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WINTER EGGS', "T-he'first winter I used Dr. LeGear's Putltry Prescritpion, it made me a lot of money. I have 61 hens and sold In January $44.00 worth of eggs, besides what we used ourselves."-C. D. Mc Cormick, Irimo, Idaho. Paultry Raisers who get an abund itlce of eggs, use Dr. LeGea''s Poultry Prescription, which tones uip the sys tem and stimulates the egg-producing organs without Injury. If you want eggs this witner when eggs mean money, get Dr. .Lecar's Poultry Pre scrkitlon from'your dealer right today. Dr. LeGear is America's foremost IN, pert Poultry Breeder and Veterinarli'n. Feor any ailment whatsoober among your pultry or stock get his remedles from your dealer. They muts satisfy you, or your dealer will refund yuur money. Bottled Health GREY ROCK ALE (xtam Wect) Delicious and guaranteed to re lieve dyspepsia and indigestion Made with the celebrat ed REY 11O0K Min eral Water. WVrlte ftr water booklet. Order a case today from your grocer. C, C. Featherstont. W. B. <Knight FEATHERSTONEN & KNIORT Attorneys at Law Laurens, S. C. All Business Intrustod to <Our Care Will Have Prompt and -Careoft Atten tion. M)Ioe -zer Palinetto Bank Mr. Feathorstone w spend Wednes day of each weei in LIaurens. W. N NASH SURVEYOR Terracing Leveling NOTARY P BLIC Gray Court, S. C. Dr. T. L. Timmerman - DENTIST Laurens, South Carolina Offiee ki Peoples Bank Building Simpson Cooper& Babb Attorneys at Law. Wili Practice 4n all Otate.0eurts Prompt Attention Given All 'Business I" Assra F m ,4STOMACS ?51 townLs ABBEVILLE-GRLEENWOOD MUTUAL INSURtANCE ASSOCIATION. Organized 1802. PROPERTY INSURiED) $16,150A)00 WRITE OR CALL ona the undersign ed for any Information you may desire about our lian of' insurance. We Insure your .property against de struction by FIRE. WINDSTORM ORl LIGHTNI.NG. and do so cheaper than any company In existance. Remember, we are iprepabred mo prore 1o you thait ou1r1 la th II ate ur4 .iid~ oheapiest plan of insurancfle kno' wnt.. Our Association Is no lc) e t o (1 ' ( wjijte Insurance In thie counmitis of Abbeville, GIreen wood, .\icCoranc k, Edgefield, Iourens, Saluda, Lexington, RIehIand, Calhonn, and Spartnn rg. Grecnville, Plckens, Bamberg, Barn wvell, Clarendlon, Sumter, Lee Kersha'w, Chesterfild, Lancaster. The omcers are: Gen. J. Fraser Lyon, President, Columbia, S. C.; 3. Rt. Blake, Gen. Agt., Secty. and Treas., [lreenwood, S. C. DIRECTORS: A. 0, Urant .. .....Mt. Carmol, S. C. J. M. (ambrell .. .. Abbevllle. S. C. 3. IR. Blake .... ..Greewood, 8. C. A. W. Youngblood .,. ..Hodges, S. C. I. Fraser Lyon .. .. ColumbIa, 8. C. R. H. Nicholson .. . .Edgefleld,S, C. W. H. Wharton .. ....Waterloo, s. C. W. C. Bates .. .... ..Bateburg, 8. C. J. R. BLAKE, Gen. Agt. GrecenwIood,, s. C. 'J.an. 1. 190. Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN WCoPyright. 1*2% by Jmnes Morgan.) PREtDENT FOR A MONTH 1/77--Pobrva'ey 9, birth of Wil S ilam eNnry Harrison at Berkeley, Va. 179'i--Entered the army. 1801.14-Governor of territory of indiana. 1811-Batle of Tippecanoe. 1816-19-Member of congress. 1819-21-Member of Ohio senate. 1825-28-United States senator. 1828-29-Minister to Colombia. 1836-Candidate for president. 1841-March 4, inaugurated ninth president, aged 68. April 4, died in the White House, aged 68. A LTHOUGH William Henry Har rivon was elected to the presi dency -as the log-cabin candidate, in the first -of our frenzied, parading cam paigns, he was born ;to one. of "the first families of Virgiila," lin a manor house'on the banks of the aristocratic James. As a son -of Benjamin Har rison, signer -of the Declaration, with the blood of Pocahontas in his veins, and as a descendant of i -Cromwellian colonel who signed 'the death warrant of :a king, no president has had a longer, more historic lineage. In ability William :Henry Harrison -fell.'below the standard of his prede cessors. He was felected not because he -was a great statesman or a great soldier, but because he was thoroughly representative of. the new West, which was flattered to see in the White House for the first time a 'nan created in its own image. At Harrison's inauguration the presiflency entered an eclipse and was held for 20 years by secondary - characters, who reigned, but did not rule. With men of the eminence of Clay and Webster, Calhoun and Ben Williun Henry Harrison. - ton, latterly Cass and Houston, Doug . las and Davis,- Case and Wade, Sew . ardl and Sumner in the senate, dils tinction and sleadership passed from - the White House to the capitol. It was an ignoble period in our polities when both part les were dodging the irrenressibile Issue of slavery, and the smaller the candidate for president the better chance lhe had to dodge the question. In the teeth -of a piercing northwest wind, the old farmer piresident-elect, bareheaded andl disdaining the protec t ion or ani overc'(oat, rodle hlorseback to the capitol. After addressing a great crowdi tjiat slhivered in its shawls andl furs, lhe Insisted, though hal f-froz~en, onl remiounting his horse and leading the inautgurial paradi~e. No sooner' was the first WVhig pre'si dent in the chair thtan the clalims of factions and the clamor for patronage assnileid him. Cilay had declined cabinet honors-nand labors--In .te confhientt expectation .of playing the easier aud more lions4)ful role of thew ,power ilhind -the thenine. The ira g~erlous manner of (te Great Comn jloner wounding the presidential pride, he was requested to make his ealia at .the White Hotste as infre gwent -and Inconspicuous as he con *1entently con~d. -Thereupoii his total absence became .emba rrasasngl y con spieuous. '!flhe one clear mandate of elec ifon .of 1840 was to turn out tltjemo.. crate end give the jobs to tl Whigs. Straightway a hungry h .e -'ell upon Harrison and literally devourted him. In at month to e day he wvas de'ad of pneumaonla, the Srst president to die in offleec throughout the more than 50O years of its existence. This briefpst of admrinistrations Is a panthetic little story of a simple, lonely 01(1 nman, lured from hii, :ar~m to be the sport of politics. Ailing in bodly and harried in mind, he was without tho care and companionship of his good wife. Anna Symnmes Hiar rison, (laughter of a New~ Jersey colo nel in the Revolution who became one of the pioneer soldiers of Ohio. Broken b~y the hard toil of a frontier householdl and sorrowing for the loss of eight of her ten children, this wife of one president and grandmother of another, a till was making readly to take -i1 'ier duties as mist resn of theo White HIous(e whien the r..ws of ho: hushnan' menthu enma to tuer. AT JAPAN SHRINES Sights Worth Seeing. In the Em pire's Temple Cities. Beautiful Scenery of Nikko and the Flowery Great Yeddo in the Cap Ital Well Repay Visitor for the Excursion. "Many feet are now treading thelr way to the shrines in the temple cities of Japan," says the third of a series of bulletins from the National Ge ographic society on the places which will be visited by members of con gress on their trip to the Orient. "Eager Americans will stroll along the shdy streets of Nikko to the tombs of the shoguns and drink in the indescribable beautiful scenery, their lips all the while murmuring the Jap anese word kekko (beautifuP), which the Japanese say one never learns to pronounce until he has seen the city of Nikko. In Tokyo. called the Flow ery Great Yeddo, the capital of the empire, they will see the imperial pal ace and tke remains of the former glory of the shoguns, a fatmlly of nil itary governors who were the virtual rulers of Japan for several centuries, and in Kyoto they will probably get a confused, hazy idea of one or two of the 800 Buddhist temples and 80 Shinto shrines. "Perhaps, too, In the temples of Tokyo a bit of American pocket men ey will go to a plriest for prInt i pretty prayer on a slip of paper, which the visitor, In true pilgrim fashion, will press to his foreltead an( to his breast and then fasten to the tem pie wall In order that it may be a per petual petition. But then when -there are 30,000 delties to whom devout Jap anese write, a few Amerlean pleas will scarcely clog the celestial posti serv lee. "There will be many native pilgrims on the way to the shrines. During the summs'r nonths, when the crops have been taken care of, the village folk, though they have the -teamples of their ownt pltroini delty and the tox god, feel that they must stnd out a pilgrim or two to the sacreil moun talis and holy places of Japan to worship in behntf of those who can not go, and so they provide n fund for his expenses. Nor.does ite emissary travel in state. Life for 'hinm loses most of Its perplexi-ies. 1Ie is equippedl with -n cheap white cotton shirt that can 'oe easily waAhed, tight - fitting trousers and a loose White cot ton jacket which he tncks in with a girdle. He weNars an enormnous broad, stiff z'traw hat, and om 'his back he carries a piece of matting wlelh serves him as 1an umbrella by day and as a bed at 'night. "In Nikko, though he-does'not come especially to visit the 'toribs of the shogims, he 'loats and bivltes his soul' within the siradow of the two great mausdilen of The formder of the line and his grandson, the merelless ene my of iristianity, Whikh stand on the side of the mountain. 'Up, tip, up, he climbs hihrougi -ourt-yrrl and garden. past one splendIor after anohmer, until lie reaches the henutifil telliple and the actual burial phAec of a line of rulers whbo usurped the -sovereigity of the empire and t-eld it for almost three centuries, making the f'ew. years cov erng the -glory -of Na-poleon and Crotm Iwell insigul-ficant indeod. Wh'en the pgmreachmes -'hie -top oft the moan tainahe prays. Thlen he smokes at pipe or two and leisuirely takestup his jour "In August the pillgnim n'dlls off his Imnst and the ',lsitor froim foreign liands climbls ouit of lhdt nit th~e ernek of dawn''i to hear the lotuis flower bdoomi, for the buds hmnrst Mthm a pleasing chuirnet istic sounitd. "If Nikko is the iruim't heetiIflu c'ity in Jlantan, Kyoto etn ii Ie called thle mnost inrt erestin r. flere the feinn i sit or litnds h ers'l f hbewi lder.d by t he temst and vel-:et s. A\fter e': has b ou .hlt timre thtan she ennt comifortt ~rly get seei a tilt of the molkadto's rcnilee whIi ch 'over's over 25 acres of gro'icai andmr is surr-ound~ed by ni great wail with six gates, or journey out to see the iinrg est lake int Japan, Laike lBiwa. ande the 1,200-year-old pinme tree which stands near It." Machine Digs "Trees at Nursery. The nursery tree-digger has been devised by Edgar A. Jackson of Cmt liertino. Cal. Wilth this maehine 50, 000 trees may easily be dtug it a day, uting about ten gallons of fuel. The gas-,ngine Is genred to drtus attacht ed to cables, which in ttrn are ut tached -to the cutter dievice. TIhe gear redution gives a tremtendotts pull, ugnd holds tihe cuitting kncife with a ver'y large lif-ter, making thme hmnnd puhlyng of the treos easy. Thie machine micves froma one row~ to another by Its own powter. A Mappy Accident. MIss (1 shnpmnre-! huear youn'rr the ma n wh~o int utedl thait cute little 'htarl he Chaplin subl-nasaI mtustnehte. of it? Mr. Zitt-rt happened this way. I had troubile getting my sitfety ritzor uinder my nose, so I just shtved the rest of my face and iled It aprott there.. For Rubbet ' ig. "Do you sell rububer a ticles?" asked the man entering the store at it popu lar bathmltmg r-esort. "Ui:'i, repilied the wis~e ele-k. ''We ha~ve here a very flb:i line of -*p erB*-glasses." Smo eless and Bla Powdere Waterproof tj t Money-Back Shot-.Shella You can iget your money back for The Black Shells if, for any reason at all, you d(_on't like them. just bring back the unused part of the box*, and we %viil refund to you, w.,itlhout question., the price of the whole box. The BMack Shells have reachied so highj a state of perfection in water proofing, in speed, in power, and in uniformity-that we can make this unllIated guarantee. U T BLAU, SHr4ELLS Smokeless and BlackP Ty The Black Shlls, if you don't know thm. You c.s p-a - t load for every kind cf shooting, in srokeless or black powders. UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE COMPANY, New York, Aanufacturers - nlein nd got o W. Of nio U. a. aa 4.4W aor-QQAj J. I. Copeland & Bro., Clinton, S. C. C. E. Cason, Fountain Inn, S. C. W. L. Armstrong, Gray Court, S. C. J. E. Rodgers, Fountain Inn, S. C. T. R. Stephens, Gray Court, S. C. J. F. McKelvey, Fountain Inn S. 1C. The Gray Co., Gray Court, S. C. Jones-Tay lor Co., Laurens, S. C. iHIr , THI s'Eh'C SAY W HO'S .H'iT 4 ONH BEL.ONGS J . A W% %A 1 H N VP ~rHERE -1 THINK SAM HILL 'IDON'T SOME. ONE Pi'_(ZE or-OF ou **Y ELU P HL HOLD TOR A'mNs s E1~ THiS PE .INSTEAD OF Jus o A-r - S TANDIM 'THE RE AN' NEV W WA-9 J MINAN' JA\NIN AT NCj WALL PAP' A FE.L L ER F AT HEGR CAN'T ~D o -/ - ' 5 Na TMP e -e $ANDI C ROOEDr ' Q t . An_ esdstinfthapiesn saisatinh tfome The, toteeiIh aigo ul-a motn tm ofe ah famly quarmbei a seeeyontet o youh pateceand re-oo frm ne ew eipm t SJones=Taylor Hardware Co.