) 1 r^ni 1 1 Wlill^ iy\7y':V l< fsp ftp Qg M It Always Helps tN|; says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., In p^3 r^j writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman's ftfii tonic. She.sdys further: "Before i began to use PQm Cardui, myVback and head would/hurt so tad, I r-1 thought the pain would kill me. twas hardly able i Ql to do any of nty housework. After taking three bottles Kn u rTJ of Cardui, 1 be\in to feel like a mw woman. 1 soon r_ I I, m| gained 35 pounds, and now, 1 /o all my housework, ymrc t as well as run a^big water pull. I bqh * W151* every\suttering tfoinan would give taj The V^^mn's Tonic ^ ! ? trial I still/use Cadlui when I feel a little bad, Qfl and it alway? does me good." |Qfl r*^ Headache, backach<\ side ache, nervousness, tired, worry&ut feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman- KgJ 1 |H ly trouble/ Signs .that you need Cardui, the woman's BBS 1 tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui 1 W0M 'or y?ur trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing Bfii women for more than fifty years. 1 161 Get a BotUe Today 1 |g ! HANDJt. HAND ' ' h A businesslike business card is a * i] business asset. We can show > 11 you fine samples here. Before ordering elsewhere GIV E US A CALL. x^/^k . afc |; BOOK WORK *fl LAW WORK . CIRCULARS Job Work of All_ Kinds ..! POPULAR EXCURSION FROM Camden, Lancaster, Rock Hill AND WAY STATIONS TO , CHARLOTTE, N. C. AND RETURN % . MONDAY, OCT. 2ndTl916 j J ; Southern Railway 1 Schedule and Round Trip Fares as Follows: Schedule Rate Lvt Kershaw 8.10 A. M. $1.25 i Lv. Heath Springs 8:50 A. M. $1.25 Lv. Lancaster 9:10 A. M. $1.00 ! Ar. CHARLOTTE 11:35 A. M. t Returning, leave Charlotte 10:00 P. M., same day. 1 Children. 5 years and under 12 years, half fare. | i No tickets sold on train, purchase tickets from Agents , ii ?????? ' ( A Splendid Opportunity to Spend u Day in the Beautiful City f of Charlotte with its Many and Varied Attractions for Visitors. Separate Coaches for White and Colored People. Courteous Attention. Call on Agents for Tickets and Further Information J W E. McGEE, A. G. P. A., S. II. MCI.HAN, D. P. A. f Columbia, S. C. Columbia, S. C. ? mj t ( Send The News Your Job Printing. ! 'HE LANCASTER NEWSF1 + h WITH THK FA ItMKIt. + ? + LXC'liK SAM GIVKS ] US GOOD ADVICK Will Ik' Profitable to Follow. Clemson. College. Sept. 25.?The following suggestions for practices frhtch will tend to raise cotton grades ire made by the cotton marketing | specialists of the U. S. Department of > Agriculture: y Don't pick cotton before it has|s matured. This will insure stronger t fiber. > Pick carefully to avoid mixing ! leaves and trash in your seed cotton. 1 Don't store the seed cotton on the 1 ground. Such precautions will keep < ihe lint clean and white. Don't have cotton ginned until it r Is thoroughly dry. Ginning while the sotton is wet produces a rough, neppy lint which causes great waste 1 In spinning. Such cotton, therefore, y will not bring the best prices. ( When practicable have the ginner 1 run his machinery slowly enough to s produce an even, smooth lint, and f pay willingly a slightly Increased 1 Tee. 1 Protect your baled cotton care- I fully from dust, smoke and moisture. ! whether hauling it to market or j storing it on the farm or elsewhere. It also pays to handle and store > otton seed carefully. This product < s easily damaged if stored on the ground, permitted to got wet. or oth- , jrwise carelessly handled. Cotton seed is now selling at high prices and he farmer, therefore, will profit by keeping it in such condition that it will top the market. It will also pay J him to keep the seed in good condi- | tion for planting. Whereas cotton t ?eed sold for $17.10 a ton in 1911, I it was bringing $35.22 a ton August ' 15. 191f>. . CI.KMSON NOTKS. 1 Clemson College, Sept. 25.?He- J tween five and six hundred cadets j have arrived to take up their stud- i |AO nt W ~ 1. '* ? 1 1 nv iuc tuuc^. riveryininK was j I in readiness to receive them, and ] only one day was spent in Retting them established in their rooms and \ properly assigned to classes, 1 Next Tuesday, over two hundred j and fifty freshmen are expected. Several new professors are among | the faculty and the college is prepared to give its usual thorough courses of training along agricultural and mechanical lines, L'SK YOtrn OOI NTY aoknt. Clemson College. Sept. 29.?ir \ there is a county demonstration ; agent in your county, get acquainted with him. His ,business is to make'1 the farmers of his county more pros- h perous. He will advise with you | about the ordinary problems of farming and win put you in touch > with the specialists of the Extension Division and the United States I)e- , partment of Agriculture who will ? render special service when request- " ed. | ? ? * VALUE OK SEEIt COHX. Clemson College, Sept. 2ft.?To illustrate the value of good seed and the importance of selecting it, as ' well as the proper care of the corn crop throughout its growing season It is interesting to know that the 1 average yield of corn in the United < States is less than twenty-six f>ush- l els per acre. The highest yield ever j made was that produced by an Ala- < bama Corn Club boy totaling 232 1 bushels per acre. Poor seed is the 1 chief cause, probably, of a low yield,j< and for this reason seed corn should ' be selected from the field before the 1 crop is gathered in order that the < best ears can be selected?ears that ' have the heaviest yield of grain, are < wen lonuen ana nave not been in- f lured by rainy or cold weather?and 1 before the stalk has become im- < paired, so that everything of value . in connection with seed corn selec-i r tion can be properly judged. I It takes about fifteen ears of corn ' :o plant an acre. In harvesting the iced corn crop, therefore a good lafe margin above actual requirements should be gathered, because A'hen the corn is tested in the ipring, it is quite possible that many *ars will be thrown out on account >f poor germination. It is an easy matter to make a special sack to use in selecting seed 'orn by means of an ordinary grain sack and a nail keg hoop, which can I >e fastened to the mouth of the sack or holding it open. KILLING WEKVII/K i\ PEAS. Clemson College. Sept. 2 9.?All owpeas are more or less liable to be| nfested with weevils when harvest-, >d; therefore, it is advisable to funigate them soon after harvesting. I The best material to fumigate with s carbon-bisulphide, . sometimes >alled "hlgh-liie." The peas to be umigated should be placed in a tight )in or barrel so that the fumes will , 3 ID AY, SEPT. 29, 1916 be more effective. The carbonbisulphide should be placed in slialo\v dishes on top of the peas. One >unce of tiie carbon-bisulphide is' sufficient to fumigate a barrel of jeas; three to five pounds are re-| tuired for every thousand feet of a iglit bin, and more is required if lie bin is not gas-proof. Fumigation should be continued for twelve lours, after which the peas should )e aired for several hours. 1 lie >eas should be stored so that they vi 11 not become reinfested with veevils. This fumigation kills all lliiouu ? ??nv? v.. "toil lllll-IIIIMIIflll, Hill loes not prevent tlie weevils from vorking in the peas later. Use the same precautions in handling carjon-bisulphide that you would use in landling gasoline. Keep all sources >f fire a good distance away. ? rCK> MIC H SALT MAY KILL FA ItM AN IM A US Clemson College, Sept. 2 9.?The 'act that too large an excess of salt1 vhen fed to live stock may be pois-| >noua may seem funny, but it is a act. It is quite a common thing to see chickens die from an overdose of salt. Do not allow your cows and lorses to become salt hungry, as' hey may eat an overdose when they inally get it. When they have not tad access to it for some time it is >afer to salt them sparingly at first. , Keep some salt where they can jet it at will and they will not then >vereat when salted. V 7 1)0 YOl HAVE KIDNEY? TROUBLE > sinus of Danger V Backache, dizziness and headache, v vith "specks before the eyes," ir- V egular heart action and liver trou- * tie. The severity of the early symp oms depending upon the amount of [ ! joisony which the kidneys have al- * owed tp remain in the system. SYMPTOMS. Aching'-Pains over the Hips, Back- * tche. Sediment or Deposit in Urine, V rriation rrf the Bladder. Pain in LTrinating. Rheumatism /uric acid in a )loodl, Sudden Stoppage of Urine. ilighly Colored or Milky White Urne, Pass Bldpd or M^cus in Urine, y detention of UJrine, Straining after ! ! Urinating, ThiVk or ^luggish Urine, * Stone in the Bladder, Cystitis Cin-J lauiation of bladd/r). Catarrh of . Bladder or Bo\?elr advanced. V Kidneco is put up in 25.1 50c and $1 , packages. y PRKK KIDNECO COtPOX > + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + I" This Coupon with Tdn Cents + fr in Silver for Postage, etc., en- -+ * > titles the bolder to one 25c + Package of Kidneco FREE. + ! Adrress l)ept. M. Kidneco Co.. + * Boston. Mass. fr + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + >: v HA ID HV I1KVKMK OFFICERS > V Xrrest Made on Charge of Illicit ^ Distilling. * Conway, Sept. 22. The sheriff ^ bis deputy and three revenue offi- ^ era made a raid in the boundary secion of Horry county last night and is a result Tas itoseman is in jail ! :>n a charge of distilling illict whis- 'J key. It seems that the sheriff and <1 lis posse had evidence of some party ingaging in the illicit distilling of' ' | whiskey. The officers left Conway i s ast night and arrived at the house j | it Itoseman a little after midnight. [ They surrounded it and forced an ' ' ?ntranee. After a scramble for It some minutes Itoseman was arrested. J ; irought to town and lodged in jail 1 f arly this morning. \ \ ' m - i The Implement Co. II 1302 Main St., - Richmond, Va. | > Offer the Best and Most Improved | Farm Implements and Farm Machinery. ; Seasonable Implements to which | we call special attention arc PapeckEnsilage Cutters, If"""" William\ Portable Corn Meal antfTeed MiU. Olds Gasoline Engines, J Farmers Favorite Grain Drills, Nonbariel Lime and F?rtilizdf Sowers. Special/circular^ giving full in- / formation in reftarl to the advan- r tagc* any uses of th?c implements t mailed Sn request. We can also supply frour needs in \ _ CaneMillt, Evaporafcri, W*tti Cylinder Power Corn ibhollcri. Wood-Sawi, RoofingA Wire Fencing, etc. V , Write for Catalog and prleeiofYny Implemenu or Farm Supplies required^ ' ? _____ 1 A Scant or a Rill Tablespoon \ WHICH? i?\" ? I A scant tablespoon of Luzianne goes exactly vas far*'as a big heaping tablespoon \of a/cheaper coffee, for you use only ha\f,4s much of Luzianne. That's so positively guaranteed that if, after usin^/an > en tire can of Luzianne as . directed, yl*u are not entirely satisfied wiUf its economy and goodness, your //?/-//: grocer, on y*our say-so, will gladly $0:. return your moliey. Write for our premium catalogue. \ The Reily-Taylor Co. New Orleans E-A-T I AT ; 0LYMP1A CAFE I Because You'll Get What You ;.> Want When You Want It. : \ v We Serve tie Very Best of Every- j thing To Be Found Anywhere I, /' \ |i|| GIVE US A TR1AI. II __ l.J 9LYMPIA CAFE I CLEAN AND UP-TO-DATE : # V >* I t * ? f f # t ? ,1 ? 4 ? ^4^ FRESH SHIPMENT || OF Is GARDENER'S CAKES II ' / j f ! Is I CITRON CAKE j| | POUND CAKE Is I MARRLE CAKE II 4 \ 1 ! We Slice This Cake In Any Quantity. II r:..~ ii. *_ rv.j? p- ?? t " vjivc /\n v/iuci ror ineirose Flour. I! < > EDWARDS & HORTON || FARMERS' MUT \ / If you are not ihsured, now, ia a good time to insure. Ifter the wet spell the roof of/the house will be dry and nay burn from a spaf^c and/nres frequently occur from lightning. , \ / D. e. RON fy agent rORK - / WITH CAROLINA / \ 11