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This Is Better Than Laxatives On* NR Tablet Each Night For A Week Will Correct Your Constipation and Make Constant Dosing Unnecessary. Try It. Poor digestion and assimilation mean a poorly nourished body and low vitality, l'oor elimination means clogped bowels, fermentation, putrefaction and the formation of poisonous gases which ere absorbed by Ihe blood and carried through the body. The result Is weakness, headaches, dizziness, coated tongue, Inactive liver, bilious attacks, lo^rs of energy, nervousness, poor appetite, impoverished blood, sallow complexion, pimples, skin disease, and often times serious illness. Ordinary laxatives, purges an-! cathartics?sails, oils, calomel and the like?may relieve for a lVw hoard, but real, lasting bene.1t can only coma through u?e of medicine that tones up and stren?Ttue::s t.ie dig -Hivo as "Well aa t!io climinntive organs. Get a -"c box of Natures Remedy (NR Tablets) and talc; one tablet eaca night for a wee!:. Relief will follow the very first dose, but a few days will clar^e before you feci antl rcaa^a the fu.cst b> ncuL Y\'ken you get straightened out and f. el ju-st right again you need not ta'ie raf^'mo evcr>- day?::n occasional NTi Tablet will then lcccp your system in good condition r.r.d 5*o? will always feel your best. Kemcmber, keeping well is easier ard cheaper than suiting: well. Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) aro sold, guaranteed and recommended by your druggist. McMurray Drug Co. I ~ ..T- ' 1 i Thousands of men are still over seas. They offered their lives foi ' ' ? " <1 1 "1 T? "TTT tfie ireectom 01 tne woria. cuy war Savings Stamps and Liberty Bonds so that they may be fed and clothed and returned to their homes. Beware of Counterfeits! Some are Talcum Powder, DONT 'FEAR ltBayer Tablets of Aspirin.'* Quick Relief?with Safety * For Headache Colds . - Neuralgia GriDDe W A A Earache * Influenzal Colds Toothache Neuritis Achy Gums Lame Back' / Lumbago Joint-Pains Rheumatism Pain! Pain! Adults?Take one or two tablets anytime, with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. Since the original introduction of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" millions upon millions of these genuine tablets have been prescribed by physicians and taken by the people each year, with perfect safety. "Bayer Cross" AYE ft01117 on genuine \ E */) "Bayer" Tablets. package* I AODIDIM Honmn Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mantifatv ture of Monoaceticacidestcr of Salicylicacid Ask for and Insist Upon "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.** American Owned, Entirely. 20 cent package?Larger sizes alsal Half Your Living Without Money Cost We are all at a danger point. On the use of good common sense in our 1919 farm and garden operations, depends prosperity or our "going broke." Even at present high prices no one can plant all or nearly all cotton, buy food and grain at present prices from supply merchant on credit, and make money. Food and grain are higher in proportion than are present cotton prices. It's a time above all others to play | 3afe; to produce all possible food, grain and forage supplies on your own acres; to cut down the store bill. A good picce of garden ground, rightly planted, rightly tended and j kept planted the year round, can be - ? j-t. 1.. Hit. I I mane 10 lurmsu uvuny uau juiu ing. It will save you more money than you made on the best two or three acres of cotton you ever grew! Hastings' 1919 Seed Book tells all about the right kind of a money saving garden and the vegetables to put in it it tells about the farm crops as well and shows you the clear road to real and regular farm prosperity. It's Free. Send for it today to H. j. HASTINGS CO., Atlanta, Ga?Advt SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I?K. C. Rickard, an engl j neer of the Overland Pacific, Is called t< the office of President Marshall in Tucson, Ariz. "Casey" Is an enigma to th< I office force; ne wears "auac ciomco but he had resigned a chair of engineer ing in the East to go on the road as z ; fireman and his promotion had been ppec i tacular. While waiting for Marshall Rick. I ard reads a report on the ravages of th< ! Colorado, despite the efforts of Thomas ! Hardin of the Desert Reclamation com ! pany. This Hardin had been a studen i under Rlckard and had married Gertj ; Holmes, with whom Rickard had fanciec i he was in love. CHAPTER II?Marshall tells Rickarc j the Overland Pacific has got to step It to save the Imperial Valley and sends him to the break. Rickard declines be cause he does not want to supplant Har din. but Is won over. "Stop the riverj damn the expense," sa^s. Marshall. CHAPTER III?Rickard journevs t< Calexico. *;ees the irrigated desert an( learns much about Hardin and his work CHAPTER IV?At the hotel he meet! Mr. ant?. Mrs. Hardin and Innos Hardin Hardin's half sister. Disappointed .in he; I husband and an incorrigible coquette I Mrs. Hardin sets her cap for her formei . lover ajid invites him to dinner. CHAPTER IV. (Continued From Tuesday) Ricbard left His indoor view to lool through the French windows opening on a side street. He noticed a slendei but regular procession. All the mei I passing fell in the same direction, j "Cocktail route," explained one oj I his neighbors, his mouth full of boilet j beef. j "Oyster cocktail?" smiled the new j comer. "The real thing! Calexico's dry, lib< i the whole valley, that is, the county ; See that ditch? That is Mexico, or ; the other side. Those sheds you cat i see are in Mexicali, Calexico's twii sister. That painted adobe is the cus torn house. Mexican's not dry, even ii summer! You can bet your life 01 tnat. xou can gei an me dhu wiuskj and stale beer you've the money t< buy. We work in Calexico, and drin! in Mexicali. The temperance pledge i: kept better in this town than any othei town in the valley. But you can se< j this procession every night." The Amazon with a handkerchie: apron brought Rickard his soup. H< ! was raising his first spoonful to hi: : mouth when he saw the f:?ce, careful!: %W3 He Saw the Face, Carefully Avtrted. averted, of the girl he had met at th< Marshalls' table, Innes Hardin. Hi: eyes jumped to her companions, th< man a stranger, and then, Gert;, Holmes. At least, Sirs. Hardin! Sorac how, ?.t surprised him to lind her pretty She had achieved a variety of dis tinetion, preserving, moreover, th> clear-cut baoyish chin which had mu?:< its early appeal to him. There was th< same fluffy hair, its ringlets a hit art! j ficial to his more sophisticated eyes the same well-turned nose. He hat been wnnrlprfn^ monHricr- Vii ~ -r? ...vvnup, , A** found that he had been expecting som< sort of shock?who said that the love of today is the jest of tomorrow? Tin discovery that Gerty was not a jesl brought the surprised gratificatior which we award a letter or composition written in our youth. Were we as clever as that, so complete at eighteen or twenty-one? Could we, now, with all our experience, do any better, or indeed as well? That particular sentence with wings! Could we make it fly today as it soared yesterday? Rickard was finding that Gerty's more mature charms did not accelerate his heart-beats, but they were certainly flattering to his early judgment. And he had expected her to be a shock! He was staring into his plate of , chilled soup. Calf-love! For he had 1 loved her, or at least he had loved her chin, her pretty childish way of lifting it She was prettier than he had pictured her. Queer that a man like Har din could draw such women for sister and wife?the blood tie was the most 'JMIR, | EDNAH I AIKEN ? T/f?303B<5 COffPMW j amazing. Tor when women com6 to j marry, tlicy make often a queer choice. . j It occurred to him that that might > j have been Ilardin?he had not wanted j | to stare at thorn. . I That was not Hardin's faco. It held [ I strength and power. The outline was ! sharp and distinct, showing tho strong I; lines, tho determined mouth of tho pii>i j noer.* There was something else, some [ thing which stood for distinction?no r | it couldn't be Hardin. 1 And tlien, because an outthrust llr . changed tho entire look of the man J Itickard asked his table companionst j who was tho man with the two ladies ' j near the door. ' | "That, suh," his neighbor from Ala j bam a became immediately oratorical ' j "that is a big man, suh. If the Inv . I perial valley ever becomes a reality, r 3 j fixtuah, it will be because of that on< r man, suh. Reclamation Is like a see<" thrown on a rock. Will it stick? Will r it take root? Will it grow? That if what we all want to know." RIckard thought that he had wantei to know something quite different, anc reminded the gentleman from Alabam; z j that he had not told him the name. ' j "The father of this valley, of th( | reclamation of this desert, Thoma; 1 j Hardin, suh." f Rickard tried to reset, without at j J tracting their attention, the group o: j nis impressions of the man whose per j sonality had been so obnoxious to hiu in the old Lawrence days. The Hardii sj he had known had also large features * 1 but of the flaccid irritating order. He j! summoned a picture of Hardin as h< had shuffled into his own classroom, oi l up to the long table where Gerty ha< always queened it among her mother1! ^ boarders. He could see the rough un polished boots that had always offend ? ed him as a betrayal of the man's in ^ ner coarseness; the badly fitting coat . the long awkward arms, and the satii ^ fied, loud-speaking mouth. These fea tures were more definite. Could tlm< , bring these changes? Had he changed UKe tnat? ?iaa uiey seen mmr uoun j, Gerty, would^ Hardin remember him 3 Wasn't it his place to make himsel: _ known; wave the flag of old friendsliii , over an awkward situation? r He found himself standing in fron of their table, encountering first, th< eyes of Hardin's sister. There was nr surprise, no welcome there for him. H< felt at one? the hostility of the camp His face was uncomfortably warm Then the childish profile turned on him A look of bewilderment, flushing intc greeting?the years had been kind t< Gerty Holmes! ** "Do'you remember me, Rickard?" If Hardin recognized a difficult situa tion, he did not betray it. It was t man Rickard did not know who shoot him warmlv bv the hand, and said thai indeed he had not forgotten him. "I've been expecting you. My wife Mr. Rickard, and my sister." ' "Why, what are you thinking of Tom? To introduce Mr. Rickard! ] introduced you to each other, year? ago!" Gerty's cheeks were red. Hei bright eyes were darting from one tc the other. "You know he was coming and did not tell me?" . "You were at the Improvement club when the telegram came," put in Innes ' Hardin, without looking at Rickard. N<; trace of the Tucson cordiality in that proud little face! No acknowledgment that they had met at the Marshall's! "Oh, you telegraphed to us?" The blond arch smile had not aged. "That wa9 friendly and nice." Rickard had not been self-conscious for many a year. He did not know what to say. He turned from her uj> turned face to the others. Innos Hardin was staring out of the window over the heads of several crowded tables; Hardin was gazing at his plute. ; Rickard decided that he would get out of this before Gerty discovered that it n-as neither "friendly nor nice." ' "If I had known that you were her*1. I would have insisted on your dinin:; ' with us, in our tent. For it's terrible, ; here, isn't it?" She flashed at him thr j look he remembered so vividly, the ' childish coquettish appeal. "We dine 1 at home, till It becomes tiresome, and 1 then we come foraging for variety. But 1 you must come to us. say Thursday. Is 1 that right for you? We should love it." 1 Still those two averted faces. Rickard said Thursday, as he was bidden, and got back to his table, wondering why in thunder he had let Marshall persuade him to take this job. Hardin waited a scant minute to pro test: "What possessed you to ask him to dinner?" "Why shouldn't I? He is an old friend." Gerty caught a gin nee of appeal, from sidter to brother. "Jealous? she pouted charmingly at her lord. "Jealous, no!" bluffed Hardin. He thought then that she knew, tha Innes had told her. The Lawrence epi sode held no sting to him. Once, 1 had enchanted him that he had carriei Gff the bojirdlng-hoyseL belle, whom.evei chut" bookman' ~hacT found desirable^ c bookman! A superior dude! He ha< c always had those grand airs. As If i . were not more to a man's credit t<! struggle for his education, even if hii * were older than his class, or his teach1 c er. than to acceDt it off silver Dlates handled by lackeys? Ricard had always acted as if it had been someth-; j ing to be ashamed of. It made him'I sick. "They've done it this time. It's j 1 a fool choice." Again, that look of pleading from In 1 nes. Gorty had a shiver of intuition, jj "Fool choice?" Her voice was omi l nousi.v calm. la Ilardin shook off Innes' eyes. Bettei ; j be done with it! "He's the new gen I eral manager." "He's the general manager!" "I'm to take orders from him." Gerty's silence was of the stunned;! 1 variety. The Ilardins watched hei II . crumbling bread on the tablecloth'! ihinking, fearfully, that she was going1? I to cry. |j "Didn't I tell you?" Her voice, re I pressed, carried the threat of tears. ( "Didn't I tell you how it would be': J Didn't I say that you'd be sorry if you ,> called the railroad In?" "Must we go over this again?" aske<l ' jj , her husband. ' i "Why didn't you tell me? Why did J i you let me make a goose of myself?" ; She was remembering that there had IS boon no protest, no surprise from In-jj . ncs. She know! A family secret! She shrugged. "I'm glad, on the whole, - that you planned it as a surprise. For . I carried it off as if we'd not been in. suited, disgraced." i "Gerty!" expostulated Ilardin. "Gerty!" implored Innes. i "And we are in for a nice friendly [ dinner!" "Are you quite finished?" Hardin get up. I As the three passed out of the dining I room, Rickard caught their several ex, pressions: Hardin's stiff, indifferent.; j Gerty's brilliant but hard, as she | . flashed a finished, brave little smile in j , his direction. The sister's bow was distinctly haughty. In the hall, Gerty's laugh rippled I r out. It was the laugh Rickard remem- i ^ bered, the light frivolous cadence J which recalled the flamboyant pattern | of the Holmes' parlor carpet, the long, I crowded dining table where Gerty had! J reigned. It told him that she was in- j ^ different to his coming, as she meant ' it should. And it turned him back to I \ a dark corner In the honeysuckle- i draped porch where? he had spent so I many evenings with her, where once i he had held her hand, where he told | her that he loved her. For he had | loved her, or at least he thought he j had! And had run away from her ex- i pectant eyes. A cad, was he, because i he had brought that waiting look into | her eyes, and had run from it? j Should a man ask a woman to give ; , her life into his keeping until he is ' 1 quite sure that he wants it? He was j revamping his worn defense. Should J he live up to a minute of surrender, of j tenderness, if the next Instant brings i sanity, and disillusionment? He OTuld bury now forever self-reproach. He could laugh at his own vanity. Gerty j ; Hardin, it was easy to see, had forgotten what he had whispered to Gerty Holmes. They met as sober old friends. That ghost was laid. ' (To be Continued Tuesday) r Save regularly. Put your money i into Thritf Stamps. Convert these in-; : to War Savings Stamps. Then watch t your money grow. CHAPTER III. r APT A IN 1 TYIFS r.T.F.NN GIVEN CROIX DE GUERRE [ Chester, S. C., Feb. 14.?Captain . J. Lyles Glenn, Jr., has been award-j i ed the croix de guerre with palm, . by the French war department, for bravery on the western front during ! the spring fighting of 1918. This , decoration is the highest honor a: warded by the French government and was recommended by the com-| mander of an army corps. At the outbreak of the European war, Captain Glenn was a Rhodes 1 scholar at Oxford, England, and later rendei-ed valuable service in the relief work in Belgium and northern France. When America entered the war, ne returned 10 mis country anu was graduated at the first officers' raining school, at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. He volunteered for immediate overseas service and was placed in command of company G, Twentysixth infantry, First division. ' While serving in this capacity on a the Montdidier front, Captain Glenn !? successfully brought several com-i_ panies out of a severe and unexpected artillery bombardment. On the Noyon front, June the 9th, he executed with conspicuous bravery a| trench raid. In this action he was wounded, but succeeded in capturing' important German prisoners and in; bringing back to the American lines the desired information. It was for these services that his decoration was recommended by his superior officer and also by the commanding French officer. Captain Glenn, one of the most popular young officers at Camp Gor-1 Ion, marr,ied Miss Terrell, of De- V :atur, a few weeks ago. His father, G fudge J. L. Glenn, of Chester, is a o: easing banker and lawyer, and a: ihairman of the board of trustees of n Is Your Blood If it is, Yot Anaemic, run-down, nervou result from poor or thin t formula of Vinol, printed that it contains the very i make good blood. It soon fif/a imnrovpc rl i OY*Qti DTI. 3.T Islb'vj llUJ/iuv w ? j benefit from your daily foo DrewsviUe, N. H. " My daughter was anaemic, had poor blond and suffered from indiges- i t:or. and bilious attacks. As Vinol s helped my son, I gave it to my i daughter ? she soon improved in < health, and it has built her up and re- < stored her health."?Mrs.N.Burnell. < For ali rnn-down, ncrvons, anaemic concl 1CPOJB Uiu jicupic anu ucuvutv Vm??? P. B SPEEI And Druggists FARM i FOR SA 87 ACRES?12 miles McCormick Coui of W. D. Morrah, Pr 40 ACRES?About s ville, no improve and timber. 79 3-4 ACRES?3 mil one settlement? on place. Plenty running through 227 1-2 ACRES?11 ville. This is a sp erty. A lot of saw Pi a i 111 1-2 ACRES?IS ville. Good resid ings. Well aterei and timber. Pi 189 1-4 ACRES?1( ville. A splendi provements, aboi torn lands. Pi 541 ACRES?1-2 mi mile from Calho farm being open t n n juies wen, is wen abundance of wo Pri Can Arran ROBERT ran???i iiiaMwaMMMMOBMn FERT1L 'I represent the Works, of Charleston. ' i hand a good stock. J hard to get a little late in supplying your need ROBT. S. /offord college, of which Captain lenn is a graduate. He was one f Wofford's best-known baseball nd football players.?Atlanta Joural. Poor? i Need Vinol s, devitalized conditions Dlood. A glance at the on the label, will show ingredients necessary to . creates a healthy appeld helps ycu to get full * 1 i ^ id, ana Duuas you uj/. Bradford, Pa. "I have used-Vinol for impoverished blood. 1 was Lrcken cut with i rash and run down so it \vi3 hard for me to keep about iny wor!:. Dther medicines did nogood, but Vir.ol,; enriched my bloc<? and improved ir.y condition very rapidly. "-HoBe Lasky. ition?, -wenk -women, overworked men, en, there is no romcily liko Yinol. * ), Druggist Everywhere m^HRnmaBnannHflKu WB?? lllll I llf III I IK LANDS kLE 5 from Abbeville, in ity, adjoining lands ice, $30.00 per acre. ix miles from Abbements, all in wood Price, $25 per acre. es from Abbeville? two horse farm open wood, and stream place, Price, $2,000.00. . miles from Abbe- jj lendid piece of prop- { r timber on this place i rice, $17.50 per acre. \ mlies from Abbeence and out buildd and plenty wood ; ice, $30.00 per acre. ) miles from Abbed farm but no imit 50 or 60 acres botrice, $18.00 per acre. le from Hester, one un Falls. 15 horse ated on the place, watered and has an od and timber, ce, $40.00 per acre. ge Terms S. LINK IZERS Ashepoe Fertilizer , S. C., and have on Fertilizers may be r on, so don't delay Is. LINK.