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For IV w< Car load very best grad 3 cars of 1 less on the tor sale today. W Car load o Horse, Mule < world and gua * Rice and < that way. sack. Come to see us \ I S.F.EPP - ~ THE SEASON HAS ARI FARM JIM We have thema Garden Plow Moline Fii WE HAVE the mos ware and Buildii part of the Sta vince you. r Place your order no1 } and be sure that you will n Kingstree Hari (We Lead; G Protect your Automobile FREEZE PRO \ | COFFINS AP I A large and varied ass I Automobile Hearse I Horse-Drai pi Experienced Se F 1 ^ Day o I Kingstree H | Phones 35. I We Lead; O (live us your order for I Ian and ; Adverti of Mother's Floui es made. >Io. 1 Timothy Hay j i than it can be bougi re must move it; we >f the famous Purina ind Hog Feed. Th ranteed as represent Glrits in' ton lots if in save you money % when in need of any of I S & CO.,? DIVED WHEN YOU, NEED PLEMENTS -everything from r to the famous eld Tractor. ;t complete line of Hardng Material in the eastern ite. Call and [let us coniv for TOBACCO FLUES, get them. Jware Company thers Follow.) Radiator with JOHNSON'S DF? Guaranteed! )ID CASKETS. | K>rtment to select from. | and Robber-Tired m Hearse. rvices Rendered r Night. iardware Co. S9J*L 122 thers Follow. 1 Engraved. Visting Cards ' 1 Beast ise: ?one of the A A ?oing at $i.uu it for at wholeneed the room. , Poultry, Cow, ie best in the ed. f you want it on it by the the above Articles. i STREE, S. C. ??????I j M. D. NESMITH, DENTIST. Lake City, S. C BENJ. McINNES, M.R.CV S. B.Kater McINNES,M.D., V.M. D VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingatree the j first Monday in each month, at Hel-1 ler'i Stables. 9-28-tf j SEE John M. Eaddy FOB Surveying and Platting. Notary Public with SeaL 6-9-lyp JOHNSONVILLE. S, C A. M SNIDER Surgeon Dentist Office at Residence Railroad Ave. KINGSTREE r A ClotTTlot If you need Glasses, come to me. Single and double lenses fitted correctly at lowest prices. Broken lenses duplicated. T. E. BAGGETT, Jeweler Shi ng'les! For Sale - | I have received a car-load i rvf oll-ViPQrt I TITE.HOLD | Red - Cedar - Shingles. I Per Thousand, $7.25. W.J. HODGES. 2-27-tf Cades, S. C.! We are proud of the confidence doctors, druggists and the public have in 666 Chill and Fever Tonic.?adv. WATER WORKS MAN F GIVES THE DETAILS!d (am f Ar JOLLY DECLARES HE FOUGHT " LONG BATTLES WITH JJ! AILMENTS orf am all wo After Searching For Year* Says He Co Found in Tanlac Remedy He 1 Sought Pf] th< wil ma "I have been trying for years to th< get scfcnething that would relieve de< me of my troubles, and have found ^ it at last in Tanlac", said Alford ^ Jolly, of 3291 Quitman St, Denver, tiv Colorado, and an employe of the J water works department of that *j.r city. t0 "For a lone time." he continued. It "my stomach was in such an awful conditions that I could hardly eat a thing without being in misery. Even p0( the lightest foods would bloat wi up with gas and I was constantly . ' beltching up sour, undigestedfood ^ that at times would almost choke pj, me. Often I would get so dizzy that \vh I would almost fall and I would get *ei CVi so nervous it would be almost im- , possible for me to rest at night. I suffered agony from rheumatism in and was in such a wretched condition that I was hardly fit for a thing. pr "After trying nearly everything I could hear of I took Tanlac and it has made a different man of me. gp My appetite is splendid, my nerves steady and 1 sleep like a log at Si night. I have gained eight pounds in weight and am in better shape .Qf than I have been in years." ed Tanlac, the master medicine, is. Ca sold By Kingstree Drug Co., Kings- an tree, Farmer's Drug Co., Heming- gc way; S. S. Aronson, Lanes; R. P. Hinnant. Suttons; W. D. Bryan, no I cir Bryan- VC" Rc 0 ha Our idea of a lucky man is one who gets a chance to wear out a on pair of slippers. be III 0 V Nc Ther in N* stunt Her q VELVI ing in v all the tucky I The quid sive metto bly produ< coolnes! pipe qualii cured in I Today it to enjey, t the ers, this n VELVET Roil * V?L VET Cigarette . s* VELVET'S nature-aged mildness and smoothnee ; na':a it jxst r.-ht for ' r/jareffej. ? iperor of Japan Bestows Fund I'pon the Salvation Army iVord has just reached America it the Emperor of Japan in an perial decree has bestowed an lua! fund upon the Salvation my in that country, rhe Emperor, in giving: this fiicial assistance to the Salvation my, recognized it as an official ranization and a part of the Jap?se Empire and has turned over uplift work to the men and men of the Salvation Army rps. tn his imperial decree, the Em-or declared that he has watched . Caltntinn Armv thin the confines of Japan for .ny years and that it was after a >rough investigation that it was nded to make this imperial fund as to allow a scope to the Salvan Army in the far east, broadenwith time, and to enlarge its acities in Japan. \t first the Japanese people were nost awe stricken by the coming the Salvation Army workers inthe land of the chrysanthemum, was by hard work and diligent oris on the part of the S. A. rkers sent into the interior that ?y received the confidence of the jple and were allowed to proceed th their work unhampered. In addition to their work of upt and taking care of the ill and edy, the Salvation Army has immted in Japan a religious seed, lich, in the last few years, hasas"ted itself in the advancement of ristianitv. The Japanese as a whole were at st very unfriendly to newcomers their own country, but now the ring of a large sum of money to ? Salvation Army is absolute oof of their worth in Japan. o Annual Convention at Florence artanburg, S. C., April 28, 1919. The forty-second annual State inday School Convention, to be Id in Florence, June 3-4-5,, will injar to me aiaie ine largest, aua> Sunday School talent ever securfrom other States for a South irolina Convention, according to announcement from the program mmittee of the State Sunday hool Association. Prof. E. 0 Excell, of Chicago, ted composer and leader of muand his accompanist, Prof. A. W. >per, of Wynona Lake, IncL, will re charge of the music. Among the out-of-State speakers the program the following have en announced. Prof. M. A. Hon\ _ ' THEN / smoke. I en tobacco cared by it are? t by Mother-in-law Pi I I e is nothing ature'e meth s, no huiryuiet, patient a ST during its tw< wooden hogsheads kindly comfort o1 3urley baf. ker, lesj exper.ods can;'*.;: possi:e the f :a ":*eiee. . .J o\^^1 ti * > t j auu uv- v . -. i . , ui . ties of VELVET. { Nature's way. r C; is your privilege I vith hundreds of J; ^ f r-* *. ^ - jj! aild and friendly S. tobacco. pi if' }^cfsJT9yiC\r.z.: .Llua Cc. / - - ' ! line, Dayton, Ohio, Professor of Religious Education, Bonebrake Theological Seminary, and educational secretary, International Sunday School Association; Mrs. Mary Fosj ter Bryner, of Peoria, 111., auxilia^ I field worker. International Sunday | School Association, and specialist in work with children; Dr. Gilbert Glass, Richmond, Va., general superintendent Sabbath School wo A of Southern Presbyterian Board; Mr. P. E. Green, Atlanta, young people's division superintendent, Georgia Sunday School Association; Miss Mary F. Price, Jacksonville, young people's division superintendent, Florida Sunday School Association: Bishop James Atkins, Nashville, of the Methodist Episcopal church, South;and Rev. P. H. Welshimer, Canton, Ohio, minister and general superintendent of one of the largest Sunday Schools in ! the world. ! o Soy Beans For Hogs i Clemson College, April 26.?As the time for planting soy beans ap: proaches, farmers should decide on ! the acreage to be seeded and should J make sure of good seed. The following from the annual report of N. j G. Thomas, county agent of Mcj Cormick, will be of interest. During the year of 1917, I induc ed a few farmers to try soy beans 1 as a fall hog grazing crop. Every 1917 grower grew them again in 1918, along with new men, who were giving them a try out. I had ten demonstrations of soy beans during 1918. Every man has made a favorable report of this ; bean for hogging purposes. It is a , i heavy yielder on poor land, and seems to be adapted to withstand adverse conditions. The farmers sej riously object to the rabbit's fondness for this bean when it is quite young. In three cases, the rabbits practically ruined two-thirds of three acre nlots. This fact acts as a . stumbling block in getting a greater acreage of beans planted, s One farmer made a test of plant11 ing time for soy beans. He planted ' I acre plots as follows: May 15th, June 11th, and July 16th. All of the t plantings began to ripen about the ? same time; the first two plantings i ripened faster. There was only one " material difference in the beans and that was the size. The first two , plantings grew much taller than the latter, but the yield of bean was . about the same. The soy bean should find a place as a hog grazing crop on every > farm. The bean is an excellent poix t producer and is easily and economically gathered by hogs. r f j** THE ^SMOOTHEST r SMOKING ^TOBACCO ? 1 ! 'am? my Mother 'oces$. I harsh j ods?no up." ,vay with I d years age, brings out F fine Ken! Jinzszr: Til ... - UHJMJ! . 111 jil jjgi