University of South Carolina Libraries
Quitt Laxatives, Purges;_Try NR jNRTelIght-Tomorrow Fel Right 'It Is a mistakq to continually dos4 yourself with so-called laxative pils, calomel, oil purged and cathartics and force bowel action. It weakens the bowels and liver and makes con stant dosln? necessary. Why don t you begin right today to evercome your constipation and get your system in such shape that daily purging will be unnecessary? You can do so it you get a 25c box of Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) and take one each night for a week or so. NR Tablets do much more than merely, cause pleasant easy bowel ac tion. This medicine acts upon the digestive as well as eliminative organs -promotes good digestion, causes the body to get the nourishment from all the food you eat, gives you a good, hearty appetite, strengthens the liver. overcomes biliousness, regulates kidney and bowel action and gives the whole body a thorough cleaning out. This accomplished you will not have to take medicine every day. An occasional NR tablet will keep your body in condi tion and you can always feel your best. Try Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) and prove this. It is the best bowel medicine that you can use and costs only 25c per box, containing enough to last twenty-five days. Nature's Rem edy (NRt Ti ,lets) Is sold. guaranteed and recommended by your druggist. LAuEM S BRUQ CO., Laurens, S. C. Ca LO Tomrro Fel Right 12' Box ' Bottled Health GREY ROCK ALES (litra Wet) Delicious and guaranteed to re lieve dyspepsia and indigestion Mnde with the eelebrat ed GRVY V tOCK Min- - cral Water. t% rite for venter booklet. Order a case ,today from your grocer. C. C. Featherstone W. B. Knlgi FEATHERSTONE A KNIGHT Attorneys at Law Laurens, S. C. All Business Intrustedl to Our Cai Will Have Prompt and Carefut Attei tion. Office over Palmetto Bank Mr. Featherstone will spend Wedne day of each week in Laurens. W. M. NASH SURVEYOR Terracing :: Levelin NOTARY PUBLIC Gray Court, S. C. Dr. T. L. Timmerman DENTIST Laurens, South Carolina Office in Peoples Bank Building UNDERTAKING C. E. KENNEDY & SOI Undertakers and Emnbalmei Calls answered any hour day or nig Simpson, Cooper & Babb Attorneys at Law. Wilt Practice in all State Courts Prompt Attention Olven All Busine Blackwell & Sullivar ATTORNEYS AT LAW P'romipt Attention Olven All Busine Money to Loan on Real Estate Teiephone 850 Office in Simmrons Building ANTI-[ERM[NT CHILDREN STOMACH u.d BOWI.S NerffP. a~ t se .nenae . "7if,... tN A HERO OF LEGEND : King Arthur Never Proved to Be Real Personage. -v- d Early Saxon Chronicles Shed No Light It on His Personality-His Burial Place Found by the Abbot of Glastonbury. d The story of King Arthur, rich in 1 the poetic elerment, is weak on the historical side. That a hter-kIng, an swering itn some respects to the de scriptions in British ballads, had ex- r istence. Is possible, for It setts un- o likely that so many associations should b clingl around an utterly mythical tper- t sonagte. Yet he has no mention what ever in the Saxon Chronicle, whose page are rich in allusions to British kina:s struggling for freedom against a the Anglo-Saxon invaders: and our anin authority on the subject Is the aec(ouint weltten. six oenturi-e later than the reputed period of King Ar thur, by Geoffry of Monmtouth, whose narratives no one can' accept seriously as truth. The legends, collected and handed dowT to us by Sir ''hotnas Malory, a t'riter of Edward IV's reign, were printed by Caxton under the title of "Morte d'Arthur." When Ilenry II, In 1177, was in Waales, receiving the submission of the princes, he chanced to hear the deeds of Klag Arthur sung by the Welsh. and was told the exact place of the hero's burial at Glastonhury. Some years afterward the abbot of Glaston bury, the king's nephew. searched for the body, with what result let Giraid.is ('ami:rensls, described in Camlen's "Britannia" as "an eye witness," tell us: "At the depth of seven feet a huge, broad stone, whereon a leaden cross was fastened on the part that Iay downward, in rude and barbarous let ters, this inscription in Latin was written upon that side of the lead that was toward the stone, 'Ilere lies buried King Arthur in Avalon Isle.' Digging deeper they discovered his body in the trunk of a tree, the hones of grent bigness. Ills Queen Guini vere, a lady of passing beauty, lay by him, whose tresses of hair, in color like gold, seemed iperfect an'd whole until it was touchted, but then showed itself to he htst." When Glastonbury abbey was ande a ruin in Henry VIii's time the re - mains of King Arthur and his queen twere ruthlessly swept away. It was on ndbury hill, In Somerset. the famed Camelot of the Arthurian ro mance, that the British king pro e pared for his great stand against the Anglo-Saxon foe; and the name of Arthur still clings to the locality in "Arthur's Lane" and "Arthur's We ll." a- In the battle, almost the only event of his life to be regarded as historlcal fact. Arthur seems to have come out of the darkness by which he is sur rounded. The Welsh songs are full of praises to his valor in the fight with Cedric, the Saxon king; "The Paxon Chronicle," unwilling, perhaps. to record a severe defeat, is silent upon the subject, but the result for a time. was a crushing blow to the invaders, and Cedric was never able to push his - way into Somerset.-I -ndon Tele graph. Newspapers in Spain. The Spatniah newspaper presents a problem to the American citizen who contemaplates an advertising campaign In the Spanish press. There ar'e 22 newspnpers printed In Mandrid, but as a rule these newspapers are supported by politi(enl, religIous or lndustr-iai ~jgroups, ail the adlvertiser is nteither 'the source of Incoaae aaor, as some times happens in consequence, the oh jec't of deferential admaIraation that he 40is in the United States. -The editor edits for a public more interestIng in local news than nay other. One mnust remeambear also that of the approximate 22,000,000 people In Spain, more than half are lillter ate andl rend~ no newspnpers at all. No eveaninag paper Issaues a Sunday edIt Ion, and no mor'ning pnper 'omets out ona Nionday, for Simay work of any kind in newspaper plants Is for hidden bay the goveranment. Statue to Balboa. US Panaa aIs to have a st atute of l - hona thle iscovere'r of thle Pnciftic ocean . Thae ('(ntriact for t he worak has ara ady baeen signedr'a at Maidr-Id. nnd Ithe amonn - aim'ent h as baeen intru-astedl to thla senly .. tar lDeniiliture. Thait there is to lhe ro uanduti hatsti' In thne mat ti-a Is sIgnal fi:;rl by t he fact fint he cont:raict doues maei:t unttil twvo years aftaer thae signintg oif thi' agrea'ament. Tihe opportutatlies for a amost effoctive plec' of w~or'k na'e anay, with th liiikeaness of thle amn n ove'rlooakintg the oca-ann of hIas di scovary. TPhie gandlose settingaL woulad seem to call for a grnnadllose nttor to adoami :nate lthe se-ae, says the Chriktrw Scelnce Mfonitor. Aviation in the Sahara. The' Fre-nch do not ri-rardIt a'rplranes as proifitalide for tise Itin'ommaaaer,'e (aver the Saharnr desert: it costs too onch to move the minerni weath I f athei territory by airplane whein pack mu's tandl -am-nels cant be aused inasta-od. Bt to suapple,ament thne dhesert iol lea' nndai to maintltain French pratige mli litiary avinators are w~ell wor'th while. Thle Aranh tribes have deep respect for iheri and take to their heels whenaever an airplane arrives. Navy Never Supplied President. No navnl man bas evor bmeli ,the parierny, while 14 of the Brer.'dentr we-re at one tinte or anothear conneructed with aka arna , IORLD ABOUT THE SAME oday, as in Ages Past, There Are Those Who Seek the Simple, "Old.Fashioned" Girl. A London correspondent, remarks ie Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser, iscovers a rollicking satire upon peo le of the day, that is of those of ut i1 'ho gravely shake our heads as we I ontemplate the manners and dress ' f maby young folk of the day. The rrespondent finds that in the Satur ay Review of fifty years ago the fol. )wing article was printed. "The girl of the period is a creature -ho dyes her hair and paints her face s the first articles of her personal eligion-a creature whose sole idea f life is fun, whose sole aim is un ounded luxury, and whose dress is he chief object of such thought and ntellect as she possesses. Her main ndeavor is to outlive her neighbors n the extravagance of fashion. If a ensible fashion lifts the gown out of he mud she raises hers. "All mien whose opinion is worth inving prefer the simple and genuine ir of the past, with her tender little vays and pretty bashful modesties, to his loud and rampant modernization, vith her false red hair and painted ;kin, talking slang as glibly as a man intl by preference leading the con "ersation to doubtful subject * * * All we can do, is to wait patiently until the national madness has passed out and women have come back again to the old English idea." Not a few writers and private talk ers have said things to the same effect as the foregoing. We hear it every day and hearing it we may accept it as a scathing indictment of the new girl, just as our forbears accepted the foregoing article as a just Indictment of the girls of a half century ago. Headstrong, forward and disobedi ent young people were known long before the time of the Review's edi torinal. Readers of the "Last Days of Pompeli," may recall the lamentations of a chief character that young peo. ple of his time were not as reverent and respectful in the presence of their elders as they had been in a former generation. Neither were they as re ligious. Certain it is that the Apostle Paul. in writing those epistolary messages thought it pertinent and timely to re mind women not to he too forward in church. As it appeared to him it was necessary for him, as an authority. to repress women, warning them specific ally against bobbing their hair. It seems that the race has always stopped to ask now and then: "What has become of the old-fashioned girl who," etc. Qe Soto's Route. Council Bend, Miss., has taken from Memphis, Tenn., tpe honor of being the point at which De Soto first saw the mighty Mississippi. Dr. J. C. Row laud of Jackson, Miss., who has traced De Soto's route clear across Mississippi, guided by the narratives of De Soto's companions. in which the topography of the country was fully described, has located the great In dian mound at which the adventurous explorer and his followers camped the night before they saw the Fa ther of Waters. On this, the highest Indian mound in Mississippi, a monu ment will be erected to De Soto. Doctor Rowland is convinced that De Soto first beheld the great river at CouncIl Bend. The explorer-'s fa mous trip from the point where Tampa, Fla., is now located, was mamde in 1541, 24 years before St. Augustine was founded, and 75 be forec the Mayflowver completed its first voyage. Trying to Economize. I visited a cash-and-carry grocery. Tiwir lender for the (lay was rice. I bought five pounds andl several other articles and asked to have extra pa per on the rice, but it twis refused. Str-uggling uip the high steps of a street car with my niany hundles, 1 stumbiled ;something pierced the bag of icie, andl it began to ooze and fall. Of (course the car wvas crowdled, and as I squeezed in it suddenly lurched ahead. I made a frantic effort to sai-e my rice, letting everything else go. Kindly fellow passengers tried to help, hiding their laughter as best they could. I had the mIsery of helng comumjserated and1 laughed at. besides losing all my rice, and this bus fin ishied my efforts at trying to lb-at thet old high cost of lvlng.-Ch-leage Trihmre. The Sun Volcano. Not long ago at the Yerkes Observa tory an erupilIon was obs-ervedl (ant photographed) on the im of the sumi whieh threw uip material to a heigh of 500.000l umiles. One cloud1( of it whilh appear-ed as if iloatinug de-t eue was reckoned to have some thmoumSS.md of times the volume of the earthb. W" are accustomed to regard grea volcmanle explojsio~ns on thme earth as thm most appalling of natural phenoment but they are feeble and tritlag dit i urbanmces c'omparmed with the outburs;t which are coatinually taking pilac aN ovecr the body of the sun.-Kansa City Star. Has Proper Regard for Rooster. CIimrles Collins of Oak' hill, aLitel field, Mo.. thinks so much of a Whit Wyandotte rooster that he enqourag( him to roost nights on the foothcar of his bed and feeds him every lMttl while. This is because Mrn. 00o1li1 was awakened one night by the e: 01%=d ': -.:ig of the reoster, wvhic had g-%'ha v got into the house, an founed .d~en hie got up to inveigiai that the hbus, was on fir. Anytilti *hat't tw i.'V. wants iereafter' LAND SALE he State of South Carolina County of RAmrens In Court of Common Pleas J. M. Pitts, Plaintiff vs. Gramby Watson and Bub Watson, Defendants Pursuant to a Decree of The Court i the above stated case, I will sell at ublic outcry to the highest bidder, at ,aurens, C. H., G. C., on Salesday in ovember next, being Monday the 1st ay of the month, during the legal You Zrkke THE chief consideral a cozy, artistic hon and decorate it Lei your home reflect choice of correct and harr whatever your needs, be s have proven their wort protect as well as to beat flave stood the test of tim and will give you longe do matter the surface--there Every, Purpose, a number economically use yourself. LAURENS HAlR Laurens, Mone: You can get yol if, for any reason bring back the ur refund to you, ' whole box.A The Black Stiel Sperfection in a in uniformity/ 'giarantee. Try The lack S1 - get your pet load fe eblack powders. SUNITED STATES CAl e Come in and get a J . I. Copeland & Bro., ~W. L. Armstrong, Gr T. R. Stephens, Gray *The Gray Co., Gray 4 hours for such sales, the toflowing de scribed property, to 'wit: All that lot, piece, or parcel of land ,lying, being and situate in the town of Clinton, in the County of Laurens, and State of South Carolina, containing four and one half (4 1-2) acres more or less, bounded on the North by lands now or formerly of swell Dendy, on the East by lands now or formerly of B. M. 'Henry, on the South by lands now or formerly of Joe Suber and on the West by public road from Clinton to Woodruff. Terms of Sale: Purchaser to pay ion in the creation of e Is the way you paint your own taste by the aonious color effects. But ure to specify Paints that h, because you paint to tify. e for more than fity years st service at lowest cost. s a Pee Gee Paint Product for of them you can easily and DWARE CO. S.C. r-Back Sb ir money back for The Black Sb at all, you don't like them. J used part of the box, and we ithout question, the price' of Is hayd'reached so high a state erprofing, in speed, in power, ht we can make this unlimi LACK SHELLS mokee, an1d Black Powder.r. ~e, if you don't know them. You r cvory kind of shooting, in smokcle' TRIDGE COMPANY, New York, Manadao p of The U. S,'Qame Law Book-P Clinton, S. C. C. E. Ca y Court, S. C. J. E. Ro Court, S. C. J. F. Mc out, S. C, Jones-Ti or papers and stamips. It the. terms )f sale are not complied 'with, the land to 'be re-sold on same or some subse quent Salesday on same terms, at risk Af former purchaser. C. A. POWER, C. C.'C. P. and G. S., laurena, S. C. Dated, this Oct. 9, 1920. . 13-31, Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days pi eflm on 39 R PMD 1 t.; ;rnrrel tee e t rt ptan yu cPr -Ask For These Free Paint Books "Homes and flow to Paint Them" - Contains many beautiful illustrations of attractively painted homes, shows floor plane, gives specifications and tells how to select the right colora. "The Modern Method of Deconring" This beautifully illustrate i boo&k gives the latest and bcst idenn oua the decoration of interior walls and ceilings. It shows a number of rooms designed by leading artiste, giving exact opecifications for ob taining harmonious color effects witih Pee Gee FLATKOATT. "The Modern Method of Finishing Wood".-If you intend to build or refinish your home, this illustrated booklet will be of great help to you. It contains 20 color plates of finished wood panels, and gives practical advice how to take care of your floors and woodwork. Peaslee-Gaulbert CG., lao. LOUISVILLE. Kv. Smokeless and Black Powders Waterproof ot- Shells ells We ma~ke exactly she 118t same gnarantee with the CARTRIBGES There is no 22 l.ong of Rifle cartridge as ac dcurate at disanes fromn t 50S to 250 yards as U.S. td22 N. R.A. Long Rifle Lesmok Cartridges. This is 50 more yards of ac curacy than has hitherto been possible with 22 rim-fire ammunition. can Solid bullet for target ' , ~. work. hlollow-point .bullet for small game. ure Cost no more. Ask for, ree circular C-93. son, Fountain Inn, S. C. cIgers, Fountain inn, S. C. Klvey, Fountain Ipn S. C. mlar o., Lnrn. S. C.