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I GENERA The limits on Parcel Post in certain zones, has been raised, effective after MarcH 15th. C ____ The annual expenditure of the United States for candy is approximately $400,000,000. Senator Phelan, of California, introduced a bill extending the Free Mail, privilege to the Red Cross. The limit of time for filing in come tax returns has been extended to April 1. No formal comment was made in Washington on Imperial Chancellor Hertling's speech in the reichstag. Furman will be represented in the Bsitorieal Contest to be held in Greenwood in April by E. C. Kolb, of Sumter. Some cotton on the depot platform at Belton was badly damaged 1 TmabJuw TKavo WAI*A 1 K H bales, 75 were almost a total loss. A law to prevent chickens from tearing a p the gardens of the people 'of Columbia ia going to be passed. The first reading was in order at the meeting this week. In Savannah a record for a single ale of cotton showed that 6,000 bales brought nearly a million dollars. The Flannery Co., sold the eotton but the name of the purchaser was not given. Miss Penelope. Clarke, an Atlanta girl, has enlisted in the Navy as Yoeman to help win the war. Her sister is now studying to be a Red Cross nurse. Senator Reed of Missouri, says that unless the chaos in the coal business disappears, the United States will faee a greater coax snortage than ever before. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture says th^re is no danger of famine in the United States, .Indications now are of a record crop and the outlook is bright for a good wheat crop. On Wednesday the Bolsheviki was offering resistance to the Huns. Violent fighting was reported from Pskov, 105 miles south of PetrogTad*. This town has changed hands again. Judge George Ward it dead. He died at Elizabeth City, after an illness of two months. He was on the North Carolina Superior Court Bench from 1964 to 1911. In two gas attacks Chree American soldiers were killed and nine badly gassed. Some were caught before they could get their masks adjusted and the others weres asleep in their dugouts. Money of the L. and N. Railway Company was invested in political campaigns is the statement by Milton H. Smith, the President of the Road. This money was spent before 4915. The War Department now permits women to qualify as inspectors of 11 " 'tn n n fln. glUttll OXUUTf avvviuiii^ w M*> nouncement by the Civil Service Commiaata, A ten months old baby boy fell i from his bed while it's mother had gone into another room and caught his head in the iron frame work of the bed and broke it's neck. Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation of Labor said that the attempt to have the New York State ratify the Federal prohibition amendment was the most unpatriotic proposition ever submitted. Labor is unalterably opposed to the amendment Fertilixer now goes under govern ment control according to a proclamation issued by the President last Tuesday. Makers, importers, atorera, and sellers come tinder the scope of the new regulations. Licenses must b* obtained by March 20th. MWMi??iiMiiiMMniMMHMituiinnMtiniiiiiiii!inimnmmnittnmnnitmtinrtr-rnT"rir"rii'"lL NEWS Senator Wataon, Republican o Indiana, said that the country wa quite safe in the hands of Presiden Wilson. Broad powers bestowe< upon him were not dangerous bu necessary. Blame for the big wreck on th< Southern railroad near Columbia has been placed on the crew 01 train number 18 by the coroneri jury. The flagman of that crew i; held responsible. Twelve person! were killed and a number seriouslj injured. The Americans in Moscow an safe but a dispatch from the American Consul General says thej were preparing to move to Samara about 500 miles eastward, for the Germans were reported to be proceeding to that city. Johnnie JoneB' Carnival is to show in Columbia two weeks beinning on March 11. The Columbia City Council had put a ban on all Carnival attractions but a committee of ladies went before the (Jounciimen ana were granted their request to allow the Carnival to come to Columbia. A bill for the 1920 census will be reported in a few days. It will be broader than ever. Supervisors and enumerators of population and agriculture will number between 85,000 and 90,000 and for manufacturers, mines and quarries under separate supervision there will be 1,500 employees in the field besides from 1,000-to 5,000 clerks and other employees in the census office. A whole United States battalion volunteered to accompany the French in a raid on the Germans north of Chemin des Dames on Satiiv/taTT mnmincr Onlv twelltV-six u4um; ?-v 0. ? ... ?r were chosen. The French numbered 76. Six German prisoners and five Frenchmen were injured in a barrage fire on their return. The prisoners claim that they have plenty of food and each one tells the same story. The Parliament of Italy voted to continue the war by every means necessary to aid the allies to gafn their ends. The address of Fojeign Minister Sonnino was a rebuke to those who favored a more moderate policy on the part of Italy. He held out for the allies war aims and the independence of Albania and the free development of the othe^ races. The Raleigh Iron Works opened up after having closed down a week. I All the employees were non-union men. The manufacturers declared an open shop- and the machinists -1??-J Onmo Viavo aor>nrpH oWppcu V*\JL a. uuiitv uwtv ? positions elsewhere while others have gone to Washington. The union men refuse to accept the management's invitation to return to work under the new conditions. Representative Bear, father of the bill which provided for the appropriation of $50,000,000 to furnish seed for the farmers in the drouth stricken districts . in the North west, says that he intends to take the floor as soon a? possible and lay the matter before the house. His bill was killed by the committee. A negro private, Ivey Cleveland, has received his honorable discharge from the army because he has feet too large to buy shoes for. He came to Camp Travis wearing a pair of No. 14, brogans, which were too small. After a while his shoes wore out and rather than go to the expense of having a pair made which would cost between $15 and $20, he was given his honorable dis charge. He will go back to the Brazos bottoms, where they don't wear shoes. ARMY DRAFT TREATY WAS SIGNED TUESDAY Washington, Feb. 19.?The siging of the army draft treaty between Great Britain and the United States was announced today. The new British Ambassador Axed his signature to the document as his first official act i* Washington. oiiy- L _ i ?.? ?i ?mi urn i?i?m i > * , I Hopes Women Will i | Adopt This Habit j j I As Well As Men i f I! !' < Glass of hot watsr each morni' Ing helps us look ?ind feel clean, sweet, fresh. j " 11 i J : 1 c Happy, bright, alert?vigorous and vivacious?a good clear skin; a nat- ' ural, rosy complexion and freedom from illness are assured only by i clean, healthy blood. If ohly every ? woman and likewise every man could > ' realize the wonders of the morning : L Inside bath, what a gratifying change i a would take place. 1 Instead of the thousands of sickly, i anaemic-looking men, women and i girls with pasty or muddy comptexr ions; Instead of the multitudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain rags" ana pessimists we snouia see a 1 virile, optimistic throng of rosy, cheeked people everywhere. .n inside bath is had by drinking, each morning before breakfast, a , glass of real hot Water with a teaspoonful of limebtone phosphate In It > to wash from the stomach, liver, kldj aeys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's Indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening | the entire alimentary canal before | r putting more food into" tie stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bili lousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, ? colds; and partlculary those who have ? a pallid, sallow complexion and who c are constipated very often, are , urged to obtain a quarter pound of r limestone phosphate at the drug store j ' which will cost but a trifle but is E sufficient to demonstrate the quick v and remarkable change in both health E and appearance awaiting those who y practice internal sanitation. We mnst remember that inside cleanliness la more important than outside, be* cause the skin does not ahfiorb impur- . ities to contaminate the blood, -while the pores In the thirty feet, of bowels T dot.' * IF KIDNEYS ACT r BAD ME? flayt Backache it a sign you have bean eating too much meat, whioh forma uric acid. When you wake up with backaehe and dull misery in- the kidney region it generally mean* you have been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms urio acid which overwork* tlia kirinovN in their pffnrt to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you most relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; mmoving all the body's urinous waste, else you hava backache,, side headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongua is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urina is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water soalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Baits; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water ? j before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice,' oombined with litnia, and has been used for /generations to v clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, c also to neutralize adds in the urine so it j no longer irritates, thus coding bladder weakness. ti Jad Salts is a life saver for regular p meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot c injure and makps a delightful, effer- r yeacsnt lithia-witer drink. s j SAGE TEA DAND1T ' 111 DARKEN 111j V F Ifs Grandmother's Recip# t# Bring Back Color and Lustre to Hair. ? Tou can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustroua almost over night If you'll get a bottle ol? "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of p old famous Sage Tea Recipe, Improve# by the addition of other Ingredients, g are sold annually. Bays a fiell-known druggist here, because It dirkens the c hair so naturally and evenly that no j one can tell lt?has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or <! becoming: faded have a surprise await- D I ing them, because after ore or two F applications the gray hair vanishes a and your locks become luxuriantly idark and beautiful. This Is the age of youth.; Gray- a haired, unattractive folks'* aren't wanted around, so get busy with r Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound q to-night and you'll be delighted with ^ your dark, handsome hair and your 1] youthful appearance within a few ? days. . < This preparation Is a toilet requisite ti j and is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. v a "TWIN BEDS," COMING. a P "Twin Beds," Salisbury Field and y Margaret Mayo's tempting theatri- jr cal morsel, which ran for one solid B( year at the Harris Theatre, New jj York, has already reached its second a; year in London, will be the attraction at the Opera House here on Friday, March 8th. tl OPEI! NOSTRILS! END 1! A COLD OR CATARRH j; How To Get Belief When Head J J and Nose are Stuffed Up. ;<? Count fifty! Tour cold in head or catarrh disappear*. Tour clogged noa> trils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe , freely. $?o more snuffling, hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or headache; ao struggling for breath at night. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream . in your nostrils. It penetrates through evfcry air passage of the head, soothing and1, healing the swollen or inflamed muixms membrane, giving you instant reliaf. Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't stay stuffed-up and miserable. Belief is eureC Half Your Lfvlng_ Without Money Cost , We are s 11 at a danger point On ; ;he use of i:ood common sense in our L91S farm and garden operations depends prosperity or our "going broke." < Even at present high priceB no one : :an plant all or nearly all cotton, buy . !ood and grain at present prices from mpply merchant on credit and make 1 noney. Food and grain is higher In )roportlon than are present cotton >rices. It's a time above all others to play i lafe; to produce all possible food/ Tain and forage supplies on your own icres; to cut down the store bill. I A good piece of garden ground, I ightly planted, rightly tended and ; rept planted the year round, can be nade to pay nearly half your living. It ' irlll save you more money than you J aade on the best three acres of cotton ou ever grow! Hastings' 1918 Seed Book tells all .bout the right kind of a money sav- < Qg garden and the vegetables to put 1 a It. It tells about the farm crops as rell and shows you the clear road to 1 eal and regular farm prosperity. If? < rreo. Send for It today to H. Ck JA8TING8 CO* Atlanta, Ga?Advt Wood's Seeds ; For 1918? j The patriotic duty of farmer s and * < gardenerseverywhereis to increase crop and food production. Inten- 1 siv? farming and gardening, and i the liberal use of fertilizers, together , with proper rotation of crops, so as to increase and improve the fertility and productiveness of the land, are all vital snd necessary considerations at the present time. ' * Wood's Descriptive Catalog ' For 1918 gives the fullest and most up-to-drfte information in regard to all Farm and Garden Seeds And tells about the best crope to grow, both for profit and home use. Write tor Catalog axd prloea of 1 Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed 1 Potatoes, Seed Oats, or any Farm Seeds Required. i Catalog Mailed Tt? C*n Keqneet. t T. W. WOOD & SONS, < SEEDSMEN, Richmond, Va. g 1 i HOW'S THIS? e We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- t /ard for any case of Catarrh that annot be cured by Hall's Catarrh t ledicine. Hall's Catarrh Mediicine has been aken by catarrh sufferers for the 8 ast thirty-five years, and has be- h orae known as the most reliable emedy for Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh J ledicine acts thru the Blood on i he Mucous surfaces, expelling the s 'oison from the Blood and healing he diseased portions. After you have taken Hall's Ca- s arrh Medicine for a short time you f rill see a great improvement in your qneral health. Start taking Hall's 8 !atarrh Medicine at once and get id of catarrh. Send for testimonials, s rg G J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. 8 Sold by all druggiste, 76c.?Adv. -1-lmo. : b TWIN BEDS," FASCINATING COMEDY, COMING MARCH 8 a An early booking at the Opera n [ouse is Salisbury Field and Mar- g aret Mayo's uproariously funny I omedy, "Twin Beds," coming un- p er the direction of A. S. Stern and f; lompany. Not in a decade has any f: lay scored such a laughing triumph s1 s "Twin Beds", a story of domestic p fe in a fashionable New York partment house. It is said to be a are theatrical treat. The fun is j f< uick and clean, the lines sparklingf witty, and the highly original omplications in which the characjrs find themselves so mirth-prooking as to be almost irresistible, ^ nd, best of all, it leaves a pleas- ? nt taste in the mouth. "Twin Beds" 0 layed for one solid year in New S1 ork, delighted our Australian cousis for six months and is now in its 14 jcond year in London, .turning E) undreds away at every perform- 0 nee. k ,? , , ? 03 Only those on the lower parts of bi le wheel are in favor of revolution, n Hews for t WARBLES OR WOLVES v IN CATTLE Clemson College, S. C.f Feb. 28.? About this time of the year, cattle are commonly affected with grubs, "warbles", or "wolves" in the back. Seventy to eighty per cent, of Southern cattle are said to be affected. The eggs are deposited on the skin during the summer months by the warble fly or gad-fly. The eggs hatch and the young . grubs penetrate the skin and develop just beneath it. Some claim- that the cattle lick themselves and thus take in the eggs, which hatch,the grubs piercing the throat and wandering to the structures under the skin, f? UVA V VUCJ UV V VIV|I? THey develop under the skin for about ten months, after which time they emerge (in the spring) as full jrown warbles. They drop to the ground and burrow under the soil. Here they develop for about thirty days, and the result is the mature Garble fly. The grubs in the back prevent proper development of the animal, causing considerable irritation ' and pus formation. The value of the hide of the animal is materially re traced. Treatment consists in standing the affected animal on a board or cement floor, squeezing oat the grub by hand onto the floor, and killing bhem. Fine foreceps may be used to assist in removing the grubs from the swellings. In the early stages of the development of the swelling, a small amount of kerosene may be injected into the mass by means of a machine oil can. rhis destroys the grubs. To prevent the flies laying eggs on the animals in the summer, a J per cent solution of creolin may be sprayed on the cattle. rOUR 1918 FARMING PROGRAM.! ' Clemson Collie, S C.t Feb. 28? 1. A good garden all the year, ft is the best and the cheapest food for the family. 2. As much corn in acreage as n 1917. More attention to its cul;ivation for a greater yield. It is ;he cheapest food for man and beast 3. An abundance of hay and 'orage. Home-grown feeds mean >rofitable live-stock keeping. _. A plentiful supply of milk*, >ggs and meat for the famliy and he farm, and som? to selL Milk is he indispensable food. 5. A large patch of both sweet ind Irish potatoes, and a proper louse to store the crop in. A large >atch of sugar cane, and more care * AAA/1 lu avtciibiuii LU uic uiaxviii^ ui guvv* yrupsL 6. Aa large a cotton crop as posible, after the five items above are aithfully performed. Cotton as a urplus, is the best money crop. 7. As good machinery as posible, to make up some of the labor hortage. Weak and starving colonies ^ of ees should be fed. Begin now and o everything possible to strengthen he colonies for the honey flow, larch, April and May are the great lonths for building up the hopey ' athering machinery in a colony. )o not raise drones this spring. 'Ian to use some type of standard 1 rame hive this season. Supply the rames with comb foundation or 1 tarter as it greatly increases the roductiveness of the be<es. If U fast, U beat U4>oats; if U i east, U-boats beat you. i USE THE TRACTOlgS MORE. Clemson College, S. C. Feb. 28? j >r. Bradford Knapp, Chief of the , tates Relation Service, U. S. Dept. , f Agriculture, makes the following , jggestion: . With the shortage of farm labor ( is suggested that each county ;ent obtain a list of all tractor wmers in his territory and escer- i lin from the owners what portion i f the time the tractor will actually i a needed for their own use and ar- : inge, if powible, with owpara of 1 u lie Farmer | tractors to operate them to their ^|| fall capacity, training at least two vlW men to run the machines so thdiv-Jsjl they can work two shifts. Arranjf?v ments should then be perfected between owners of tractors and ownr'C^S J ers of land for the hiring of tractor '^ M plowing at reasonable rates. In way it is believed that in some ter-. ritories it might be possible to mak* jjjgai the-tractors already in the hands of^'Js M farmers do double duty. * r--|f9K In publishing this statement, the Extension Division of Clemson Col- || lege, would urge the heartiest operation with it on all the part of ; | all our people. We are short labor, and the tractor does take the |? place of men and mules. Don't'^ wait for the County Agent to s?a you about tractor plowing. Go arrange for its use on yottf owii^ ^ farm as soon as possible^ Get machine to do the heavy plowing, THE LIMA BEAN, A PROFIT- Jl ABLE FOOD CROP >|p Clemson College, S. C., Feb. 28?r||j \ South Carolina's yearly impoitftr ^B tion of the common Lima or Butter vf JgH Bean amounts to thonunda of dollrr^ firs, yet this bean will growand'jm|9 M duce to perfection in all sections the State. It is an excellent hums*^ >^ food and may be used as feed for '.J domestic animals and It adds fertfiU M % ity to the soil as the other legmnef'|9L j do. The farmers and gardeners of the State could resort to no" secon- % ^ dary food crop that offer a moreJwH af promising outlook. Lima beans 'M should have a larger place in evtr#a ',vgarden and on every farm. ' Thsjr^ require no special preparation cultivation, yielding well on any^ ^ good garden or field soil. As wWi"|a ii other beans there are two tvoea: ^$9 the bush, or ?warf, and the 'too- J ning, or pole. For extensive plantta?ff^ J! the bash type is the more deiirable^H % Plant in rows three feet apart eight to ten inches in tlie '|jl cover to 'a depth of two or thwN^^*'-| inches. Plant the running beana* ^ along all of your garden fences for ^jfl their yield is usually heavier, than ::jjM the dwarf type. |s For further information eonstllt^Hp ^ the Extension Division, Clemson '|jp Jj Fields not plowed in the fall and left idle over winter should be plow-^ ed as early as possible to prevent Ja. some measure the severe damage expected this year, from the whit* ^ Look once more for pokeweed and % blackberry vines on terraces andrf^Me other places in and around the fields ^11^ to be planted to cotton; Arrangj. that tenants do not plant ' violets r^U about their houses on the plantsK' l^gM tiona as this is a splendid way of' , starting red spider.. '/v. MAKE GOOD YOUR PLEDGE) V. ;|| KEEP THESE FOOD RULES'^^9 Each day one Wheatless meal; .-jaw aaaIi tftAA^ AVIA WliAaflaoo Ho *f 1;*SH cat,u wccuv uuo IT uoavtooo i/M/ .nn WednesdaV. v Each day one Meatless meal; e?Kh MJSB week one Meatiest Day?Tuesday. I One other day without Pork? Saturday. . '$'K Wheatless means to eat no wheat products?bread, 'biscuit, crackers, V'|| pastry. V^fggH Meatless means to eat no red r?M meat?beef, pork, mutton, . lamb, , '<J veal; and no preserved meats?beef, bacon, ham, salt pork, or lard. . yig Use vegetable oils or butter subatitutes for cooking, hold the household to three-fourths of a pound of ..IE sugar a week for each person. Ten millions of household* har?*^.^J|l joined in the Food Administration*^ ^ to make our national resource#1 h .*|l suffice for ourselves, those associ-^ , a ted with us in this war, and our ','il armies in France. Observance of these rules will make the pledge If arood.?Official Bulletin. The world's most glorious givers are those who give cheer, sympathy, JSj&i ?nd hope to others. They are far rarer than those who bestow money, jret they are far oftener needed.? Exchange.