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fflfiSffiHSfiHiHiifiifiHiififfi. s j Our Spr jjj Abbeville Cc yp ig models. S If you are ifj acquaint youi jjj Ne\ IT X jjj Quality, Fi jjj It is the sly ijj and satisfactii jjij comes from i 3- We have 1 jjj Our stock ? jr bought be for ? GLASS OF SALTS i CLEANS KIDNEYS; If your Back u aching or Bladder bothers, drink lots of water 11 and eat lest meat ic 2 When your kidneys hurt and your back ? feels sore, don't get scared and proceed j to load your stomach with a lot of drugs . that excite the kidneys and .rritate the * entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys t clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body's urinous e waste and stimulates them to their nor- s mal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours \ they strain from it 600 grains of acid * . and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water?you can't dnnk luu in nun; uiov get irom any pnarmaciBt 11 about four ounces of Jad Salts; take|a a tablespoonful in a glass of water i before breakfast each morning for a few ' t days and your kidneys will act fine. 11 This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined r with lithia, and has been used for genera- s tions to clean and stimulate clogged kid- g neys; also to neutralize the acids in i urine so it no longer is a source of irri- ! tation, thus ending blaadar weakness. t Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- j jure; makes a delightful effervescent | lithia-water drink which everyone should p toL'P Tintr fln/1 fKon frt IrAftn 4-IiaJ*. 1-J/l ' - vmvm w ivccy men IWIU" i neys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no i( doubt you will wonder what became of J your kidney trouble and backache. , i WASHINGTON LEADS WORLD < IN H. C. L., SAYS BRITON 1 ' TI.v hiyh cost of living is high all over the world, but 1 believe thai in Washington the highest prices anywhere on earth arc charged for i food," said Colonel Orville Lee, a | retired British officer, while in that city recently. "The English people 1 know better how to curb prices per-j 1 nps than other peoples. For instance. there has been a marked de- , , nvlna nf hofif in I.nn. runt.* ui me j/iivv. v*. vw* ... ?? (ion un l other largo cities, and a eon- j jeuiu-nt congestion on the docks becaa-i th?- r.oynle have cut <!o\vii lii < r-Kity of meat eaten. 71: beef dealers, of course, are <!>:!:: i-.'irntr, but tlv.*y >v iref \vi1 : IjU5 . v iTL '1:1*11 uUlt il iilt'V V... ? " j / lilso SPRING ing Stock of Ladies' . 3unty a special invita not already a regular rself with our Prices < v Suits ? New Dress it and Style. These rl riffvoofo f|^ O' 1C W111L.11 ClLLiCl^tO 3n which results front rearers of the Irving 00 pair of small size of Silk Hosiery are 1 e the recent advance Can P luce prices they will have larger sales. While food prices are high all )ver Europe ,they are ridiculously :heap to an American. One can, inleed, get as good a meal in London >r in Paris for $1 as he could buy in Washington for $3. "It is entirely possible to get a ubstantial meal in almost any Engish or French city for 50 or 75 :ents, and one can get good food for to cents. But here in the United States I found, imriT&diately upon anding, the prices are still high?in act, higher than ever before. I used o be able to subsist here for a reaonable sum, but at the prices chargd now I fear my stay will be cut hort."?Washington Post. ATTACK LAUNCHED . ON PROHIBITIONi Washington, March 8.?Rhode Is- J and's legal attack on the prohibition mendment to the federal constituion was argued in supreme court oday, assailed by the complainant as evolutionary and an invasion of tate rights and defended by the ;overnment as a legitimate addition o the nation's basic law over which he court held no jurisdiction. Throngs attended the session of he court to hear the arguments on >ne of the burning questions of the lay. Many persons waited outsi:!'.' ;he doors throughout the morning to >btain admittance. Herbert A. Rice, attorney general >f Rhode Island, opened for the opposition and William L. Frierson, assistant attorney general of the Uni;ed States, replied for the govern nent. Other arguments will be heard omorrow as well as appeals from Kentucky and Massachusetts involving the same question. Mr. Rice charged there was In irogress "a constitutional revolution hrough amendments." "I see more danger in the doctrine irged by the government than any loctrine urged by the demogogue luring the world war," he said. "The ights assured the pepole under the j enth amendment " "iv nc?v :itr^-' ! (1 to bo taken away.'* Iticc argued that the prohibii.):! amendment resulted from a i^couCi-piiGii 01 ihi* law iy rp B B B r1 BBBBOOBPan m31313131317l7ITI317l3131J I n am , OPENING 1 Apparel is complete, an< tion to visit our Store, an Customer here we belie and service. >es ? New Coats ? New i "SPRING FOC are three important featu ir eye - it is the quality th 1 perfect fitting models, n r\ r>i f JJress Shoe. JTrices rrom s on the Bargain Shelf. "SILK H05 Dy far -greater than ever which permits us to giv< We Expect A msoN & jgress and thatt he federal govern-|sian c ;merit had no authority to make such |The l 'a change in the constitution as the [the U I 1 j. ;j T~> - -1 : j menumeni pruviues. L/ecmiiiig tnat Bu,t? j 'amendments" means a correction witho ! e said the terms of the prohibition to th< : mendment are clearly outsile the s Sor ; mrvifew of the constitution. ridicu home] j NDIANS SHAVED HEADS jviolat TO AWAIT CRACK OF DOOM ilMPR Londan, Jan. 22.?The masses in j I ndia, especially the ignorant vil-| Thi agers, were greatly agitated as the were result of the prediction made by velopi Professor Porta, of America, that showr December 17 would see the beginnig things I of eveceptional storms and earth-, with 1 quakes, says the Calcutta cor/espon-: count dent of "The Daily Mail." By the listed time the nrediction reached India it .to del had grown into a declaration that'A fe\ the world was coining to an end. nifica I The correspondent says of these below [frightened people: i I)ui "They invoked their gods, made'oil n | ows and offerings, bathed in the under acred streams, shaved their heads, prove and sat clothed practically in sack- washe cloth and ashes (it is quite o common ings a sight to see religious mendicants i Th< smeared all over with ashes), waiting tems the crack of doom. numb I "It was rumored that 'Khuda' berini j (the deity) was going to descend on farm ^he Ochedlony monument in Calcut- gun 1 ta. At the police courts scores of,hund] J self-constituted astrologers argued ing s some for and others against the the p prophecy. As soon as the weather systei got cloudy an aged Moslem, who was built :the complaintant in a case of petty! ^01 assault, left the court and let his home; jcase take care of itself. Ho he by th said, going home to die with his fam- groun ily." tary < the NEW GERMAN COURT Of ARMS again: I I Ret Berlin, Jan. 30.?The new Ger- were ; 'man coat of arms adopted by the -3863 National Assembly consists of a one- savinj headed eagle on a yellow ohl produ shield. nnrl without the old time farms crown. The eagle will be displayed in simple heraldic form, without any ac- impro cessories. terns The Hohenzollern coat of arms ed to and the chain of the order of the si'- 17-'l, t vcr eagle. nil part< of the old Prus- mers i , I d He ?^ * /> 1-n t a ym t *w rr JlorLAY W < d we take Pleasure in d reveal the fasion worl \ ve you will be if you a Millinery ? New Swee )TWEAR" ires of ANY shoe in whi tat comes in for careful ii lakes permanent and e $5. up. ilERY " I/* ? iii i i ' before, m all the leadir 5 our customers' advant Visit From You : HENRY fwifiwwftftfwxiffe *sssm :oat of arms, have been omitted. J hu; impi >ill of the eagle, the tongue and iu'.jced t ilons are in red. Servants of the improving nment are to wear the device ar.ners i ut the shield so it can be pinned o turn u iir uniforms. 1,431 ac ne of the Pan-German papers mp'cmen le it, saying, the "skinny, 1?421, tl ly eagle with extended tongue" )etter wo es all the rules of good taste. iN,Tew PJ ___ 925, inch ? ? - - ? ? ? i? "> octaVilicVio UV Jb.IVlfc.IN 1 I IN KUKAL Lire. ** agents; a it hundreds of improvements eluding 7 made in 1 919in farmstead de- Road ii nent in South Carolina is the numb > by some figures summing up by count; s done in this line by farmers ting farm the advice and assistance of miles of i y agents. The improvements rna#e from screening homes nonstrations of improved roads. < v of these interesting and signt facts and figures are given Wash in ring the year, agenta report, obtain ne ew farm buildings were erected J to provid their guidance , 723 were im- men was d, 575 were painted or white- house wa id, and plans for 201 new build- with re vere furnished. ^organizat i number of home water sys- agreemen installed was 412, the total practical er of such systems now num-J All sor % 3116 as opposed to 691 when | offered t demonstration work was be- (with its c ess than a decade ago. Nine|three seen red and thirty-one home light- j been mac ystems were installed, makingjpointed o resent total 3194. Telephone ;ing views ns to the number of 69 were ^ions. Th and installed. j that harn iditions in the immediate farrri|Velop. 5 and premises were improved; Col. Le e improvement of 526 home ^ne cusin ds, the improvement of sani-:American conditions in 2082 homes, and the legii screening of 41,718 homes would me st flies and mosquitoes. belief tha tor eating and better health'operation promoted by the planting of ward obt? new home gardens and by the eminent, r of surplus farm and jrardcn | Davis I cts for winter use on 7694 a former jinterest o M and cultivation methods were I loans be i vod as follows: drain aire svs- but it wa: established, 47; farmers indue- had been drain all or part of tehir farms, schedules. bus improving 8401 acres; far- payments induced to remove ?tumps. word bom i I nry 'EEK. extending to ever Id in the radiancy < risk our store this iters ? New Waisl ich every woman is nspection ~ whiie t nthusiastic custom 1 1 rT1l lg shades. 1 hese age of same. ? i roving 5693 acres; farmers C< ;o terace lands, 1371, thus ; 7492 acres; number of A nduced to plant cover crops' nz nder, 6721, thus enriching Ame res, number of new farmjlj b ts bought by agents advice, the ius enabling farmers to do prov rk more efficiently. |rece istures to the number of cabl iding 13,665 acres, were one d through aid of county Eur( nd 391 old pastures, in- Intel ,293 acres, were renovated, sion, mproving demonstrations to man >er of 66 were engaged in troo; / agents and their coopera- area lers, and in this way 508 It roads were improved. prox with | oflic< QUESTION | heh BEING DISCUSSED rou I Gc gton, March 8.?How to : ias w sources of revenue so as r n e relief for former service | niss discussed today by the' ys and means committee! :presentatives of soldier I f I ions, but without common I I t as to the best and most methods. ts of suggestions have been1 he committee in connection consideration of more than re bills. The problem has " le more difficult, members ut, because of the conflicti of the various organizaere was the promise today an{j lony of action might deusin; ;ster E. Jones, commanding.?^" ct of Columbia department fui : Legion, announced that ^ oil's executive committee , the i suge et March 22 and expressed t it would work in close co- P'!0** thei with all service men to- and lining help from tho gov Schanlon, of Philadelphia, j jj * solider, suggested that the the 5 ti the government's foreign ] used '"for a soldier fund, I side; - explained that this money! allocated in making up taxi of a Other witnesses urged j jig^t but objected to use of the' .is j tion I '? I S I I I y lady of ffi ~ of it's new ffi week, and ^ interested. yj he comfort y; ters which if; I I hose were jfi [Jj KifiSifiSifiifiSifiifiaS OBLENZ IS OVERCROWDED :r.erican Headquarters, Cob, Germany# Feb. 6.?No more irican offkers are to be permitted ring thc:i* wives from America to Rhine until living conditions ime in Coblenz, it was announced ntly in a War Department e from Washington. Coblenz is of the most crowded cities of )pe, being headquarters of the v r-Al!ied Rhineland High Commis- , in addition to the seat of comd of the 15,000 United Stater, ps stationed in the bridge-head is estimated that there are apimately 200 American officers their wives in Coblenz, manias hav.':isr also brought over n rl Pftviro wf ? T * wnm wiiuuicii kt.i i oci vaiu j< 1.1 uuuis cases an American family and irman family in Coblenz which not one or more Allied soldiers lembers of the Rhineland comion billeted in their home. 1 Hi DARK WITH SAGE TEA Mixed with Sulphur It Darkens so Naturally Nobody can Tell. 1? old-time mixture of Sage Tea Sulphur for darkening gray, iked and faded hair is grandler's recipe, and folks are again g it to keep their hair a good, color, which is quite sensible, as .re living in an age when a youthlppearance is of the greatest ad age. iwadays, though, we don't have troublesome task of gathering the and the mussy mixing at home, drug stores sell the ready-to-use uct, improved by the addition of r ingredients, called "Wyeth'sSage Sulphur Compound." It is very ilar because nobody can discover 13 been applied. Simply moisten comb or a soft brush with it and r this through your hair, taking small strand at a time; by morning jray hair disappears, but what des the ladies with Wyeth's Sage Sulphur Compound, is that, be a few applications, it also pros that soft lustre and appearance , bundance which is so attractive, ready-to-use preparation is a deful toilet requisite for those who e a more youthful appenrance. It - , ?t intended for the cure, mitisu- 1 or-prevention of disease.