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wNRR!. MNi .. " .i./. LU.i " A NEW FOOD A NEW SMILE A smile of complete satisfaction follows the first taste of New Post Toasties---the superior corn flakes made by a new, patented process. These delicious new breakfast flakes are fea tured by the tiny bubbles-- -raised on each flake by thedick, intense heat of this new art of toasting. Si'he New Toasties are not "chaffy" in the package; they don't mush down when milk or cream is added, like common "corn flakes;" and they have a delicious new flavour not found in corn flakes of the past. They're well worth trying---these New Post Toa sties Sold by Grocers everywhere. MOTOR CARf 1 Consult the impression uppermost in your mind and you will find that you think of this car as very conscientiously made. This very general and instinctive feel ing is, of course, a reflection of the actual facts. People think of the car in this light because of of their high opinion of Dodge Brothers as manufacturers. And that good opinion is justified by the perfor mance of the car. The gasoline consumption is unusually low. The price of the Touring Car or Roadster comn plcte, including regular mohair top, is $950 (f. o. b. Detroit.) Piedmont Motor Co. J1. R. SMATHERS, Manager Maxwell Ave. Write oer Phone~c for dem.-or~t: at oni. Greenwood, S. C. Luzianne Coffee will satisfy further guarantee that one/ tire contents of one can ac ording to directions, you are not absolutely ~atisfied on both these points, throw the empty can away and get your money back from the grocer. HeI will give it to you with out quibble. Buy this better and cheaper coffee today. Write for premium catalog. WOMAN AND AUTO. Local Agent Says There's Nothing Like It, "Who has said a word about what good roads are going - to do for wo men," asks, Doe Swygert, of Trayn ham & Swygert, distributors for the Haynes "Light Six." "We have had dinned in our ears that good roads are going to profit the general public by cutting hauling costs, vivifying the country, boom ing real estate values, but no one has so much as intimated that good roads have benefits in store particularly for women. They might well feel that they have been slighted. "Women and automobiles have been marked as boon companions. A few women drove cars when they were cranked by hand. Bitt since the ad vent. of the self Starter, and improved steering devices, the connections be tween milady and her automobile have eersicially close, for wotuen may now take their' cars and go where they please, so long as streels and roads are good. "'There is no getting around the fact that t.he automobile has made 11 pret tier, healthier, and more self reliant woman. The woman driver today can thread through traille expertly, and she is beating chauffers at their own tricks in city driving. "Just now few women venture tak ing their cars out over country roads alone. Thoroughfares outside city limits have offered rigors and discom forts, that she is unwilling to put up with on a pleasure spin. Usually the trip out through the country is post potted until Saturday or Sunday when a man can preside at the wheel. "Level and solid roads, kept up the year around, are going to place the sunshine and good altr of the country at the feminine driver's pleasure ev ery day in the week. Highway im provements will make a wholesomer woman by extending her touring radi us in parts where she needs most to go. 'There is nothing that will smooth out a tangle of household affairs like a dash through fields and woodlots for a good breath of fresh morning altr. "The Man of the house will find that a morning spin will place a pair of as sparkling eyes and a face as flush with color opposite him at lunch as he is likely to see for (lays , to come.' MOTHER! GIVE CHILD "SYRUP OF FIGS" IF TONGUE IS COATED If cross, feverish, sick, bilious, clean little liver and bowels. Children love this "fruit laxative", and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not. stop playing to cmlpty the bowels, and the result is, they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one lecome(s cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat, sleep or aet/ naturally. hreath is had, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomiac hfael e or diarrhoea. Listen, .\other! . e if tongue is 'oatel, then give a te.;sJooniful of''"California Syrutp of lFlgs,'' and ill a few hioturts all the c'onstitiatedl waste, sour' Ile and unidi gest ed tood Passes Oult of' thle syst em, andiu you have a well, playfttulI hil d aga, n. Al ilionsi of miothetrs give "'Califoria Syru ofi~ 01 igs'" he('aiise it Is perfectly harimless: chiildlrn love it. and it tneer fails 1o an't on the stotmach, liver amid hiowels. A\sk your drullggist form a 501-centt 1hot tle of "':allfoniia 8yr'up of lFigs'', which has full dir'cct ions fonr babies, (chlilren oft all ages and for grouwn-upis plainly pit(ed on the hot the. Itewarte oif coutn terfteits sold here. (Get. the( getituine, atny.'' liefuse any ot her' kind with * * * * ** * * e *** * e * . T 11 ItiliiI' OF1 iiESPE'("'T. * -: * * * * . * * * . 4: ** (Whtera:ts, oni~ Februiary Tilh, it. pleaised iiimebe of l,:,urents lsaige~i No. I::, anid while wte depliore the death of' thIe lurother, we hioie ie has entered that ('ter nalI lodge' abhove. Tlherefore, he it llesoilved I. Th'lat we tender 0our (ldeest sym1pathIy to thle berecft wIfe and family, who now survive hinm. 2. That. a page of our record book be inscr'ib~ed to hIs memory. 3. That a copy of these resolutions be sent to thme bereaved wife and famn ily and a copy to the two county pa pers, the Herald and the Advertiser, for publicatIon. L. (}. Roff, Trhos. D). D~owney, J. F. Tolbert, Committee. F~it Y'OIl ('IIILD'S COUJGH. If y'ourm child has a cold, nose runs 0o' coughs much get a small bottle of Drm. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. Its a pleasant Pine-Tiar-Hfoney syrup, just what children like and just the medi cine to soothe the cough and check the cold. After taking, children stop ftretting, sleep good and areo soon on tireliy Well. In alst on D)r. Bell's Pine Tar-Holley. 25c at your druggist. New line of Table Crockery juset re ceived. *3. Mf. & E2. HI. WILKES & 00, COLLAR BUTTON SAVED LIFE Either Carpenter Had Remarkable Exporlence or He Had More Than a Shade on Ananias. The ancient Carpenter held a small object between the thumb and first finger of his left hand and pointed at it impressively with the index finger of his right hand. "For this little article," he ex claimed, "I wouldn't take a farm." As the ancient Carpenter is the ac knowledged verisimilitude champion of the Curbstone club, the other mem bers gathered about him to hear his latest effort. "Looks to me like a collar button," the fat plumber observed. "And so it is." "What is so valuable about it?" "It saved my life once." "Ilow?" .It was when I became lost in the Grea North woods." "w ere you ever lost in the Great North woods?" "I should say I was; for over two seeks, and without a thing to eat in my knapsack." "How did you manage to subsist?" "That's where this trinket comes in." "Indeed ?" The ancient Carpenter gazed affec tionately on the little object in his hand as he replied, amidst breathless silence: "Yes, the little bit of bone saved my life. For two long weeks I didn't have a thing to eat but collar-button soup." The club members, as in one voice fervently exclaimed: "Poor old Ananias! "-Youngstown Telegram. PLAYING CARDS LONG IN USE Their Origin Lost in Obscurity-Have Been Put to a Great Variety of Uses. The origin of playing cards is lost in obscurity. They are generally as signed to the Orient, but they are now almost universal in currency and popularity. The backs of old English cards were generally plain, and thus it was that when pa'per was scarce or expensive, old cards were too useful to be destroyed. They were, on the contrary, used for various purposes. Thus they are often found in the bindings of old books, where they were preserved. The old cards were also sometimes cut up for paper dolls. They were also used as cards of in vitation and as risiting cards. Thack eray refers to this in "Henry Esmond." The earliest examples of wood cuts were intended for playing cards. They antedate the famous St. Christopher wood cut that is sometimes credited with being the earliest. In the olden days playing cards, in stead of knitting, were used by spec tators in playhouses as an amusement while waiting for the performance to begin. Such widely differing materials as silver, leather, paper, wood, parch ment, cardboard, deerskin and even buffalo hide have all been used in mtking playing cards. The Japanese Woman. The Japanese woman exists pri marily for and~ in the family. WVe still adhere to t he old way of thinking that hier- natural habitat is the home, and that her appearance at the polls is as uninatural as on the battlefield. Lot it be far from mec to give an impres sion, alreadly too pr1evAalent abroad and at home, thant wo look upon wvomen only as cogs in the iachiner-y of the kitchen or as moreie puppets.' andl orna ments in (lie parlor,. writes D~octor Nitrobe in the Japanese Nation. The personality of the fair- sex is not as clearly recognized among us as it ouight to be; but I ama confident that it will come with miore general en lightenment of public conscience. As it is at present, thec aim of femiale education is to make "a good wife and a wise mnotheir.'" a ster-eotyped shib holet h on thie 1lips of all educators and of the nation, ci rcumscribing the endl and aimm of .womma's life. Accordinag to this' doctinei , it is not as per'son, hut as' wife anad motlher-, that woman is to bie (eduIcatdl, Infection Through Cigar Gutters. Wh'len it is recognizedl how easily the cigar cutter may 1)0 the nmeans of spreading infection, andl infection of a dangerous nature, (lie days of this article of convenience wvill be num bered. To illustrate: a person wvill often, after he has first held his cigar in his mouth, step to the counter and put his cigar into the cutter. This thoughtless yet dangerous habit is so common that it can be witnessed time after time at every cigar stand. Un doubtedly it has been one of the prin cipal means of spreading infection among those who smoke cigars, and it is high time that an agent so potent for harm was abolished.-American Medicine. Aztecs Favored Turquoise. At the time of the Spanish conquest undler Cortez, the Aztecs of old Mexi co employed turquoise and "chalchi -huitl," a similar stone of greenish hue, in many of their ceremonies, These Spaniards, entering the region now oo. cupied by New Mexico and Arizona, found the turquoise there also held in high regard, and recent excavations in the ancient pueblos,and cliff dwelling. of these states have revealed many tu'rquoise ornaments which reflect er-edit upon artistic agility of those early workers. 40 S. PPOSE YOU GOT SICK, WOULi'Nt IT BE GRATIFYING TO HAVE MONEY IN THE BANCC. YOUR MONEY IS YOUR BEST FRIEND- TAKE CARE OF IT. SOME DAY IT WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU. OUR BANK IS A SAFE PLACE Why do ships carry life boats? To be on the SAEE SIDE shuuld anything happen. Things do happen---sudden unlooked for things. Think of it, death, sickness or calamity! That's when you NEED a bank to go to and draw some of the money you should be putting there now, where it is safe for OLD AGE or ADVERSITY. Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank. Enterprise National Bank of Laurens N. B. DIAL, Pres. C. H. ROPER, Cashier PINS! PINS! FOR ALL PURPOSES HA T PINS, SCARF PINS, VEIL PINS, BABY PINS, ALL KINDS OF PINS FOR ALL PURPOSES, IN PLAIN AND FANCY DESIGIIS, LODGE, FRATERNITY AND SOCIETY EMB1.EAS OF ALL KlND)S. GOLD AND SILV'ER SE TTINGS WITH! GEN.. UINE STONES. ALSO MAANY IN LESS EXPEASIVE SET TINGS. COME IN AND) SEE OUR BIG DJISPLA Y. REMIEM BER?, WE NEVER "STICK" YOU oN TUlE PRICE, HUT G;IVE YOU FULL VALUE ON E VERY A RTI':LE YOU BU Y. FLEMING BROS. TIlE RELIAHLE JEWE'SLERS A SPRING BLOSSOMING The eye is relieved from the sombre shades of winter wear at the appearance of the br'ighter' and more variegated tints for spring. The goods just opened have been personally selected in the northern Smarkets and embrace the latest effects for the season. Many choice designs are dis played in colored fabrics and the plain and frncy weaves in all white show nice tex tures. One of the most difficult lines to se cure this season is Hosiery of foreign make, forfunately we succeeded in getting our old standard stock, numbers that have been so satisfactory in former seasons. And this can also be said of Table Linen. A complete line of Notions including the latest ideas in Neckwear. Owing to the high cost of materials, the man ufactue ers have notified the jobbers to advance prices, and the customer at the retail counter wili make a wise move to buy early, or later pay the advanced price.. We solicit an inspection of the new goods opened here, Respectfully, W. G. WILSON & CO.