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Saves 7-8 of tno labor of planting. . . ? ' . 'Si - ? ". \ V ? -. THE COLE ONE-HORSE GRAIN DRILL If you plant your grain crop right between your colton or corn rows with a COLE ONE-HORSE GRAIN DRILL you are far surer of a good stand when winter ia over than if you sow broad-cast, or with a Western Drill. With one of these machines you can go right l. .'tween your cotton or corn rows and plaut three furrows at a time. No need to wait until the crops are gathered. No need to make seven trips to plow and harrow the land. The Boil of your fields ia well cultivated <u summer and by grain-growing time ls well aottled, making au ideal seed-bed for grain. Just plant your crop be tween the rows with a Cole. Save 7-8 of tao labor. One man and ono horse can easily plant G to 8 acres a day. Besides your cotton or corn crop you get a good grain crop and you can follow thia with a cow-pea crop In thc spring and plant it with the SAME MACHINE Sow Grain Between Your Cotton or Corn Rows The seed are planted fa ll?!*-' furrows which protect ?he grain from the winter winds and cold. No danger of tho planta "spewing" up. Tho seed are gloat ed in a basin where they secure the moisture they need. You can sow three rows at a time with a Cole No. 34. Our other machines sow one and two rows. Fertilizer can be applied at the time of planting, and the machine is splen didly adapted to applying fertilizer to growing crops. Don't accept any of the shoddy Imitations offered. See that you' get the genuino COLE. SULLIVAN HARDWARE CO. EXCURSION TO ATLANTA, GEORGIA Via PIEDMONT & NORTHERN RY And SEABOARD Wednesdy, September 15th, 1915. , Tickets sold on mornir.g ?rains from Spartanburg and Greer. S dal trains operated from Greenville and Anderson. The following low excursion rates and schedule will be used:: From Relied ule Round Fron' Schedule Bound Trip Fore Trip. Fare Spartanburg .....10:80 A. M. Pelser.1:40 P.M. 8.00 Taca pan.10:4? A. M. 840 Willuuuston.1:45 P. M. Mt Do?ean ....... ..10:46 A. H. 8?0 Anderson.1:80 P. M. 840 Ureer.10:57 A. M. &2J* Belton.2:00 P. M. 8.00 Chick Springs '.. ..11:07, A, M. *M Ilonea Path ... ... 8:18 P. M. 840 Taylors..11:08 A. M. 8?5 Donalds.2:25 P. H. 8.00 Paris .. .11:10 A. flt, 945 Shoals Jet..8:80 P. M. 3,00 Greenville.1:00 P.M. 840 Hedges.,8:40 P. M. 840 Pledm sst.1:30.P. M. 840 Arrive Atlanta _7:80 P. M. RETURNING. Tickets will be honored on ail Seaboard Trains leaving Atlanta before midnight, Sunday, September 19th, 1915. LAST CHANCE to go to Atlanta this summer on excursion rates. Don't forget the date, September 15th, 1915. Excursion will run rain or shine. arrangera, .nts made for handling colored people. For detail information call your nearest P. & N. Ticket Agent, or C.S. ALLEN, Traffic Manager, Greenville, S. C. ?J. L '.'JSJ.1L"_IV-l'-l-!-_UJUPJ8-Ul- -'-UL--'.-'-L-l' Attention Farmers! sw Black Elastic Carbon Roof Paint 40c per Gall?n Suitable for Barns and Out Building' Roofs of Tin or Paper Guest Paint Co. Autumn Weddings Require the prompt placing of orders far engraved Invita tions. Our samples represent tao very latest shapes sad forms that have been accepted by refined and fashionable aocWty. -jv ' WB LB AD in originating artlatic effects with fine material. Oar pried* ore the lowest. Send for samples, which will bc ?applied frea of change. J. "P. 8TEVS$8 KNORAVft?G^C?., Wending Stationery Engravers, 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Oa. cr ^SIIIEIlllllllHU?tlIlIHIllllMIillllIll?liflIMllllimilItlIHIlimitUKIUIItUIIIlHliaiHlllII^ I ls Tuberculosis Curable? j HllHlihMillltlHIIIIIMIiini?ilillllllillllltlliilltlllllillltlilllliltlilllliHllliUllHIilllll^ EVERY once in a while people will ask "Do you really think Consumption can be cared!"; and then, when they are told that thousands of cabes all over the world bear witness to the fact of the curability cf this disease; they wonder why their several friends and relatives, who died with tuberculosis, were ?.?ot cared. Tuberculosis ia curable, bat not everyone ii cared, and not J everyone can be cored. The chief reason why more consumptive? are not cured is because they have waited tao long before they heeded the warning danger signals of the disease, or because some doctor to whom they went did not recognize thia deadly plague. In its early stages, consumption can be cured, and the patient can gen erally resume his normal life within a period ranging from six months to two years, depending cn circumstances. As high a per centage of actual recoveries from tuberculosis may be found in really early cases who follow the right course of treatment aa in almost any other infectious disease. What, then, is thc right coane of treatment? This article can not prescribe for individual cases] but it can and will tell what are the essentials in faking thc cure for tuberculosis. First cf all, there is a good? doctor on whom you can rely and whose advice and inspiration is kaost valuable to you. He will not give you much medicine, because there isn't any drug or "cure" that he can prescribe that will do more than to relieve some imme diate symptoms, sueh as constipation, cough, headache, etc. J? your doctor begins to talk of a "marvelous remedy" which will euro you, it is time you looked for another physician. That man is more than likely a quack and is simply after your money. There is no sure or quick "cure" or remedy for tuberculosis that you can buy at a drugstore or that a doctor can give you. Thc second essential in the core of tuberculosis is fresh air. To . tbe healty person the best tonic is fresh air at work, at play, and ? (tarring sleep. To the consumptive, however, air is medicine. He must take it in as large doses as he eau, the more the better. It may not be easy for one who has been accustomed to indoor work to sleep and liv? outdoors, but since fresh air is vital, he must accus tom himself to being outside all he can. At sanatoria for the treat ment of tuberculosis, patients ure out of doora on porches or elsewhere almost all the time. If one is at home, he can with a little ingenuity arrange devices for outdoor sleeping .and sitting. Tho National i ub?rc?losis Association, 105 East 22nd Street, New York, will tend free of charge to anyone a booklet entitled: "Directions for .iving and Sleeping in the Open Air." The next essential in the core of tuberculosis is rest. Like fresh air,.rest mast be taken as a medicine by the.consumptimo. The reason for rest is evident, when you stop to think the way the germs of tuberculosis work. As they destroy the tissues of the lungs Vr other parts of the body, they make a wound or a cavity. Thip wound, like a cut on your finger, will not heal if it is being opened all the time. To keep the lungs as quiet as possible, rest in bed, or in a reclining chair is absolutely necessary . The dose of rest you take will depend on your doctor's advice. He will tell you when you fan get out of bed and when yon can exercise and how much. Cut first and foremost you must learn to rest, in order to give the lungs n chance to heal. Besides a good doctor, fres') air and rest, the core for tabarea losis requires 'good, wholesome food. In normal health, food ol the right kind is very necessary, hut in tuberculosis it is doubly im {portant. Food is the fud which heats the body and gives it ita energy or you might almost Bay "steam." In tuberculosis one must pay special attention to food, because he1 has to provide fuel not'Only for the ordinary functions of the body, but he most pro? vide an additional supply to meet the waste and damage done by th? germs of the disease. This doesn't mean that you must be continu ally stuffing youri elf, for if you do that you will tppset your stomach. Iiowels, and liver, and you.will counteract all-the. good the food might do. f Neither 4oes it mean that yon must'eat just one or two binds of food, such as milk and eggs, which some people think are a cure fer tuberculosis. They are excellent foods for people whe can eat and digest them readily, and every consumptive should try to acquire an appetite for them. ?But meat and potatoes and bread and butter and good vegetables and almost any other nourishing wholesome fcod in plenty of variety are needed also. Don't rely on tid-bits and sweets but stoke your body furnace with food-fuel that will keep it running in tho best possible order. Your doctor it the best one to advise on foods. < And, finally, a last essential in the onre of tuberculosis may tx summed np in these words: * "Don't worry." Keep a hopeful stat? of mind. If you give up and say "It's no use," you will never gel well, no matter how patiently you follow the other essentials ol a cure. Getting well dependa for the most part on you. Backbone hopefulness and courage will do more for you than all the doctor, in the world. Just ? word as to where to take the cure. If you can go to a sanatorium, do so. There ere not enough sanatoria for everyone, however. Bo you may have to stay at home and fight alone. Be member, tuberculosis can be cored if yon take it in time and dc FW Part. {NOTE-This ls the Last et a ?eries cf Fte? Articles Prepared by Th? I National Association fer the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, Nevil City.] <Mhi?SS^ SOUVENIR SPOOK BUSINESS CONTINUED ALWAYS I Will Have to Stop Before Great While-Louisiana Spoon On Sale. Last week we added the spoons for the state of Louisiana, which Rives us a total of twelve different states.1' To those who have not secured the souvenir spoons of the different States which ve have had >n and for several1 Weeks, we would advise to them'at once ss we <onteroplate discontinuance c f this sou spoon business, souv?nlr spoon at the price of cent? each la- one ot the st bargains we havje over, 'seen ; an& there are hundreds of Anderson poo pie "ho bave bought these spoons who ar? delighted with them. "Those who cont?mplate the par ?base of these souvenir spoons would, do well to attend to it at once, as we ara ant going to continue this spopa business indefinitely. BUDDED PECAN THEES. . Wo otW (rr? rwembwr 15 tn Jamiarv 1?, .hfeasts* I fa? t* HM kwh . htm hwl fol tjwiiw iU*jJ<W rtran Tue* "ftrlilay'' ?MW* Innt tep rt?? tanttU rjufuititaan Itt IS?, W? biimlmf or mon? at ?Sr. Al?o i~ Ut* ta C fwd feisfe tobie ' variety. rrtsntwl tinhut tap r<K?*.onQ? splendid IniWfst ron?*, amati ??itan?ttns at SHA, i? tiuoHrt?l or mm mt H.7S **fh. All F. O. ?5. Onugertws. rtmilh Ca red ?na. Brtirr rwy ?rat ?te*? tr*?? aurtaWe for th:? Miwal? from M?' 'r*w*tiryn4? <Hkl> lie? paid <i*?Hy for trying tait r.Jwr mAarttla. We find tfe*t tbs "ScbWV omi or?!? n? m Utjm prit* Utan any ?jttWffiM ^FECANWAT PLACE, feS. O. Daaufer. : V .?: fk-sstehim, a c. . Wemen la Saasas. (From The New York Telegraph.) Out In Kama*, where they strive I to! .please, the women ought to have | (.mall cause fer complaint if lt ls pos sible to deprive the. sex ot that In alienable right. Here are some of tho things a wo man of the un flower State may le gally do: * Can take back her malden name ofter her husband ls dead, without any l?gal process or legislative act Can'heep her own uane . when she ls married. Can persuade her husband to take her name and K?ve up his family name lt she does not like it Con keep her maiden name and i her husband can keep his. Can retain her malden name for i business transactions and nae her husband's name for social affaira. ! It wire does not like either her own or husband's family name they can : change to a name that dees adit A woman can wear men's clothing J without any restriction except that j she must not pose us a man. She can vote st every election. - j9hc 'can hold any office Ir. tte State j and run for congress. As Kansas probably puts lt, a wo man there can do almost, anything' a ? ra sn can. That's MO. The men's cloth ing provision even permits har to I scratch a match aa soma a,en do.] Only thing sho seems debarred from ls -"posing", as ' a man,'* which te ' im possible, of course, for most ot th'vn at least. "Mr. Jones, you will either have toj marry at once or leave our employ. "But why are you so anxious that ] j marry V ?BaBa? "While yon are ia lover yoe do not half attend to your duties, and you must einher (be cared or fired."---'! Housto a Post. SEVEBAL APPEALS J. H. BOWDEN WAS GRANT ED A NEW TRIAL BY JUDGE DEVELIN SENTENCE ' .i II, , ..i WM Given Three Year* at Hare! . Labor-Several Minor A*-peala Were Asked But Refused. Yesterday the court was occupied with aeveral appeala and arguments for new trialB. It adjourned rester- ! day afternoon shortly after 4 o'clock. The first case taken up was thl.t of , J. H. Bowden, who had been found guilty during the week of malicious Injury to trees, the damage being sot over $20. An appeal waa asked for which was given by Judge Moore who Issued the following order: "I am of the opinion that Ute, evidence ia not sufficient to show that the defendant ta guilty of a malicious tresspass. Without passing upon the question of who has the better title to the real estate In question, it ls ordered that a new trial be and tho same ia hare lay granted." An appeal was asked also in ...tho case of Clyde 'Develin, convicted In* this term of court wlthasseult ,-and battery with intent to kill. The judge denied a motion for a new trial. ? sentence waa passed in this case tjg" the off oct that the defendant , serv? three years at hard labor in the state? penitentiary or on the public works ol' Anderson county. ' Appeals were also taken in the caaes of tho city of Belton vs. J. A. Campbell, state vs. J. R. Thomas and the city of Anderson vs. George Clinton. 'ralph Black, a young negro, was arraigned for criminal assault. He' had no defenae and Mr. Rufus Pant, Jr., waa appointed to defend him when the case comes up this wek. An appeal waa also asked tn the case of the city versus Lena Gamble, charged with violation of the dlspen-. sary law. The appeal was not grant ed. r To introduce Oar New Fall Goods We Quote Low Prices Girls Gun Metal Shoes, sises 3 to 6. value $2.00, fl? 1 Cft yours for.sJ?l?iJV 36 inch Figured Silk PA Poplin, $1.00 value for %HJC Ladies $1.00 Waists a CAR great Bargain, now.... *#Vv Hamilton Hlokory * /k _ Stripes reduced to.* VC 36 Inch .Soft Bleaching, [C* good 10c value, now..vC Bine 18 cent Denim in' short lengths, now. Beautiful Plaids for school dress, now.... fl 36 inch Colored Curtain K >, Scrim, yourb for .. .. ..vC Amoskeag Feather Bed Tic, only .. .. Regular 12 1-2 Cotton Flannel, now. 15c ..Bc Boys Wool Suits, QA Hi all ages, $1.76 apd ?PA?Oa | Regular 8c Sea Island {ff Jj] cotton, now.vva < .Wool Dress Goods, Ofi* ' regular 88c grado..**wv ? * Girls Corduroy Capt;, , A&t** 8 75c grade.HrOC '% Heavy and Smooth Cotton ? Blankets, per 04$C ft 'The Dry Goods King" Weat Side Square Tiir f ^ ' i ii .1 Bsa H. H. TAILOR FOR MEN 184 North Main J. H. VANDIVKR, President. J. I. BROWNLLE, ( achier, J. ri" HAMMETT, Tte? President C. if. MeGEA Aunt, Cashier. . CAPITAL $100,000, , SI RPLl'S #150,000. ANDERSON, S. C. Let us pay you to save your money. Deposit #100 v/ith us an4 let it stay on de posit for one year and at the end of that time we will pay you $ 105. When you work and keep your money working you can get on easy street. There is more real pleasure in saving than there is in spending your money. Try it. Come to see us. J. I. BROWNLEE, Cashier. ANNUAL EXCURSION To SAVANNAH, GA., JACKSONVILLE, FLA., AND TAMPA. Tuesday, September 21tt, 1915 ^ ...... .via SOUTHERN RAILWAY In Connection with Blue Rridgd Ry. [ ' . fx' -rrsrr,- . >.> > .# K Jt>:\?& -jj ' &'? .'V,' vr : B* Fares Rt Fare? Ht Par?t Savannah Jacksonville Tampa Arderson .. -.$4.00.$7.00.$?.00 Dutton .. . 4.00 . 7.00. $.00 HOE ea Path.3.00.0.70. ...8.00 Win tamaton :. 4.00...7.00.?.00 DoniUde .8.80....1.6.66. 8.60 Shoals Junction. 8.76.6.00. 8.76 . . i . . 1"- .i ?? .1 .' .i. ..?. Tickets wi? be cold for all trains September 21st. Tickets good returning n all regular tralss to reach original starting point before midnight :a? fol owa: To Savannah,'Sept 26th., to Jacksonville, Sept. 88th.. to Tampa, Sept Otb,, 1016. SCHEDULE: Leave Anderson 9:15 A. M. 4.48 P. M. Arrive Savanuah 6.40 P. M. $.00 A. HS. Ar. Jackson vii lo 10.30 P. M. 8.25 A, ai. -i-,-: Through coaches and pullman sleepers will be handled. For complete information, pullman reservation, etc., apply to ticket agent?, J. R. ANDERSON. Supt B. R. Ry., W. R. TABER, T. P. A. Anderson. ?. C. Greenville, 8. O. W. ?. McGee, A. G. P. A., Columbia, B. c. Bookkeeping Shorthand, and Typewriting. A knowt tgc r?f these subjects means SUCCESS. Come, and let us prepare rou for an Independent career. A good position await? you. Day ?nd night serons. Enter any time. Write for catalogue. 1 STATE RAISED SOT OATS ??R SAH 2300 Bu. Fulghum. .9Bc 7800 Bu. jCoktrs Pedigreed ......... 3200 Bu. Appier ...*.580 These Oats arc Stained but Sound. Send for Samples. : | Price* are F. O. B. Blackville but will deliver at these pricer to Carolina points irylots ot 5oo bushels ar more. V'^V"- J. M. FARRELL, Blackville, S. C.