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-* A REVOLUTION IN l SOCIAL AFFAIRS With the year 1920 comes the actual beginning of a revolution in so- j cial affairs. There have been threat? j of reform and change in many social ] customs, and it has been on the tapis i many times 'to do away witn several < exceeding foolish and awkward ceremonies in vogue between the refined members of what is gracefully called^ society. And there has been no ha- j. bit more senseless than that of a gentleman removing his hat upon every ^ meeting with a female acquaintance. c Heaven only knows where such a stu- ? a pid and such an awkward act received t its origin. It has arbitrarily controll- a ed the men and was supposed to rank ^ as a mark of the gentleman for as c many yeai^s back as history extends, s despite the fact that it has caused j. many colds and has hustled many ^ men into their graves. ;v And now it is saichthat influenza is n often caused by exposing the bare ii head to the cool bre'ezes by lifting the a hat when meeting a female, and it a has been decided to do away with this 1? son: of thing, and the sensible and y simple substitute that prevails in Ori- h ental countries is to be adopted. The ? iion t' th m i cy Much Suffering is Needless/ ,n Get Relief Without Fear! s* Don't Lay Awake in Pain, on ' m. OBH r SLEEP : pc b } ' Adults?Take one or iwo ne "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" cu with water. If necessary, re- im; peat dose three times a day, 00 after meals. Li For Pain! Colds Neuralgia Grippe Toothache Influenzal Colds D< Harache Neuritis , i Headache Sciatica , : ? -- - th Rheumatism Lumbago i ~ an * v ^ Ownadl by Americans! ibe nc The /^T\ World-famous j q ' Barer Cross" /ba9qA original tab. a each tablet \"hy lets. Intro- jth gleans genuine. >N?S^ dticed 1900. 'w I JOTN i Aspirin is the trade mart of Bayer Mint>fic? u >ture of Monoaceticacideater of Salicylicacid Always insist upoii the safe t] ? ?- m mm ? "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." j, Buy only original Bayer packagea v' 20-ccr.t package?Larger sizea. ^ (STOMACH Mr. Marion Holcomb, of N a long while I suffered with R have pains and a heavy fee disagreeable taste in my mot M butter, oil or grease, I would W regular sick headache. I ha< after a course of these, I wc (seemed to tear my stomach no good at all for my trouble, THEDFi (recommended very highly, s< me. I keep it in the house ? liver medicine made. I do stomach trouble any more, the jaded liver and helps it throwing out waste materials B tern. This medicine should B use in time of need.' Get a sluggish, take a close tonl^l jg morrow. Price 25c i pack< | ONE CEN1 mode consists of placing the han( over the heart and bending the heac slightly forward so as to make a no tieeable, but not extravagant obei 50nee. Progress has been made ir this reform to such an extent thai most gentlemen now just touch th( brim of ?he hat a la militaire wher meeting a lady, and it is accepted aj j'oocl form. ROBERT TODD LINCOLN )earborn Independent. Lincoln's son still lives, a link with he past. But because he is Lincoln's on he has always with deliberation nd consistency kept himself outside he wide circle of light which shines round his father's name. Others iave written for us the life of Linoln and others have interpreted his pirit but some have always felt hat Robert Lincoln knew his father est, because he was a growing boy rhen his father was an obscure Illiois lawyer. Lincoln junior was born i 1843, when Abraham Lincoln was comparatively young man of 34, nd had been a practicing lawyer onf six years, and a married man one ear. Theason was 15 years old when is father made the afterwards amous "house divided against itself" peech. He was 17 years old when le Cooper Union-speech was made, 'e followed his father's footsteps in le law, but by an easier path, goig to Harvard law school. He left s studies to serve as a captain on ie staff of Gen. Grant, and after i le war resumed his law studies, be-, g admitted to the bar two years af-1 - ?~i-\ ? : j s r\ I i ins latuer was ctbsasMiiuieu. wnuj i was mentioned for the presiden-; but resolutely declined. He Has! >ver traded on his name or re-: tionship. However, he has served veral presidential appointments, j ice as secretary of war and once as| inister to Great Britain. For thirty j :ars he has been associated with the j lllman company. Whether he has prepared his recol-1 ftions of his father to be published j >sthumously is not known. The | jrld would be welcome a picture of e great liberator as he appeared to. s growing son . However, to a re-| lest for an interview Mr. Lincoln ! replied, "I appreciate the kind-! ss of the request, but you will ex- j se me from breaking away from; y well established habit." Mr. Lin-1 In lives in Washington. FTING SOUTH CAROLINA OUT OF DEEP MUD jarborn Independent. Two years ago the general asseni-. y of South Carolina started to lift i | e Palmetto state out of the mud, id wonders along that line have en accomplished. But the half has it been told no$ done, according to Dvemor^p. A. Cooper, who urges I e legislature which began its mid-j inter sessions a few days ago to | mplete thex program of crisscross-1 g South Carolina with a chain of ird-surface and modern highways lat will make the commonwealth le best paved of any state in the nion. It may be of interest hqre to say iat already many of the more proressive counties of South Carolina ave modern highway systems that 'ould amaze those who have not een in these couties for a period of TROUBLEJ ancy, Ky., says: "For quite I stomach trouble. I would E ling after my meals, a most B ith. !f I ate anything with spit it up. I began to have s i used pills and tablets, but iuld be constipated. It just all up. I found they were , I heard g ORD'S I RAUGHT 3 began to use it It cured ill the time. It is the best j| not have sick headache or R " Black-Draught acts on ' ) to do its important work ot ' i and poisons from the sys- a be in every household for w package today. If you feel g tit. You will feel fresh toige. All druggists. |J r A DOSE (173, & 1 two years. For instance, Anderson ( I county is now buiHing a county sys-j - tem of roacis costir!'. more than .$2,-; - 000,000. Th< cidr.on^ c : ;hat courtly. I um/Iaw r-?i-?4- a o lofrJii" >*n r. *' 1 01 S\ * uuuci v/. ? .v. aWf-, /. tvoted road l.c :. 3 amounting 'o -1,s 725,000. The federal govern men tj i augmented this sum by $600,000 andj > modern highways are now nearly! I ; complete in that prosperous county > which make travel in it in any direc-j lion about as pleasant as travel i would be in the well-paved city of Columbia. This part of the pro^-am has also , been carried out. j j { Greenville county, Spartanburg | county, Charleston county and Rich-j land county. Governor R. A. Cooper, says, "good roads are cheap; bad/ jroads are very costly." j The legislature now in session is j j planning to extend all the state aid that may be i needed to connect up .and complete the system which will I make South Carolina one continual A A-f nlnqcnm iy\ a cliArf fimo Tf i vau v/x picuouit u i/iiiiv* aw i s expected then that the Palmetto state will become the playground of j he South, since it is rich in scenery from the beautiful mountains at ^alhalla to the placid sea at Clarlesiton. I The good roads programs have jbeen boosted wonderfully by automobile owners and the increase in^ .autos in the state has been remarkable since the good roads programs i started. i The state highway commission isj alive to the importance of efficiency and permanacy in roads. The commissioners are Robt. G. Thomas, of Charleston; Hale Houston, of Clem- 1 son college; M. G. Holmes, of the University; C. 0. Hearon, of Spartanburg; Thomas P. Cothran, ofj Greenville. J. Roy Pennell is state highway! commissioner, F. IK Murray, chief of i construction; R. T. Brown, chief ofj ' sudveys; Joseph W. Barnwell, bridge j engineer, and N. S. Anderson, chief' draftsman. \ -.j FRENCH BLAMES US FOR CURRENCY ILLS I / i Paris Feb. 10.?The exchange! roblem and the depreciation of the i ranc seem to be the leading topics,' of conversation in Paris. Three | months ago these subjects were much discussed by business men and the j ress and begun to take interest in. them; now the man in the street is j wrestling with their mysteries under; the sudden stimulus of the know-i ledge that they are closely connected: with the high cost of living. It is a j j peculiar trait of the French that they! ! must always find a reason for any! tate of affairs, and that if that j tate of affairs be unpleasant the reason they find throws the blame upon j some one else. Accordingly, the ma?f=j of public opinion has accepted the j* theory that the depreciation of tbo I .franc and the evils resuting from it! jare all the fault of the United States. | Last Novemberit was the popular i Jthing to say that the fall in value of i , French money was due to "speculr j jtion," although no ne seemed I jknow how the wicked work was bein done. Nov/ it is heartless America.; gorged with the fruits of victory, but! refusing aid to those who helped herj win it, who is blamed. Superfically, j of course, French public opinion is | right. The appalling drop in French: currency?over 100 per cent?in I'm' past three months is the logical outcome of America's .refusal i:u'. March to continue to uphold iZUiV-j pean credit from that period. The du-i dine in the value of the franc, which has grown and will go on growing unless checked, becomes more rapid; in accordance with economic laws. . fortV hours a week I NOT ENOUGH 1 ?? . Having given as their sober j-> men that 40 hours of work and 1 S; hours of idleness erch week, would; result in failure adequately io r;; jI j the country, the Farmers' Nation'.! Congress, meeting at Hagerstowi;, Md., put itself oil record as oppo-.-tl J to the present der.'.nn'.!? of va-'ica1: ' ! Tiie man who t!:*? *o*! counted on for certain j-ano cov./c:vatism as well as for that degree of! public spirit which : consider > ;ae {rood, of the nation and molds conduct upon lines that lend toward the ir:eral welfare, rathv-v than on me."' persona 1 co".sk!e ra ; ion... ! The i:itro('uct?or. of < ' ' ever be iter fr.v:? 'vptv prop- fsirther thr>Y?- v-" c "!: thin!: cf iov.arj vA -;'v?, \ jfor the farmer to shorten his long working day, .and is a far safer way than trying to get along on less roc:1. Experiments in c.it'-:njr ' f;;cJ 'V-.ply, have n:-v. - r ' happily fc. ' he health : " ? ir r7_i.:i il? ^4. i . VvlVCU. OIIlll IIIL SUUIK.-lwl! Ui ..tU.l has had time to adapt itself to famine conditions, there'? not ?.-rh' i chance to rest. , PRODUCE :F YOU ; V/OULDJ-GET PROFITS 'I Every now and then a letter comes from some farmer who is discouraged with the outlook, and who is thinking of sharply cutting down his production of this or that. One ?nan thinks farmers should cut down the wheat crop; another can see only loss in , cattle feeding; another is afraid to take any chances on hogs. Now, the Southern Agriculturist is about the last paper in the world to^ advise any man to produce "all he can of everything he can" without taking thought as to what he is going to do with it and what he is going to get out of it when he has produced it; but it does feel very confident that; I this is no time willfully to roslrijl; i i_: rni_ _ u i ? .r j pruuucuon. ine wunu riee.i:* a>uu; still, and is likely to need about allj it can get for some years to conic. It:. QUIT MEAT WHEN I KIDNEYS BOTHERj = j Take a glass of Salts before breakfast j if your Back hurts or Bladder is troubling you. ! No man or woman who eats meat regu- i | laxly can make a mistake by flushing the f kidneys occasionally, says a well-known { authority. Meat forms uric acid which f excites me Kianeya, uiey Become uver- = worked from the strain, get sluggish and ! fail to filter the waste and poisons from ] the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all I rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, | nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and f urinary disorders come from sluggish \ kidneys., 11 The moment you feel a dull ache in the _ kidneys or your back hurts or if the j urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi- | rnent, irregular of passage or attended by | a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad j Salts from any pharmacy; take a } tablespoonful in a glass of water before I breakfast and in a few days your kidneys { will act fine. This famous salts is made I from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, j combined with lithia, and has been used j for generations to flush and stimulate f the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids \ in urine so it no longer causes irritation, I thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot I injure; makes a delightful effervescent i lithia-water drink which everyone | should take now and then to keep the f kidneys clean and active and the blood | pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney | complications. l$PSF ' !; 1 Wv ' i . 5# ':3'' . " .<? -'--r .,v\ | ; I ' j? ' if/ ' ' ; : / ' ' ... V ..i I!" -'H | ) ' . i. is the farmer's job to produce thisjw food, and he must not fall down onjw his job. The notion that restricted \v production can be made permanently p: profitable to hir\iself is all wrong. E( and there is positive danger to all that is best in our civilization if once! the hunger madness is allowed vo seize upon an already distraught ci world. bi The farmer must "tr.dy how to oJ market as well as how to produce, in but the man who has nothing to sell w is not very vitally interested in in marketing. Certainly the farmer is fc under no obligation- to produce and ta then sell at a loss; but he is under ? obligation to himself and the world j to produce. He must ' produce as j economically as he can, and then^m market as advantageously as he can. p< It is the farmer who does this who ni " S-U-iil IB?a???? 1 I Farm Surveys WILLIAM L. CIVIL ENI Member of the American As* Farmers and Merchant! GREENWOOD, SOU! Landscape Surveys ssBMBnmBHHBmmB ^iiiiiiiiitttMiiiituiraiMiniiimtiMiiiitHiiiiitiiiuiiiiiiMMiiiittiitiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiittitifiitiiitiii |! Fire Torna< | W. D. WIL Insura New Brunswick F | New Brunswick, N. J. Georgia Home Insu bus, Ga. Rhode Island Fire In j , dence, R. I. For those who desire reasonable rate insura { companies cannot be s Call on me and let i the advantages of the j offer. t / / W. D. WILKIN' wwiWHUwtmtitBtiwniniimmnnimimtpmmwmxiiniiimnnmioininAiMiniiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.u jHii wJJII meet youi Camels are offered you as i out of the ordinary?a flaVc neVer before attained. To bes ^ j? *_ lty compare t^ameis wnn i the world at any price! Camels flavor is so refreshing win you at once?it is so new a what Camels expert blend of c choice Domestic tobacco gives this blend to either kind of tobac As von smoke Camels, vou any uripleasant cigaretty aftc pleasant cigaretty odor. And, to discover that you can smol without hring your taste! Take Camels at any anglecigarette contentment beyond experienced. They're a cigz You do not miss coupons, You'll prefer Came is c Wm "?til"" Camels art: ao.j > .i ':e.-r in . ^2?'*V i a'- *0 c - or if v-'j i gl'i*stnt!-p..f vred V j *Aii cjrton Sir !/:>? heme '..e s \ ' V, ,;.y r. u;:V.'Cll?5 TO,... -D f ill get ahead. The man who grows heat on suitable land, well prepared ell fertilized, will find wh^at a rofitable crop. The man Aviio f:'?ds ood hogs or good cattle on e. sap ome-grown feeds will find prcfit it :eding. So all along the line This is no time for plunging of n.y kind; but it is time for sound, ireful, thoughtful framing?for the jilding up of the soil, the growing P 4- V\ /-? V\ i rr o m aI a/J L gUUU tivp, Lilt WI .14111^ UllVI 1CCUig of good live stock. The farmer ho sticks to the paths of good farmig need not bo afraid to go as far >rward as he can, or have any horitncy about producing all he can. -Southern Agriculturist ' V*? Next to the Bible, which is the ost popular book? No, not Shakesjare, nor the dictionary?the almaic! Real Estate Surrey* I HEMPHILL 1 3INEER I ociation of Engineer!. i Bank Building. H CAROLINA, . ^ ! Subdivi?ion> || ???'?~ - T j do Auto KINSON | | nee ire Insurance Co., ranee Co., Columisurance Co., Provi1 ' . ji safe protection at a nee in the above urpassed. me explain to you pr otection I have to if i ! .1 4 .T7j 50N, Agent | Jj IK if iiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiittiiu?iiititiiiiiii?i?iiiiiiiitiiimiiiMiiiitiMmiim<imiiiiuuiituii?>iui. " ^ || , I iiade to III I , ii . taste! i| . , W ? 9'il'i 'j a cigarette entirely v.^^i >r and smoothness |$jj}| t realize their qualany cigarette in 'S'ljjSf ?, so enticing, it will ; ' * $ nd unusual. That's choice Turkish and vnii! Ynn'll nrefer : lj J ? ' .,'.1 co smoked straight! l'11 note abscnce o: j ^rtaste or any unyou'll be delighted te Camels liberally ' j n' ! -they surely suppljr I anything you ever j ire tie re i el a tier:.' , premiums or gifts. I \usliiv! i J ap;> \ .v 10.. : ' - : .. I -1 ' in.