to his 1 home in the Nation this #eek, d Mr. John Phillips is moving his nily into the house vacated by Mr Tow. Game warden Huckabee is having -.siderable trouble with both white colored boys lor hunting witht license. Fines, amounting to a ndred dollars, were collected last turday. Parents, if they will pert their children to hunt, should ce them to obey the game law. Mrs. Theron Allen and her inter;ing family have been on a visit her father, Mr. E. W. Harper. Miss Virginia Latimer went to igusta last Monday to seo VOh, ? LEAV1 ABB We wish to the Datronaere < X c/ by the people this method of to sell out our uary 1 Oth. "V on goods suita many useful ai they are picket FOUNTAIN PENS POCKET KNIVES SILVERWARE SHEET MUSIC TOILET SETS UMBRELLAS CUT GLASS TRAYS ** O TL/1 ivir. <x ivi] Parties having call for same Jp.by" at the Grand. Miss Treva Spee rhas res:gncd her >osition at the central office and Mr t. W. Bonds has taken her place. Mr. Jep Wilson has been in town or the past week, building concrete teps to the dwellings of Mr. D. L. Barnes and Dr. Kirkpatrick, which lave added greatly to the looks of heir residences. Miss Treva "Speer has resigned her >e glad to learn that she will remain n Lowndesville and not move to Georgia. Miss Mattie Lee Harper, who has barge of the telephone office at Star, pent Thanksgiving with homo folks. Mrs. J. T. Latimer has received >oth by private letter and by newslapers a highly gratifying report of ter nephew, Andrew borsey, Jr., of Atlanta, who is in Prance. This rourig soldier went over on General ^railing's boat, under his command nd has been awarded two Croix de Juerre medals and twice cited for iravery in battle. This yottng Geor;ian is the son of Mrs. Alice Dorsey, srho was reared at Lowndesville, but ince her marriage, has lived in Atlan a. The farmers are not putting their otton on the market, but are holding Not Only The But at the present pri GRANITE is the CHEA construction of WALLS, NEYS and UNDERPIN* or on the Farm. We can furinsh prompt class of work drilled and I two men can handle. Carload Shi, WRITE FC OGLESBY G ELBERTON TELEPHONE [NG EVIL ? express our < and support give of this commu announcing thai stock between fye are offering ible for gifts. I rticles. Come E i over. WRIST WATCHES LA VALLIERES DIAMONDS BRACELETS WATCHES LOCKETS CLOCK RINGS rs. R. K1KJ repair work he : before January for better prices. The warehouse is full and the old Methodist church is being used to store cotton in. As the epidemic is completely stamped out both the town and community schools are in full session now. The Diamond Spring school is in charge of Mr. Bunyon Scoggins. Miss Lollie Scoggins .is, teaching the Kennedy-school, and Miss Ellen Lawrence has the Ridge school. Subscribe to The Press and Banner : OPEN NOSTRILS! END \t A COLD OR CATARRH !: i J ^ ? '< r i? > How To Get Relief When Head .< > , | and Noae are Stuffed Up. ;< y ImMM ?M?M1 Count fifty! Y<mr Cola In head 'or catarrh ffisappeam. Tonr clogged nostrils will open, the air paaeagea t>f y<tar head will clear and yon can ttaalhe lreely.' No more snuffling, lurtriasg, mucous discharge, dryness or headache; no straggling for breath at night. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Dalm {rs\m rrnnr ilmocrtit and inniT ft little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nofttrlla. It penetrates throorgb every air paasagB'of ths'heafl, *oothmg land healing the swollen or Inflamed muoous membrane, giving you instant reliat Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't stay etulfed-np and miserable. Belief is surcC I Mao! DivviUa t iHUdi if 111 aurc r ce oif building materials I PEST you can use in the I FOUNDATIONS, CHIM- I JTNGr for Houses in Town S ;ly stone suitable for this t B iroken in sizes that one and 9 pments Only 1 )R PRICES. i RANITE CO. I , GEORGIA | :S 2602?208. | LE appreciation of I :n our business I inity and take I t we are going I now and Jan- I liberal savings I _,ook over our I 1ARLY before I LEATHER HAND BAGS . H LODGE EMBLEMS. B9 SEARCHLIGHTS ^ LUNCH BOXES H WATCH FOBS SH BATTERIES |H CHAINS COMBS SB iCWQOD || re will please I I Oth, 1919. I