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M Wl" -7 I Gr I Thi I neii Iiaci Mud in pr< for tY the r; shelv printi execi will c Iminu This TH A - ' J , m . , ?. SAGE TEA DARKENS I nir HAIR TO ANY SHADE aft ' ati' Don't Stay Gray! Hero's An Old- ^n< , time Recipe That Anybody " Can Apply. vis for The use of Sage and Sulphur for j restoring faded, gray hair to its nat- ^jr Tiral color dates back to grandmo- pa ther's time. She used it tb keep her I ghair beautifully dark, glossy and at- ] tractive. Whenever her hair took jja on .that dull, fadted or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was ^ ?p|UICU mui nuuuw?? But brewing at time home is mussy a ? and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a 50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- ^ phur Compound," you will get this famous old preparation, improved by a ^ the addition of other ingredients, j which can be depended upon to re- pQJ store natural color and beauty to jja the hair. ^ "to A well-known downtown uru&giBt j^0. says it darkens the hair so nautrally jos and evenly that nobody can tell it tjje has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By hi{ morning the gray hair disappears, it and after another application or gp, two, t becomes beautifully dark and glossy. Wyetb's Sage and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation, or preven** - * j: ? A Axr lion 01 uiscoec.?mi.. vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv V V V LOWNDESVILLE. V V V vw vv vv vv vv vvv vv < Lowndesvilte, Sept. 3.?Mrs. D. L. Barnes has returned home after ( spending several days in Anderson' with her niece, Mrs. Rob Moseley. Mr. D. N. Bourne of Columbia, visited relatives here for the week-end. Mrs Wilbur Blake and little daugh-' ter of Calhoun Falls, are the guests of Miss Ellen Tennant. Misses Virginia Latimer and Christine Kay were shopping in Anderson Friday. Mr. W. M. Speer is in Atlanta on business. ^ Mrs. M. E. Peabody is visiting in / the home of Mrs. Thos. Cooley. i~~ Mr. W. R. Bone and Mr. M. Man-j V. IfE YOU s advertis< jhbor. W< t and feel i money?billic sparing for wa le gigantic tide ailroads have s es in anticipate ing? The prir ited now while command respe te and rush yo advertisement e pres: \\ , i ig have returned to Lanett, Ala., er spending a week here with reives. They made the trip by auto i were accompanied home by Mr.] G. Bone. Mrs. Sam Brownlee of Anderson, ited her sister, Mrs. Kittie L. Kay several days' last week. Mrs. H. J. Armstrong and son, . W. A. Armstrong, of Honea th, were the guests of Mrs. T. 0. -kpatrick Monday and Tuesday. Messrs. W. H. Bonds and E. W-. rper, Jr., made a business trip to ferson. Ga.. Thursday. Rev. T. M. Sullivan of Royston, will arrive Monday to conduct jeries of meeting in th^ Methodist ireh. \n election was held here Saturj for cotton weigher. Mr. L. B. ftis defeated Mr. W. R. Nance by rote of 87 to 56. Mr. A. V. Barnes has accepted a >ition as book-keeper for Sullivan rdware Co., in Anderson and will ve his family there Tuesday, wndesville feels very- keenly the s of this good family but wisheg m much success in their new home If wheat and oat seed are jh and they probably will be will pay to prepare, your Dund well and fertilize well d make all you can on three four or five acres.?Adv. tfHWlfcOwIi ??n5w*nfc I i ' I R NEIGHl ement is wril e merely call sure you wi >ns of it?is being i r anrl the business ! of business that is ;olved their problei on and preparation ited material neces j the printer has tii ict for your busiru ur printer to death is written in behalf 5 AINU BA t '/ ' I /v *. > . \ ' fv / " ' , f r GRAIN SOWN % The United States Government gue of $2.00 a bushel for wheat harvestec i T i r\ii rrVi I n nf In Ka o irnntT i it UU^ilt UUU tu V O CI V t/1 J UlIilLUlt 1 otic farmer to rai$e wheat at $2.00 a farmers are asked to increase their w this year. This also should be easy t Two dollar wheat means high flour 1'or wheat and then pay the millers' the dealers profit, your flour will cos It takes six bushels of wheat to make of you buy?millers and railroads an fit, they won't work for nothing and result is you can make your flour che And besides it will pay a man to s( There has heen considerable trouble an early stand of cotton, but there h an early stand of cotton when it is p early stand is going to be exceedingly weevil strikes you and it is going to does the early cotton is all you will h boll weevil comes, it will be July cro July crop will not be very heavy on < June. It will be the early cotton that mighty nearly guarantees a quick sta all your land at once and it is a good are guaranteed $2.00 a bushel for yoi Three acres of wheat and three aci land that is well prepared and well trick and make enough for your farm year win leave some 10 sen. When you sow with a three disc gr when you sow and you have about as plant. We are not selling three disc people here who do. You can get the selling fertilizer, and the best that is in sacks; the best by test of result, want?the best by test of results. _ V demand last spring nor the spring of : the floors. It must be a pretty good such a demand for it. It isn't our wi goods, at least we have ben reliably in ways did not add to the sales to speak inherent virtue of the goods that ma creates the demand. / We have it now fine and dry. S December first. If you can use it in bulk (unsacke cost of the bags which is higher this known and the cost of the labor of b) more than it has been heretofore. See us and get the best. When it i the best. A great many people will itself when sowing and will top dress The Virginia farmers use 16 per c sowing and do not top dress in ths spi ers make fine grain crops. 'i&u . uS ' 1 'a tS rj . J R' . ., ?WIIMMI BOR A cn tten in behal: you attentic II see the iusl - turned loose by the world has adjusted coming. The fan ns, and you have i i. Have you plann sary to your busin< me to do it properl; 5ss. Don't wait i l?it's an injustice : of your neighbor NNER CO] 4G. We can i prefer. Go ) AND irantees a minimum price I; in 1918. _____ natter to induce a patri- FERTILIZA bushel. South Carolina rheat acreage 47 per cent .The fo] o accomplish. concerning for when you pay $2.00 wheat this toll, railroad freight and the departD t you a pretty stiff price. e*tension * ,, ,. , ' ? y . sity, July . the kind of flour the most The fer d dealers have their pro- wheat crop board themselves. The important \ aper than you can buy it. fall. From )w wheat for the stubble. ana come ri the. last few years to get \?J}^ Jesuits as been no trouble to get "lization a >lanted after stubble. An ?tn?ivpri r, important when the boll fog~the"f?U strike you and when it for'eagles, tave to pick. When the "Evidenc p or no crop. And your bleness of cotton that comes up in wheat is ab you will pick and stubble L. M. Wagg nd. You can't sow down countv, app vear to begin when you Poun?s ?* 1 ur wheat. nartThel' es of oats to the olow on TLl Vl fertilized will turn the cured l22A needs and if it is a good to the acre, tilized, 12.? ain drill you can fertilize acre?a gai safe a crop as you can due to fert; grain drills but there are This Jei grain drills?but we are Pounds of a made; the very best put ""L?fh $2 And that is what you ihi^basis th /e could not supply the ^y Mr. Wai 1916. Sold out and swept worth $19.? fertilizer for there to be after countii nning ways that sells the plying ferti [formed that our winning for harvesti of. It is just the natural i^e increase kes the crops and that j P??re. ' r this isn t a iHnllflra fnn 560 us Top priccs. Cdsh v?ry neap to Tho Ohio d) w? can save you th0 tion of Wooi y0ar than w? hav? 0V0P for the last agging it, which is also has secured ' . 8.0 bushels is all the same price, pret ^P0E5 us0 16 P0P cent acid by 160 pounds in the spring if needed. ? ldieh^rL ent acid by itself when ^d the un *ing, and Virginia farm- bushels. W of potash h* I i i IANCE f of youi >n to this tice of it Goveromen I II! i lLseir 10 car ner is readj stocked you ied for you jss should b y; so that i mtil the, las Jto yourseli ?and YOl MPAN\ ? ?? supply you 'with acid anc me to see us. ER80N PHOSPHATE A W. F. Farmer, tTION OF WHEAT, the \ ? beer [lowing statement or a f a frtnl i 1 J rw r\ 5 r\T\ r> P - ? uic ici uxuaiiuii ui IIIUI" fall was issued by phos lent of agricultural Jen^ it Purdue Univer- fore 1, 1917: mcp tilization/ of the n?t.] i was never, more ?{, . ;han it will be this P' every part of Indi- in& eports of the excelsecured from fer- Pl!?( nd the very poor , 1 heat secured from n.. ia.il. sun. IC ruuz[ mer swaps dollars e on the profita- P{an fertilizing the P , undant." "In 1916 ?ack joner/.of St. Joseph J18?/ lied two hundred icid phosphate to ;"e 1 all but a small turn d sown to wheat. utilized part he se- IerifJ bushels of wheat , and on the unfer- ear^ > bushels to the emP in of 9.9 bushels, ear.y ilizing." ?*!<' ar two hundred .1 cid phosphate will 13 lel $2.25, and wheat rpj. .00 per bushel. On floup e increase secured you , ggoner would be iu* *0 and the profit you j rig expenses of ap- Jnnp. ilizer and paying ^ ng and marketing own ( id crop would be And , f!5.00 an acre. If case of swapping Th eagles it comes Soutl 1 it. make i experiment sta- every 3ter, as an average Phos] twenty-two years, son an increase of from of wheat to the state an Application of and i of acid phosphate to gel The pnosphated en 19.2 bushels, A iphosphated 11.2 well 1 here 1000 pounds tion < is been added to Adv. a \ 1 I ' I siii H:" *353) 1 mixed goods, just as yott;j|j ND OIL COMPANY, _ ' V1"f sec. phosphate,^ the yield has i 20.4 bushels to the acre^vji n increase of 1.2 bushels ,^/f e than was secured . from ::i;M jphate alone. Even at preprices for wh^at and be-war prices for potash the ease in the wheat crop was ;|| sufficient to pay the cost tie potash. The addition otasn to fertilizer cont&iri-' *;.3?g phosphorous and nitrogen not be profitable when ap1 to clay and loam soils. -M ine farmers out of\ ten ild fertilizer wheat this ;cj| Fertilizer not only in- ^ ses the yield directly, but ^ greater supply of available^ ; ; t food naakes stronger >: ts that withstand t.hft ? . of fungus diseases and % 3ts better than those unlized. At present prices | farmer may expect a re- ;$| of at least five dollars for -i y dollar spent for wheat ,11 lizer this fall. . le importance of' ordering r cannot be to6 'strongly ^ lasized. Those who order r will get what they want, 3 those who order late ^ be compelled to take what M ft, op do without.?Adv. te bread you get from the ^ you make) from the wheat J, ?row is better and purer any you get from the flour Duy. There is%very little ndicitis in sections of the try which produces its >3 corn and wheat and meat. there is a reason.?Adv. e superintendent of the 1 Carolina penitentiary s a contract for fertilizer year with the Anderson Dhate and Oil Go. ClemCollege buys fertilizer them every year. These 1 institutions want the best t seems they know where t it.?Adv. " good acreage in grain 'ertilized is the best soluof the labor problem.?