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mmmmrnm^mtrnMrnmrn ONLY ADVERTISING OF VALUE Mutt Be Absolute Truth Is the Unvarying Experience of American Men of Business. The only kind of advertising that has any real value Is that based on the truth, so that when the convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World, in session at Indiana! oils, reaffirmed "truthful publicity" their slogan they but formulated the unvarying experience of the business world. Lincoln's famous remark to the effect, that "you can fool some ot the people all the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all the peoplo all the time," id peculiarly applicable to the publicity field; the attempt to fool the peoplo uy means of dishonest advertising is cu- ; mutative in Its retribution and the ad- | vertiser who tries It spells his own ultimato confusion. This Is by no means a mere assumption, for statistics prove that the public is quick to detect the fraudulent variety; faint earmarks of Insincerity and mendacity Boon become conspicuous warnings, and the truthful advertisements bring results out of all proportion to those which fail to keep faith with the buyer. Even without the laws here and there aimed at the dishonest practice of the fake advertiser, the business world is learning quickly that tfce su<> cess won by the trickster is a transit tory one, while the firm foundations are those that are built upon truth and sincerity.?Philadelphia Ledger. T FISH KNOCKS OUT FISHERMAN Qlves Man Black Eye and Breaks Its Own Nose?Will Be Kept as Trophy. It was a starlight night and "Joe'1 Rivers' good launch Yankee lazily slid through a succession ot oiled waves* Biff! and Skipper Jerry Shlvely at the wheel measured his full length of six feet five upon the deck. Bang! Something careened off the spokes of the wheel and lay fluttering in the scuppers. "Who did that," bellowed Jerry as he arose to his feet and glared down upon the cowering crew. "Something from overboard," timorously replied William Askerson, able seaman. "Seen it come aboard." A few turns of the wheel and the Yankee settled back to its course, while the crew began to search and Anally came upon the riutterlng thing in the scuppers. It was a flying fish, and not a large one at that. But it had sent a man who weighed over 250 pounds to the mat for the full count of ten and had given him the blackest of eyes in the bargain. The flying flsh and the black eye were brought into port here one day last week by Mr. Shlvely, who proposes to keep the flrst and is making every effort to rid himself of the latter. The flying flsh had its nose 4^. broken in the encounter and only lived * few minutes.?Los Angeles Times. Sheep Made Much Trouble. The exploits of the proverbial bull In the china shop have been emulated. If not surpassed, by the raid of a sheep on the Rugby (Eng.) branch of Lloyd's bank. The sheep dashed into the rear of the bank premises, with 1 two drovers in hot pursuit. Gaining entrance to the kitchens, it made a I terrific clatter among the pots and i pans, and then leaped through a win- < dow and turned on a water tap. The < drnvorfl worn r?o nal>?/wl <** ? ' .... V>> nv.u l,U|<ni'.(TM 111 lUI) BlIUgBIH < which ensued, and the Rhcep bolted ! through another door and got Into I the main office. A dozen bank clerks, < aided by rulers, induced the animal to return to the kitchen, whero it was i eventually cornered, trussed up, and f ignominiously carried away, after having kept the bai k staff busy for nearly * two hours. . ^ 1 Roped and Tied. The men engaged in cutting off the * ends of protruding ties on the elevated railway at New York were ex- I pllcttly Instructed for the sake of innocent passers-by on the street be- I v low never to allow a piece of tie to i fall to the street without a rope at- < J tached to it. * One day, as the end of a tie was li sawed off, the man on the Job throw li the rope, tie and all, into the street. v "Hy, there, what er you doin'?" n yelled an indignant foreman. fi "Ye told me not to let anything drop n to the street wldout a rope attached," o rejoined the man in a surly tone. "Well, ain't I obeyin' orders?" n f( Refractor for University. u The astronomical observatory of the c University of Michigan at Ann Arbor 11 hopes ultimately to possess a 24-inch a refractor, thanks to the generosity of a R. P. I.amont of Chicago. This telescope was ordered in 1911, and the latest report of the Jena glassmakers ?V. - *? " ttbo umi iuc UUWII UIBR oaa oeea ' made, while a mass of flint glass sufll- A ciently large for the flint disk had been produced. The completion of the ?i latter disk would require some months, P< even under normal conditions, and the Q war will probably cause further delay. ?i Meanwhile the mounting has made good progress at the observatory shop. L bi Good Flour From Old Wheat. D' Wheat thirty-four years old has Just ;111 been threshed, and It made exception- d< ally good bread. The wheat was j tb i grown and harvested In 1881 by a farmer near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England, who swore he would not sell it until it reached a certain price, ;r' That price was still a secret when the 'ot farmer died. The grain was then po| T m m a?rtfr * T j WANTED TO SHOW LOYALTY ' Pathc? In Offer of Burmese Villager* I to Cone to tho Aaalstance of Great Empire. J j. \ J .ok 8 tells this well-authentletcry In the Yale Review. It i r->iuo8 fr'-m a civil ofllcer In a remote ] of Uurrua. t <o early moaning not long ago 1 j 'lis o til cor in >nd an ancient Burtrnn < squatting on his heels in front or trie i bungalow whom he recognlTeu as tho j head man of a village diblunl i>0 miles away in the hills. ( Questioned >> uia olllcer as to the < purpose tor which ho had undertaken 1 ~ ? l<: g a Journey through the jungle. | ... i old man replied ng follows. < ' Thai.in tma3t.;i?. my viila.iora i i wish to make 83U" rotum for tli" | J vors bestowed upon us by the British j government. t "And now I am come to tell you that f we have In our village eight guns, ancient and well tried and all held under t a license granted by the most honor- l able Thakln; we have also four i pounds of excellent gunpowder in a \ bottle and a bag of bullets; these be- i ing neither more nor less than the a Thakin's llcensq permits us to hold. e "Moreover, there are In qur village t two trackers yho have prgved their t skill in the capture of dacolts. Thakln, e we have heard a rumor that the British government Is In great trouble s with its enemies. li "Wherefore, our vlllageaa have em- b powered me to say that the eight o guns, bottle of gunpowder, the bag of i bullets and the two trackers are freely s at the disposal of the British govern- tl ment." C ? d FACTS ABOUT WORKING DAY " 11 During the Last Twenty-five Years It Has Only Been Shortened an Hour. N We are far better ofT than we were S fifty or seventy years ago, the New York Republic observes. At the beginning of the century, the wage earner labored from sun to sun, and later. wnen expensive machinery and artifl- si cial light were introduced into the fac- rt tories, the working day was extended \\ far into the night. In 1840 American si cotton operatives worked 14 hours per ai day. and as late as 1852 13 hours, while tb today the average working dsv in the is mills is under ten hours. The hours of ci labor of farm laborers, except in har- hi vo3t times, seem to have diminished, tb and in a considerable number of occu- tb pations, notably in the building trades, an eight hour day has been introduced, tli In other occupations, affecting the tb health of the workers or in which bi women and children are largely em- th ployed, a shorter working day has been secured by legislation. But this th progress, though considerable, is not ai nearly so great as is generally supposed. The ten hour day still pre- to vails In most industries, while the 11 fo and 12 hour day is far from being ex- fli tinct. During the ten years from 1891 le to 1901, the average working day fell tr only a quarter of an hour. In the last sii 25 years, less than one hour has been nt taken from the hours of dally labor. be Peary Says He Knows. Lord Raylelgh is one of the most Interesting members of the British rp peerage. Bt His lordship is a noted scientist, and It was for Lis scientific work that he th received the high honor of the Order I i8, 3f Merit Mthough Lord Raylelgh is | th i profound .tholar, he has a humor- i mi ius side to his nature, and he once p( [)layed a neat little joke on a learned pr 'rlend with whom he had been dis- i a mussing some deep subjects. i jai "What is the difference between the tj lorth and south poles?" ho asked very ! or gravely. l in] His lordship's friend thought he had 1 an i new scientific problem to grapple tli vlth and hrnii?ht oil u>n .....I -_1.. ? ~.w?0?v cats IUO WCI^Ul UL , lis brain to bear upon tho question. ! pj "I really must give It up," he said at th ast. I |.q( "Tho answer is simple enough," re- I fG1 died Lord Rayleigli with a smile, j0| 'there is all the difference In the aR vorld-" j pli Military Wedding Cake. The very latest British war fashion b the military wedding cake. So ) ?rii argely has this become a feature of jct weddings associated with military and fQ] aval men that the wholesale manu- jia acturers are specializing in toy or- \y( amenta of a warlike character to dec- er rate the cakes. on These are mostly ornamental can- Btr on. guns and rifles, with battleships ar naval men and very well executed lodels of aeroplanes for bridegrooms onnected with the flying corps. Ar- w0 lored cars and flags of all nations ^ Iso figure. Sugared Cupids and harps ar( re at a discount. { t>ei | we Warsaw Has a German Newspaper. pel Two weeks after the occupation of all /arsaw by the Teutonic allies the rst German newspapor printed in the nclent capital of Poland made its < ppearance in the streets. It is a four age sheet entitled Warsaw German ha, azette. It is published by the own- i rs of the Grenzboten of Berlin, who ()f i bo hare founded a Oerman papqp in cj(i odz. The newspaper occupies a large or(j ulldlng on Mledowa street and the ton lant la equipped with six linotype (jje larhtnes and several presses. Evl- ( sntly the publisher Intends to make bio te venture permanent. wa Ion Suggested. age A number of Englishmen who were the ijected by the recruiting officer talk ten ' getting up a company of their own. 1 thr hey might call themselves the Refua- cat iers.?Boston l^ansorlpt , TTK T,AXr,ASTEK NF,WS VISIONS SEEN BY SOLDIERS Men at the Front Firmly Convinced They Have Been Witnesses cf Supernatural Things. In periods of great national stress, when the responsibilities facing a people call for an effort superhuman. ;he mind is more prone than in times ess tense to place dependence upon livlne aid and to believe that supernatural powers are exerting their night. This tendency is embodied in a Utile column entitled "The Bowmen and 3ther Legends of the War," written jy Arthur Machcn. The potent character of these tales >f latter-day miracles is well exempliifcu b.v the fact that the story of "The Jowmen," with itt> allusion to the apjearance of a supernatural host, has >een accepted widely in England ae act. Upon its publication in serial form, here came to the author scattered nquirles from editors of occult jourials as to the foundation of the stor?' iVhon the author denied that his com>osltion had any basis in fact, to his imazement, some of his correspondints maintained that he must be misaken. In provincial papers hot conroversy was waged regarding the ixact nature of tho appearance. Bishop Weldon, Dean Hensley, Hcnon, Bishop Taylor Smith (the chapaln-General), and many other clergy ave occupied themselves with tho latter. Doctor Horton preached about he "Angels," at Manchester; Sir Joeph Compton Rickett (president of he National Federation of Free !hurch Councils), stated that the sollers at the front had seen visions aud reamed dreams, and had given testilony of powers and principalities ghting for them or against them. HAMY RCI I CMC IM ouimio mi uulil.IL in onnnivio oldlers of the Kaiser's Army Put Their Faith in All Kinds of Peculiar Amulets. The soldiers of the kaiser are very iperstitious, from the men in the inks clear up to the crovn prince, 'ilhelm's eldest son carrit i a horseloe with him on all his i ito trips, id the crown prince spends most of le day in his autc. The L irseshoe attached to one of the doo 3 of the ir and when being photogr; lied 111 Is auto, the prince always ii i?..? 011 le photographer "taking" the ...do of le car with the horseshoe. The Bihdicrs of Wuerttembc j pin teir faith upon a little bag containing 10 dry pollen of flowers, which, they jlieve. has the power of warding off le bullets. The Saxons sew into the lining of teir waistcoats the wings of a bat, id think themselves to bo invincible. The Bavarians hold on tenaciously 1 a still more bizarre custom. Bere going into battle each soldier ids a birch tree, cuts his skin, and ts a few drops of blood fall upon the ee. This ceremony, they assert, asires recovery, no matter what the iture Of the wound, when the Imvpo >gin to grow again. Flying War Horse. A correspondent of the Milan "CorBre della Sera" reports the following ory: "An Italian lieutenant recently rode rough one of the villages on the onzo front. He dismounted before e temporary quarters of the comunder of his regiment and tied his irse to a tree. When he entered the >use he heard the humming poise of large Austrian shell and a moment ter a terrible explosion followed. io shell had struck a small building l the opposite side of the street. An imense cloud of smoke and dust rose d when it disappeared the horse of e officer was gone. "The air pressure caused by the ex oslon had lifted the animal from e ground and thrown it on the flat of of a nearby house, where it was and almost unhurt. It was no easy b to get the horse to the street ain, as this could only be accomshed with the aid of a large crane." Washrag'a Turn to Go. ivasurug: me wasnrag must go. | ie United States public health scrv> agency has so decided. It must low the towel, the drinking cup, the irbrush and the hubit ot kissing. 0 knew It was coming. Next we pect that an embargo will be placed shaking hands and on the use of aps for the stand-ups in street cars, ter they have once been handled, jy will have to be destroyed. There ght be a wandering germ that >uld locate on somebody's palm, you ow. With all our fads, and fancies, j we any healthier than our forirs were? Do we lire longer? Do bring up better children? Aro we Iter ourselves physically or mor* y? But what's the use??Leslies. Boy Wins War Cross, lustav ('baton, fourteen years old, 0 Is just out of the Brest hospital. 1 been awarded a cross for valiant l vice in the French army. Because l his age Minister Millerand has de- t ed he Is too young to tight and has s lered nim back to his famjly. Cha- \ i Is recognized as the youngest sob t r In the French army. c 'baton left his home in Fontaine- t au in Augufet, 1914. He was told he ? s too young to enlist, but he fob j red a regiment of Infantry and man-1 t >d to stay with 1(T He took part in | b i Marne and Alsne battles. At Fon-1 c o, despite the fact he was shot j d ocgt the shoulder, he managed to I t iture two Germane. Later he waa lly wounded in the knee. 1T.BRITAKY 18,19,16. 1 Corns Come Off | Like Banana Peel Wonderful, Simple "Gets-It" Never Fails to Remove Any Corn Easily. "Wouldn't It Jar you? Her? I've been going along for years, with on? desperate corn after another, trying to get rid of them with salves that Resitatst Fa* Ruro "Gcts-lt" for Those Corns end Sat* Your Life and Your Toes I . eat off tho toes, tapes that stick to the stocking, bandages and plasters 1 that make a package of the toes, trying blood-bringing razors and scissors. Then I tried 'Gets-It' Just once and you ought to have seen that corn 1 come off?just like a banana peel." It's simple, wonderful. It's tho new way, painless, applied In two seconds, never hurts healthy flesh or irritates. Nothing to press on the corn. Never falls. Quit the old ways for once anyway and try "Gets-It" tonight. For corns, calluses, warts and bunions. "Gets-It" is sold everywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent direct by E. Lawrence & Co.. Chicago, 111. 8old In Lancaster a*d recommended as the world's best corn remedy by Lancaster Pharmacy and J. F. Mackey Co. WHAT PEED TO GIVE TO BREEDING STOCK Beef Cattle Fed For Breeding Purposes Need TissueMaking Foods. In the management of beef cattle for breeding purposes, the object In feeding Is to develop the animal and maintain vigor and tone. Therefore, teed rations rich in tissue?building materials. nrot?-in mul u-t. " ><> a feeding excessive quantities of fatforming feeds. Below are feeding hitus for South Carolina cattle feeders: Concentrates: Mix the feeds in each group in proportions suggested and feed as directed: Group 1: Corn-and-eob meal or ground barley or rice meal. 40 pounds; < ground oats. 40 pounds; wheat bran, 20 pounds. Ration: feed from 1 to 2 pounds of this mixture per 100 pounds live weight, exact quantity to feed depending on age. weight, and general condition. Group 2: Corn-and-cob meal or ground barley or rice meal, 50 pounds; oats, 20 pounds; bran, 20 pounds; cottonseed meal, 10 pounds. Ration: as In Group 1. HEREFORD COW^?The Kind of Cat- ! tie it Will Pay to Feed a.id Breed. ] Group 3: Corn-and-eob meal or ; ground barley or rim meal, 4<> pounds; , cottonseed meal. 10 pounds; bran. 50 t pounds. Ration: as lu Group 1. Roughage: Feed from 5 to 8 > pounds cowpea hay. clover, or alfal I fa. and what crab grass or other haj the animal will clean up. Stover ' (corn fodder) and oat straw may be ( used with the cowpea, clover, or al- f falfa hay. Corn silage antj roots. i such as beets, carrots, turnips, etc.. 1 are excellent feeds and, when avail . able, should make up a part of the roughage, replacing about 6 pound? of the dry roughage. Feed about 2 pounds of silage per 100 pounds live weight. livestock need salt. Feed It Id small quantities at regular intervals or put In a suitable box to which the stock have continual access. Good and abundant pasturage Is essential in economical livestocK pro duetion. Purlng the grazing season If pastures are good, cows and calves need very little attention. Pure fresh water should be avail aide at all times. If not constantly before the stock. It should he giver, them at least twice dally and during hot weather three times dally. R. L. SHIELDS, Chief, Animal Husbandry and Paliw Inv Clemscin Afrtcultvsl Collesri Makes Plants Grow Fast. Electroculture, as it is called, is the atest thin? in agriculture. Electric | Ighting baa been resorted to in an efort to keep plants growing at top ipeed for 24 hours out of every day. rVhen night comes or when clouds ob- ! icure the sun, the lights are turned m. Electricity will also be used to lupply heat during the cold weather. < Jo far electroculture le only an ex- i reriment, but the experts believe that his treatment will both hasten the rarvest and Improve the quality of the rop. The experiments are being conlucte'l V>th indoors and out. Day- I on, O., is the seen* 01 the experiment -American Boy. JB0" ?r .? -m?f r'fT'Qj 7 t i ? !?:- \ ? 1 ? ? V*.t ?i !.?! ! I ? . I OUR DIFFERENT LINES I t ii | THE BEST GROCERIES THAT I I T jj MONEY CAN BUY* I t \\ 1 i Shingles, 1,'me, Cement, Ceiling, Flooring, Weather- J 1 I boarding. Coal, Wood, and Brick. i 1 I | DELIVERED PROMPTLY. * i Edwards & Horton T * t * * t ? OK* t I POINTS || S OF MFDIT | - - ITlLiiVl J. t z These have brought the | ! UNDERWOOD ! 1 TYPEWRITER | ? To its present leading position. ? r zi==IZ=====Z=Z^=IZ=Z======Z^: I Award Grand Prize, Highest Honor Panama-Pacific * t International Exposition. 4 Holder International Speed and Accuracy Typewriter t 4 Trophy for Ten Years. ' f Elliott-Cresson Medal for Mechanical Supremacy. 1 v Endorsed l>v World's Champions and all Great Tvpists. 4 t- i | "The Machine You Will Fventually Buy" I . m . _ _m m _ 1 -M- m. - m ' r*." *?* *?" . .-i" . ,^r .^r . x ts^ .UT/i\V.u'i *. t I t r MASTER'S SALE. and of Blackmon; East by lands of Amos Muugo; South by waters of STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ?{a| ?l!ef?: and West b> waters of COURT OF COMMONapLEA8. " L,, A, WITTKOWSKY A. J. Gregory. Admr.. of the estate "?..r 'terhw Cojotr of T. E. Gregory, deceased, Martha * ' iyib 4t 1& * J. Catoe and Owen Gregory, ? ? Plaintiffs. ^ LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. 0. A. Gregory, Sam Gregory. R. B. _fS,tate ?' Soi,t|l CaroBna* County Gregory. J. W. Ingram, G. C. ?Jstpr:K By J- E- Stewman, Welsh and L. T. Gregory, Defend- Jud^e of Probate, ant. Whereas S. F. Williams has made Under and by virtue of a decree su'1 to me to grant him letters of erein of his Honor C. J. Ramage, ^ministration of the estate and ef esiding Judge, of date November fects of Harriet Whaley, deceased, ".rd, 1B14. I will sell at public These are. therefore, to cite and jutcrv, for cash, before the Court admonish all and singular the kind' louse In Lancaster, South Carolina, r?y and creditors of the said Harriet Miring the legal hours of sale, on Whaley, deceased, that they be and he first Monday in March. 1910. appear before me. in the Court of aeitig the 6th day of thereof, the fol- ' fibate. to be held a Lancaster on owing described real estate: 1;',h day of February. 1P16, next, Tract "B." all the right, title and :'fter publication thereof, at 11 nterest of T E. Gregory, deceased, ? ?'(K'k in the forenoon, to show he same being a vested one-half in- " 11 * .'they have, why the said erest In remainder upon the death "'mj.listration should not be granted. >f Owen Gregory and Emma Ore- oi\en under my hand, this 1st day :ory. in and to nil that piece, parcel of February, Anno Domini 1016. { r iract of land, situate, lying and J K. STEWMAX, Probate Judge. >eing In the State of South Caro- Feb. 1st and 8th. inn. and in Lancaster county, near raxahaw, and on the waters of Flat _ _ .. 'reek, containing eighty-two and Old Sores, Ctfcsr Remedies Won t Cuie, >ne-lialf (82 1-2) acres, more or The woi..t cait t>o mutter of how loiifrstanditift. ess. bounded and described as fol- ^ "v1!"1*',1 Dr ows: North by lands of W. F. Cook l?u ^ / We SL _ Absolutely Guarantee Luzianne Coffee will satisfy / I you in every respect. We ^ J further guarantee that one Vk \ /y pound of Luzianne will go as yPrv\ f far as two pounds of cheaper W Vanadyl coffee. If, after using the en- Q tire contents of one can ac' cording to directions, vou are not absolutelv ! V | satisfied on both these points, throw the empty can away and get your money back from the grocer. He will give it to you without quibble. Buy this better and cheaper W * coffee today. Write for premium catalog. ^ j The Reily -Tkylor Ccx New Orleans i'i ii'i i 11 ; i .1 i r11 ,Vi, 11 r. 11 li :i I I hill imin I [ ;i I i i ?'i