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R- ^ r VA?OfOH, AT It, HAD CODE OF RULES v. is CnM i iatiU Mottoes Guided Him Throogh Lite As thousands of patriotic A moreens will this year observe the anniversary of George Washington's birth?February 22?with befitting ceremonies and still greater reverence, it may prove of Interest to here present some - of the original rules for his future conduct, which he tried to live up to the rest of his life. He called them "Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company." There were fifty-four in all. Here are a few of them to show you the earnestness and thougfift of a boy Of onlv 13 vnarfl nf a arc "Speak not when others speak, sit a** when others stand, end walk not when others stop." "Turn not your back to others, especially in speaking; Jog not the table or desk on which another reads or writes; lean not on any one." "Show not yourself glad at the misfortune of another, tho he were your enemy." "When a man does all he can, tho he succeeds not well, blame not him that did it." "Speak not injurious words either in jeet nor earnest. Scoff at none, altho they give occasion." AND NOW THEY ARE COOKING TOBACCO TO MAKE IT BETTER For n good many years The American Toba ccc Company have been conducting a series of experiments having as their object the improvement of smoking tobaccos. And it is interesting to know that one of the greatest of their discoveries was one of the simplest, and that was, that cooking or toastmg tobacco improved it in every *?iuvwk ?vwo uu|iiuvca them. They tool: a real Burley tobacco, grown ia iLie -ountry; toasted it as you would tecrt h? nio":3te: cd :L; to replace the _I .v.. .^ture c?:vea-oft" by toasting; nde jv-to cigarettes, called them "LIT 1 TV STRIKE, the toasted cigarette.** e;r * .IT e.5. Jiemto the public. \'L L_r; suit has been the greatest demand c " r created for any tobacco product in a ; _.iar length of time. The change produced by toasting is not only r^'?st wholesome, but the flavor is IP rail/ improved, just as cooking improves t" at, for e.a.mple, I ^ PAID BY ^ "jCheBankof, . ilW DistinctiveService" J I ForVs Send for Booklet, "How Do Every day sees an increase the activities of women. Ii is therefore of the great' mat main the right bunking ct cial teatnre of women's itccoui ful advice and assistance and exclusive use. iOtel)eop of Bill CAU?FHEIMFJ JO Six Tears Ago, Thinking She Mij She Is a Well, Strong Woi Her R Roys? City, Tex.?Mrs. Mary Kilman, of this place, says; "After the birth of my little girl*. .my side commenced to hurt me. I had to go back to bed. We called the doctor. He treated me...but I got no better. I got worse and worse until the misery was unbearable.. .1 was In bed for three months and suffered such agony that I was Just drawn up in a knot... I told my husband If he would get me a bottle of Cardui I would try it 1 commenced taking It, however, that evening I called my family about me... for I knew I could not last siany days unless I had a change for i - i miii ma? "Datraet not from Mhm, b?t net- " i tlwr? be oevMlTt in comnmdini." 'Associate yovnelf with m?n of I food Quality if you ootoon your own reputation, for it U hotter to he alon? than in bad company." "Speak no evil of the absent, for it is unjust." - i "Use no reproachful language i against any one, neither curses nor i reviling*." ([ "Be not Immodest in urging your friends to discover a secret." "Undertake not what you cannot i perform, but be careful to keep your promise." "When you speak of God or His attributes let it be seriously, in re- ! verence and honor." T-BW tA Wean e1U? ? W? A -mwv. nvv|f Mil?C III /UUI Ur?UV that little, spark of celestial fire called conscience." NOTICE The undersigned offer a reward of $100 for the apprehension with proof to convict of any person who 1 hauls, cuts or takes wood from our lands. 1 R. F. BOOTH. S. A. BOOTH. W. P. ROZIER. 2-14-3t. 1 NO REST?NO PEACE I There's no peace and little rest i for the one who suffers from bad ' back, and distressing urinary disor- < ders. Dillon people recommend ' Doan's Kidney Pills. Be guided by 1 their experience. 1 W. H. Stackhuse, salesman, 3 4 Hampton St., Dillon, says: "I had (Kidney trouble and my kidneys were so weak I couldn't control the kidney J secretions. I suffered constantly from backache and pains through my ' loins and if I sat down for a little while, it was all I could do to get up. 'Whenever I stopped or lifted .sharp 'twinges were sure to catch me. I I tried various medicines, but found no ! >n|i/.r .,, ; i t i? ?-i-> - ICUCI ll IIV i I 1 ucgtlll lUKlUK UUilLl 3 i Kidney Pills. They strengthened my , back and corrected al the other kidney troubles." Over two years later Mr. StackJ house said: "I willingly verify the statement I have previously given (telling about Doan's. I still use this ' medicine occasionally when my kidi neys bother me and I always receive the best of results." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get 1 Doan's Kidney Pills?the same tlia? l. Mr. Stackhouse had. Foster-Milburn 'Co.. Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?2-14-2t. SUHmH J omen es it Benefit Me?" ] in the breadth and scope of ] i 1 est ini|K)i*tance for women to < miieelions. We make a spe- 1 its, uifording practical, help- 1 furnishing facilities for their ladsBatitt UMILY JER BEDSIDE [lit Die, Says Texas Lady, Bat New nan and Praises Cudn For s/>Awarw WW f VI J the better. That was six years ago and I am still here and am a well, strong woman, and I owe my life to Cardul. I had only taken half the bottle when I began to feel better. The misery In my side got less... 1 continued right on taking the Cardnl until I had taken three bottles and I did not need any more for I was well and never felt better In my life... I have never had any trouble from that day to this." Do you suffer from headache, backache, pains In sides, or other discomforts, each month? Or do you feel weak, nervous and fagged-out? If so, give Cardui, the woman's tonic, a trial. J. 71 flww^vWcVNNrWHMn V J m.? i. Worth af hiaala% NhMi Mi Mm Fim Vahas Wlaa Man 9m d< Maw aa WaaMh. ii ?? la "Any man, la order to aiMsia Mai M success, moat hare the rtfkt Mm fr bout money. If be taunt the rtfht ui I dear about money, ha la not aolld la hi character, obaervea a writer la the u American Magazine. A man may easily jbe happy, successful and highly regarded on 91300 dollars or lean a year; " but. If he la It la because he knows how to handle those $1300, and realises the power that Is In each of those 11,800, and keeps In st*''t the fact that . It takes 100 cents er 20 nickels, or 10 j, dimes, to make each one of those fl,- j 800. a "On the other flhnd, a man may P hare an annual Income of $60,000 and j* be neither successful nor happy nor V highly regarded. If this Is true of Urn, 4 It Is bees us'* he has not the right Ideas -j about money. ~ ri "Here Is the thing that applies to my L experience and to every man's: Money ? Is the symbol of worth and nower. If * your money is handled correctly. If 2 you regard money as a constructive J thing, something to be used beneficial- ^ ly for yourself, your family and yo?r ia community, something with which to di build up and produce improvements, L you ure on solid ground; nothing can shake you, nothing, outside of earth- ** quakes and fires, can ruin you flnandally. Let me put it this way: The ? use a man makes of his money after ^ he has got his hands on It is the meas- 0 re of his worth." PRINCE OF TAVERN WRITERS 1 "Good Qld Horace" Positively Popular J In the American Meaning, Declares 1 Genial Midwest Critic. Old Horatius Flnccus of all the an- f cient bards is nearest to our modern ^ sense. He is positively "popular" in the 0 American meaning. Nearly every rhym ster translates or parodies an ode or fi fwo T-Tn lo vorr nffinlflvn able and appropos, so to speak. We I understand him and feel certain that he would understand us were he here. He would he conducting a "colyura" of quips and jests upon some editorial page or else be n better James Whitcomb Riley were he one of us right now. To be sure, he would have to alter his morals u mite to serenade Lalage and to babble of Falernlan a little less, but In general Horace would be "right there with the push." Old Horace is a brother and a sport, as well as all men who read him feel, observes a writer In the Minneapolis Journal. And that is why so many are strong for him still. Just as the late Eugene Field was. That Sabine farm of his, some miles out of Caesarean Home and a long time back In the centuries. Is as familiar to ua as "out to old Aunt Mary's." 1 Measuring High Temperature. Tin, which melts at about 450 degrees Fahrenheit, has been applied to the measurement of high temperatures in the same way that mercury, melt lng at 38 degrees below zero, is used for measuring ordinary atmosphere temperatures. Instead of being placed In a glass bulb with closed tube, says the Nebraska Stuto Journal, the melted tin is contained in a graphite bulb having an open tube, and readings are made by lowering into the tube a plunger of a metal with a high melting point. When the plunger touches the tin, an electric circuit is closed, giving a bell or other signal, the position of the plunger showing the temperature. This new form of pyrometer may be used In either of two ways (1) to give the temperature at any time by sliding down the pointer until M the electric signal is set off, or (2) K to announce when any predetermined M temperature is reached by setting the K pointer at the proper number of de- M grees on the scale. As the melted tin, X like melted mercury, is found to ex- M pand at a very even rate, the lndlca- m tions are li id to be notably accurate. M Men and Watches. V Special talent often makes fine V spurts ahead and genius sometimes m soars grnndly, but it is the steady-go- V Ing sort of worker who gets the most M done In the end, and is the most reli nble. It Is with men as it is with m their watches?the most reliable and serviceable are the onc-s steadily at work, a writer on the Canadian Her aid observes. There is a Pennsylvania railroad engineer who has retired ofi J| a pension after 48 years of service. A "I have carried one watch for more X than 28 years," he says, "and it always V kept the right time. A good engineer M must have a good watch; it does the X most important part of his work." It M is sold of this engineer that he has B been an exceptionally sober, orderly, M steady-going man, whose healtL has al- B ways been good and his record always f clean. But doesn't this go without V saying, when we know that his watch J always kept the right time? V Don't Betray Confidence. "Now you mustn't repeat this, for I i promised not to tell anybody." When a girl prefaces a breach of confidence In this fashion, she will not deceive herself into thinking that she has made things all right, not at least if she stops to think, says a writer. For to pass a secret on to one, Is as much violation ns to tell all, and moreover, If she herself is so little bound by a pledge, why should she expect another to abide by It. It you are given to betraying confidences, do not pretend that yon make It all right by assuming that your confidante Is more honorable than you are. Wittii Is tankr Hm that ths.aa- ] >r1f i ^ClmrtW Bsltosk fcii wjtt* ] eft. a ititainhly formerly doing < ?sinew at Ltk?rl?w, 8. C.,;aad that ] on and ilnoo the 1st day of Jansry. ltlt th? aald Charlie ulioek j is no Interest or connection with i id bnsineoa. CHARLIE BULLOCK. J 7-11. i ?????? ( i The Constipation Evil There ia no nflment to which the , tody is subject that is so far reaching > a its injurious effects as constipation, t means a congestion of i !:a ooweta ( ad usually causes sick I.-idache, i sins In the bock, sour stomach, soi- < >w complexion, offensive breath or MS of appetite. When vou suffer rom any of these ill*, take a few | oees of Granger Liver Regulator, j rou will bo surprised how quickly it i bsteres your normal health. Granger J iver Regulator contains no calomel j nd produces none of its distressing < fleets. It has, however, all the cor- J active value of calomel, and may bo j reety given to children as well as to i Suits. Granger Liver Regulator is j lao free from alcohcL A box of it , ists long, and a few doses relieve or- < inary cases of biliousness. Granger | iver Regulator is sold by druggists j rerywhere at 26c a box. Refuse all i ibstitutes as there is no other medi- S ne just like Granger Liver Regulator. * i __ Big. stj who knc advantage, ha M J The STUDY these i it is to your aJv; A Comparis of the cost of plant food cial fertilizer and manure. Basic Price Per Acid Ammonia Potash Commercial Feri Analysis? 8-3-0 cost per ton. . . 8-3-3 cost pe*" ton 10-2-0 cost per ton. . . Manure From C Jackson Analysis? Acid, 0.45 at $1.25. . Ammonia, 0.68 at $7.oc Potash, 0.58 ?! $6.00. . ACTUAL WORTI Oi SOME LARI Skottowe Wannaniake Julius H. Jahns, Char J. H. Hydrick, Orang Nathan Evans, Mario A. E. Gonzales, Colun A. B. Gross, Gross St L. D. Jennings, Sumt< i M. E. Rutlind, Batesb And many others or I known. I 1 J Make arrangeme | w< [ Agents V Powt I *jJUWWM * fctiign m * ^S^BB The Reliable Fertilizer for Tobacee, ~|| Cora and cotton. Ashepoo Anuaottiated Goods?No s Potash. Ashepoo Guano, running fron 1 to I ' ' J per cent in Potash. Also Add Phosphate. No better goods offered and it will pay yon to place your orders early. M. A. STUBBS, Agent 1 | DILLON, S.C. J ! f i -i ; rtT?tttt?ti ttttt?tmrntiitifiinitminoooeoesi fCCESSFUL farmers, men 1 iw linw fn -fidni-p fn A-:-k-.* f w ww WW ?v AXE1 V** W vvr U11WX1. UVD V m ve booked large orders for - ( vnure j 1 Cheapest Fertilizer I ' facts carefully and you will see wkere . antage to follow tkeir example. | We will be glad to make credit ar- X ' OH rangements with responsible parties, or m we will accept wood in exchange for in commer- manure. Wood to be delivered during . m thp cummpr mnnfVic ' ? itlVIIVUJl J We specialize on car lot shipments. - j . Cars average 33 tons. Buy a car in Utlit conjunction with your neighbor and .. $1.25 save frieght. M -57-00 Right now is the time to use manure. M // .$6.00 Write us today if you are interested in m prompt delivery. We already have nu llizer merous orders booked for promt shipinent, but will use our best efforts to V qq make delivery in accordance with your m instructions. m:. .$54.00 Wl. .$30.00 Shipment Made from Either Point S amp CAMP JACKSON I Columbia, S. C. J ' 476 camp wads worth i ~ Spartanburg, S. C. 1 1 OF MANURE BASED ON COMMERCIAL FERTILIZER $8 SO m ur Price Less Than Half That 1 EE ORDERS BOOKED RECEKTLY 1 r, St. Matthews, a car a day until further notice. W. leston, 500 tons V eburg, 500 tons m n? cars M tibia, 500 tons M :ation, 1,200 tons % jr, 2,000 tons C urg,. . . , 1,000 tons m ders from large farm operators who are equally well nts with us now for immediate as 1 .11 ii* * sii d9 summer aenvery M /anted in Unoccupied Territory 1 ill Fuel Co. j * olumbia, S. C. I -.*4+ . .' V ^ . 4