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teeth. breath, appetite., digestion. Give If fu me* lease. Grand. aaddy." OV&Y Bobby, if you wait a bit for it you'l have it to enjoy longer!" "Poo-poo! That's no argument witMt WRIGLEY3 2cause Ithe flavor lasts, anyway!" -After every meal C :c IIhbNot.~ + uy your porch:1 |Furniture nlow Iwhile .we have * aj a p ply ont 4hand? jYou get the ;H I!use of it a full I + season. 1 13E. GLADDENXo :3 "The Furniture Man"~ suscrihe to The Naws and Herald 10 TM AFRAID THAT'S ALL I CAN SPARE" You're a regular, red-blooded, true-blue, Akmerican. You love your country. You love that iapping, snapping old flag. Your heart thumps iard when th' troops tramp by. You're loyal 100 per cent. You intend to-you want to-help win the war-in a hurry. "Sacrifice? Sure," you've been thinking. "Just you wait till they really need it." And ou've honestly thought you meant that too. But-look yourself in the eye, now, and Sea,rch up and down inside of your heart-did vou mean it? Did you really mean "sacrifice?" Listen: You feel poor. This third Liberty Loan, the high prices, the .income Tax-you-ve done your bit. You feel that you've given all vou -an spare. What? Then what did you mean? What's hat you said about loving your country? What lid you think the word "sacrifice" means? Surely you didn't mean, did you, to give only vhat you can spare? What about our boys who are giving their ives in the trenches? Are they giving only what hey can "spare?" How about those mothers and little "kiddies I he shell-wrecked towns of that war-swept hell -hungry-ragged-sobbing-alone? Giving up heir homes, their husbands, their fathers. While we-over here with our fun and our :omforts-we hold up our heads and, feel patriotic!' )ecause we have given-WHAT? Some loose )ills off the top of our roll. "We've given all we a.n spare!" Come, come! Let's quit fooling ourselvs. ,et us learn what "sacrifice" means. Let us give4 qore than we can spare-let us "give till the heart ays stop." A CALL FROM NO MANS LAND Out of the bleeding heart of Europe there omes a cry heard above the moan of the broken ody racked with pain. The Soul of Freedom, at 4 ay with Death, cries out to save Liberty for the,4 ace of men. 4 It is your Liberty, your nation's freedom, your hidren's birthright, that is fighting for its life.4 Al that life holds for you as an American is at take in this war, and you must fight for it to the' tmost limits of your power. 4 We cannot all be in the- trenches, but everyj ne of us can-and must-sustain those who are. 4 Not as an act of mercy, but as an act of war s a Soldier of the Nation-help the Red Cross N eal, support, cheereour soldiers and sailors of Lib- K rty that^they may fight the sooner, the harder, .. ae longer in this Holy War. Give to the Red Cross every dollar, every cent -at you possibly can-give till your heart says bop. ACROSS THE SEAS THEY CALL Across the seas from every war-torn nation i the Allied cause there comes the call for Red ross help. It comes from soldiers who have grimly faced e gleaming bayonet steel and poison gas and reaming shells, and who now lie with parching 1roats and throbbing wounds. It comes from soldiers sick with fever, ipneu ionia, tuberculosis. It comes from soldiers crippled, mutila'ted, [inded, who can no longer fight and must b;e ught and trained for useful occupations. It comes from the underfed, shivering, help ss prisoners in the German prison camps. It comes from little children, orphaned, home ss, slowly starving day by day, by tens and tens thousands. It comes from mothers in the pillaged zones war whose hearts and souls have been made nb with horror. From all these millions of suffering human' sings there comes across the seas the call for S alp-help that because of the frightful burdens aced upon our Allies cannot be given unless it be 'P -ovided by the American Red Cross... Another hundred million is needed to "carry 1." - V:ba will Anaaria's answer be? -. Say, Mr. Farmer! Do You Expect to Make a Good Crop This Year? Ars, you investing your time. money and labor in that crop? SUPPOSE IT IS DESTROYED IN JUNE? Can You Afford to Stand the Loss? The dreadful hail storm will, in a few moments, sweep away the earnings and savings of years. You can. at a small cost, protect yoLuself ag::st financial loss, and possibly ruin, by insuring your crop against loss by hail in IURANCE THE HOME COMPANY NEW YORK THE LARGEST F!RE INSURANCE COMPANY IN AMERICA All Losses Adjusted and Paid Promptly WINNSBORO INSURANCE AND REALTY COMPANY S. D. ELLISON, Manager. LY TIME IS SCREEN TIME See us for Screen Doors and windows -* atr right price.*' IJ.F.Davis & Bro.$ Sapolio doing its wrk. Scouring for U.S.Marmne Corps recruits. APPLY AT ANY -.: ei i ,- POST OFFICE SERViCE UN4DER THIS EMBLEM ty 0h A'ANA CIG AR S A'RE ILD ANDFRAGRANT THEYSATISFY ASK YOUR DEALER J. H. McMASTER & COMPANY, Distributors. WINNSBORO, S. C. OLUMBIA LUMBER MANUFACTURING (Cu Manufacturers of ash, Doors & Blinds, Interior Finish, Pine, Cy - ress and Oak, Flooring Ceiling Weatherboard tg, Moul'in-g, Door n!Yindbhw Eiam&~ OLUMBIA, - - 20 UTH CAR&EIWA