K EOWEE COURIER . (ESTABLISHED 1840 J * Published Every Wednesday Mot *' ' ' Subscription %l Pei Annum, Thc Courier and i bo Progrcssivc partner 1 Year ead?, both for $1.50, Advert?alos; Rai?** Kelson able -Ry- *< STECK, SIIKLOR & SCHRODER. Communications of a personal character charged for as advertisements. Obituary noticen and tributes0? respect o? not over one hunched words, will bo printed free oC charge, AU over that number must bc paid fer at tho rate of one cent a word. Cash to ac company manuscript. WALHALLA, S. C.: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, I?15. "SMOKE" THOMPSON APPOINTED tf?ovumor Manning Names Monitors of Confederate Momo board. i tiree mom hors of the Confederate Home Hoard were appointed last iveek bj (Sovernor Manniiiig in ae on ilance with the reorganization act passed at tho luau session of bbc l>og ture. Members of tile HOW board :( re : Heivry E. f" hempson, of C dumbia, ra!. road engineer. E. Welsh, of Ch arl est : Lanford, Laurens county, farmer ami Confed erate veteran. lv\-oHicio mom bora of ibo board .ire: t;. K. Laney, ol' Chester Hold, chairman of the Senate Milita rj Oom n rtee. and T. M. Liles, ol' Spa ri a u burg, . i airman of the House Military Comm lt toe. ll will be t he dut y of the Ima rd to nra ko provision tor the government ot the li?me. (lovernor Manning hoi loves thal he bas sole-ted ,t board well qualified to administer the aila.rs of Hie Confede rate Home in a business-like man ner. i Henry E. Thompson, of Columbia, is an old Walhalla "boy." Bvery 8>od> knows "Smoke," tus ho ls famil iarly Known. He will make a splen did men.ber of ?the board. He is a nephew I the Lute Co R. A Thomp son, of Walhalla, Who was al one time connected officially with the Confederate I lome, i Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take drove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless .bill Tonio is equally valuable as a General Tonio because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE ?nd IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and ^Builds up the Whole System. 50 <:ents. JURORS POR THE FIRST WEEK. (?cntlcuioii Who Will Serve for First Wee!., Deuiimin^ March '2'2t\. 'lite Conn of Common Pleas for Oconee county will convene In Wal ha! k on Monday. March 22, and will last for i wo weeks ii that much time should be required lo transact the civil .ois'ness thai is on hand for v-..;ing at thal tim?: The following jurors have hoon drawn to serve for the ll rsl week of y he M S.- ion : I. c. Harker, Wa teuer township. !.. o. H rook, Center township. j L. Broom, Wagoner township. .t. B Bryant, Koo wee township. s P. Hinket:. SeiKH'n township. 1 R. Carroll, Conter 'township. .Clifton Cobb. Tugaloo township. M. C. Cox. Senora township. '?rover Croirsha.w, \V< st Union. .1. ',. Dillard. Wo ?(.minster. ft. A. Edwards Wagenor township. I, H. Gibson, Newry. R. H. Hays. Seneca township. I Wesley Head, Keowoe township. I, w Henry. Chaiitouga township. E. P Holden,Whitewater township. IV. .1. lluskamp.Wa ?...uer township. Ch?mas (shell, Con tor township. W. R. .Iones. Tugaloo township. Y. c. Lan-;, ?on. Seneca township. H. R. Lawrence, Seneca. W. G, Lawless, Center township. S. H. Lee, I'll ira loo township. I S. Lewis, Wagoner township. J, M. Lusk, Whitewater town Sil I p. t. M. Martin. Wagoner township. T. M. Mearos, Seneca township. <1SH> Pelf roy, Wagener township. L S. Pit's. Wo .1 minster. .1. P. Sanders, Newry. T. J. Thrift, Pulaski township. M. L. Tippett. K.COW00 township. J. H. Todd, Walli illa. G. W. Weldon, Tugaloo township. L. H. White, Westminster. W ,T. Whitfield, Conler township. "Whole Family Dopoiidciili. E. Williams, Hamilton. Ohio. WTltes: "Our whole family depend on Vine-Tar-1 louey." Maybe some one in your family has a severe cold perhaps lt is tho baby. The original I>r. Boll's Pine-Tar-Honey is an ever ready household remedy it gives Immediate relief. Plne-Tar-Honey fienetrates the linings of tho throat and lungs, destroys the germs, and allows nature to aot. At your drug Siist, 25c.-Adv.3. THY IT ! SUBSTITUTE *X>H NASTY CALOMEL. Sturt. Your Livor Without Milking Von ; and Cannot Salivate. Evorj druggist In town-your druggist and everybody's druggist has not Iced a great ?ailing off in the sale ol' calomel. They all give the same reason. Dodson's Liver Tone is taking its place. 'Calomel is dangerous and people know i'. while Dodson's Liver Tone is |)orfectl> salo and gives better re sults." ?aid a prominent local drug gist. Dodson's Liver Tone is per sonallv guaranteed by every druggist who ?ells it. A large bottle costs ac cents, and if it fails to give easy re lief in ' Very case of liver sluggish ness and constipation, you have only to ash for your money hack. Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasant tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harmless lo both children and adults. Take a spoonful at night and wake up feeling line; no biliousness, slide i headache, acid stomach or constlpat I ed bowels. lt doesn't gripe or j cause inconvenience all the next day like violent calomel. Take a dose of calomel to-day and lo-morrow you will feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day's work! Take Uni son's Liver Tone ms!.\id and feel tine, full of vigor an t ambition.-Ad. (SET MONEY AT LOW INTEREST. Greenwood ami Anderson Officials Monow Largo Amounis foi Public. A dispatch sent OUt fl Hil Gleen wood on March ?I says: The county of Oreen wood luis bor rowed the sum of $18,1)00 from Ihe Commercial Hank nt ;','j ,.<.: cen' This is Hie lowesl rate of Interest at which thu county has over escvired a loan. Other bids were :: Ts per ?nt. Supervisor McCombs state thal this an.omit will be used for holli s 'lum, and (OU II ty purposes. A part j ol' it will go io the payment of i i os which individuals hold against the conni j and which are now drawing 7 per cent interest. Andersen Konows $70,000, t Dall} Mail. ) Acting under instructions given him in a resolution adopted hy thc new hoard of Coutil.? Commissioners. Supervisor J. Mack King has nego tiated a loan ol' $75.000 at the low rate of '?'>? is per cent per annum. The Supervisor invited bids for furnish ing the mono} and the bids were opened this morning, tho Citizens' National Hank ol' this city hoing the lowest bidder. This hank was given the business. Supervisor King stated that the Citizens' National Kank wilt! procure this money and have it available for ! the county's use by the tirst of next week; that the. loan will he dis-, counted and that the money will last tho county, unless some disaster comes along like the Mood of 1908, I when practically all the bridges of | J tho county wore swept away, until next tax-paving time. 1 The notes given to secure this loan will hegiii falling due on the lath dav ol' January, 1910. Tho lir.-t note due that day will be for .-;.': '.nun. The second note will he Tor $'22.."?00, am' w ill mature Pobruarj I .".th. The j third and hist time will be for .SL'L'. 500, and will como due Mardi lath. These dales were selected because count v taxes w ill l>> coming in then. Piles Cur . J tn ? to 14 Days Your druggist will rotund money if PAZO OINTMl?NT taits If? cure any raso of Itrliiin:, mini), nt? ed i nu oi Prod liny Pilen in 6 to 14 days. 1 The first application cives K.isc and K>.-st. 50c .fr ?I* ?fr ?fr ?fr -fr v ?fr ?fr ?fr *fr ?fr ! .J. IN MEMORIAM. .>*? ?fr ?fr ?fr ?fr 'I* ?fr ?fr *fr ?fr ?fr ?fr V George Yarborough Coleman, Who Died Milli of .Lummy, 1015. Ile sleeps! peacefully quiet it seems Life's fitful level is oro and (denial! dreams Arc now his, and uol a pain to mar As he sweet |v rests 'neath God's I guiding star. ! ; The Howers Huit Imo placed, still lin- j j ger there On the lowlv hed, and many a tear ; Was shed that the parting caine so soon. Ere ?he youn . life had reached its noon How brave, how valiant, he waged t ho ha t lo of life: I With odds lill against him. he smiled ai t he si rife ; To win out. and girded with hope his bean bent high: Hope, alis' that was destined ?,i die. lb' sleep.-' und the blue hills a vigil keep O'er the sacred mound: it is ours ',? vv cop, Hallowed and blessed ho rests in (Jud's care Sleeping, dreaming wo have him t hero. Mother. February 19th. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Th J Kind You Have Always Bought Boars the Slgnaturo of The city of Spartanburg ls to build a new school building in th? northern part of the etty at an oarly date. The building will cost about $35,000. Coi. R. A. " Ky Cadet S. C. Stribling, ('16,) i" Sop Wo think it meet and proper that I u few pages of tho "Chronicle"-a . publication edited by tiie boys of our ? beloved South Carolina, bo VB who arc descendants of those bravo and ? loyal wearer^ of Hie gray who so gal- ' tautly stood up and roughit for their j rights, hoys who are proud of their \ State, and the stand she has always tak ai in i he greal questions w th Which sho has hoon confronted--', shou d bo sot aside to the memory of the Lately deceased Col. Kobert An derson Thompson, of Walhalla, S. C.; who before his death was the last , survivor of that grand body ol' mon who met In convention llrst in Co- ' lumbla and lalor in Charleston, ill ; I Slid, and adopted the Ordinance of ? Secession. There were Ino mein- ! bera in t li is convention, and to Col. Thompson foll the sad duty of bury- i ing hi - l~?9 comrades. Sad. sad, in- i deed, must have been his thoughts i 118 he saw his beloved fellow-mem bers go one hy one until he alone of i all that grand array of men was lelt. i Truly we young Sou I h Carolinians should bow our hoads in honor to this great man. Kobert Anderson Thompson was i burn i.i PicketlS District. SouUi Caro- < lina, .Inno ISth, isi's. and dual al . li s home in Walhalla. S. C.. August | HM I. I lo wa.s therefore at the i time of his death passing into his < ST t ti year. Cor all it hose long years lie l d an honest, honorable, < on- : i scioiuious life. Cor long years he : was called "Oconee's Grand Old i Man." ano truly he was grand in : every sense of the word. Ho was a ; self-wade man. In the-(thinly sot ed ; portion m the State where he was i horn and reared to young manhood ? thole were few educational ad va nt- ? < ages. Ilowi .er, he was very eager i i lo learn, and bj diligence and perse- ; veranee he managed to get education | enough to ?'liable him to take a posi- ' s tim! on the old "Pendleton Messen- 1 ger." This added to his educational 1 advantages, and ho was not slow to ' grasp them. He later bought and t edited " The Keowee Courier," which he moved from Old Picketts Court i House to Walhalla, after the division 1 of Picketts District Into Pickett! and s Oconee counties. This paper tooday ? RKORCAM/.F. MILITIA FORCES. Governor Manning Outlines His Pol icy to Secretary Garrison. ( Tho State, 1 Ith.? "I shall order a reorganization ol' the National Guard and cau.se same lo con form to 'Tables of Organiza- 1 Hon. Organized Militia. 1914, ? Peace,' " said Governor Manning in ; a letter addressed to Lindley M. Har rison, Secretary of Wa*' Governor] Manning requested "thal Hie Bltspen- i sion of the benefits ol the Cedei.il al- j lot ment s due the State of South Car- j oliua for tho fiscal year IPI.. be j with drawn." Tho Governor's letter follows: "Replying to your rei pi est that I 'limy lind oprortiimty al an early dale to submit sm h suggestions as may api>ear . . .most appropriate, with a view of the state being re stored to a sta'us ol' active participa tion in the several Coderai allot ments.' I be:; io i inform you it is my Intention to conform the National Guard of South Carolina to all the refill i reinen ts of the War Depart ment; those organizations thal may he lound deficient and so reponed hy Hie inspect ing oflicers, United slates army, and recommended for m aster ia.n om of service, will be mustered oui by my orders. As soon as prac ticable after the close of tho inspec tions now being made the provisions ol' Section 1 I. Militia Act, I shall or der a reorganization of -i lu* National Guard, io conform to 'Tables of Or ganization, Organized Militia, 1914, Peace.' "Owing to the active steps taken ral months ago hy 'the Adjutant aera!, much government property r< ported al Inspections, I PI I, as hort,' has been recovered, and has been either shipped in to arsenals or is on hand in Hie Stale Armory, this city. "In consideration of what has al ready been done and what is to he done for the betterment of the mili tia conditions In this State, I would suggest and request that the suspen sion of the benefits of the Coderai al lotments due the State of South Car olina for the fiscal year Iii 15 be wit hdrawn." How To Give Quinine To Children. PRnRII.lNK ls the trade-mark n?mr given to an Improved Quinine, lt lo a Tasteless Syrup, pleas, ant to take ?nd floes not disturb the stomach. Children take it and never know it ls Quinine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Poes not nauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the heno. Try it tne next time you D'.id Quinine for any pur pose. A?k for 2 'Mince oriui ,"| package. The minie It; li Kl I,KN J, li Ldovtu :u bottle. 25 CC Ul*. tomber Clemson College Chronicle.] is acknowledged as one ot" the tlnest weekly newspapers of bhe State, and in no small degree does it owe its true greatness to Hie high tone im parted lo it by Col. Thompson. He had been in public life tor a great number of years. As early as is..:: he was appointe-! Commissioner of Equity lei !*?ckens District, and held that office continuously until 1870, when the o 111 ce was merged Into that of Clerk ot Court. Cor a number of yean he represented Oconec county in tv Legislature. , i I860 he was elected a member >f that convention, which assembled first In Columbia and final ly in Char leston, and drew up the Ordinance of Secession, for which he voted, lt Is i rather peculiar circumstance that his was the central name among tho ' signers of that famous document I there having been IGO signatures, and thal of Col. Thompson, the last to survive, being the Slst. Truly, the "Tall .Mountain Spruce" >t secession has fallen! Like the mountain spruce. Iiis home was a' the foothills of the mountains. ile was roared, surrounded, and sii]i poitod hy the pure air, wholesome mountain waler, and nourishing pro-' ?nets of this picturesque, virgin soil. ' Ml this environment forecasting the 11 physical foundation of a man near to nature, with moat ni power, physical endurance, and religious convictions. . \11 these combined to make this mountain spruce take deep and spreading roots, tall, trim, and neat Lruk, broad and spreading branche;;, ind in ago, achievements, endurance, md power to serve, towering hoad ind branches fat above tho surround- ! lng forest of manhood. I In tlie Secession Convention ho was < Conspicuous in standing equi-'dist an t in the long line of I (io signers of the Secession Ordinance. Ile stood i'.roudly on until tho storms of recoil- , it mci ion had passed and the balmy , breezes of tho rebuil'ded South made life pleasant again He lived to soe ; rime's woodman foll all of those 159 ? splendid specimens of manhood. ['hen, after a long life of faithful i service, he yields to tho mid-summer breeze and falls, and the sad. heavy sound echoes throughout the first j Secession Stale. j Bot urning South to Stay. ( Parin and Factory. ) Judge and Mrs. John B. Ad ger Mu Hal I y were in Seneca for a few c lours Thursday en route from New < Vork 'to their home In Anderson. , I'liey have been in New York for onie time on a combined business ind pleasure trip. While there, the 1 ludge states that he was offered the i position 'he formerly held before . ?oiiiing back to South Carolina, with the Department of Justice in the State of New York, his specific duties ? icing connected with the i livest iga lon of county offices and depart- , monts. While i' offers a very hand tome salary, he prefers to coi.linne to li\o in the South. Ile is prepar ing to open a law office in Anderson I n partnership with one of the bali ng lawyers at the Columbia bar and I lest known men in tho State, but lo tt not ready to announce any names ,et. as some of Ibo details have not >een arranged. Mrs. Modally is an interesting vornan, and although she is a North .m woman by birth, sim is as enthu siastic a Southerner and South Caro inian as is her native-born husband. Judge M ul lally was partially raised li Seneca and began his business ca reer here with the late John C. Cary. Ile has many warm friends in this ?oniniunity who arc always glad to .volc?me him. THOROUGH WORK. How a Walhalla Citizen Found Free (loin limn Kidney Troubles. li you suffer i rom backache From urinary disorders - Any curable disease of the kidneys, Cse a tested kidney remedy. H ian's Kidney Pills have been tested by thousands. Walhalla people testify. Can you ask more convint ing proof af merit '.' B. Oelkers W Main Btroot, Wal halla, says: "My kidneys wer?, out >l order and tho action was irregu lar. My back also ached. I used Donn's Kidney Pills and the. soon gave me relief." (Statement given March 16th, 1911). Still I sing Denni's. lin December I Tib. l*.i I 4. Mr. Del kera said: "I have every bit as much faith in Dilan's Kidney Pills now as when I formerly recommended them. Since thou when 1 have noticed n slight return Of kidney trouble, due to colds, I have always used Donn's I Kidney Pills and they have never failed to give me prompt relief." Price f)0c. at. all dealers. Don I simply ask for a kidney remedy-got Donn's Kidney Pills-tho same that Mr. Oelkers had. Fos tor- M i Ibu rn Po., Props.. Buffalo, N. Y.-Adv. YOU'RE CONSTIPA TE I >, BILIOUS !-CASCABETS. Sick Headache, Som- Stomach, Oas, Had Breath, .Menu Liver and Bowels Need (-leaning. Cet a 1 0-cetlt box now. Nd odds bow bad your liver, sto mach or bowels; how much your bead aches, bow miserable and un comfortable you are from constipa tion, indigestion, biliousness and sluggish bowels-you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; pul an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, soar, gassy sto mach, backache and ill other dis tress; cleanse your .aside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated mattel- which is producing tho mis ery. A 10-cent bo:; means health, hap piness and a clear head for months. No mote days of gloom and distress if you will lake a Cascare! now and then. All druggists sell Cascarets. Don't, forget the children-their Ut ile insides need a gentle cleansing, too. Adv. Abstinent Soldiers liest. The Cern?an war department has written another paragraph into the history of the use ol' alcoholics in this war. Il says: "At first, alcohol supplies-a certain liveliness, but w ith the consumption of large quantities i' causes somnolence. experience teaches 'that abstinent soldiers can bosl resist the fatigues of war. Be sides, the use of alcohol L ads to ex- j .esses and dissoluteness. Alcohol.1 therefore, is to be used with the greatest care, and ls to be absolutely ivolded on the inarch. For giving warmth it is not to be recommended, rho warmth which it conveys is en tirely deceptive. All in authority ire requested to pay strict attention to the nec< 3slty of limiting its use." CIICltCH OF HOME IN .MEXICO. ['ardi?al Ciblions Asks C. S. Govern ment tl > Restore Peace. Xew Orleans. Mardi IO.- The Ro man Catholic Church, through Cardi nal Ciblions, has formally requested Presided)) Wilson and Secretary of State Bryan to take stops to "restore peace and order in Mexico." This statement was given out by Cardinal Ciblions to/day, tufter a cou rt renee till late last night with .lose Maria y Del Rio. head of-the church in Mexico. "I do not ho|>e for the restoration t>f peace under tho revolutionary leaders," said the Cardinal, after he lind made the announcement. N C. S. 'frying to Help. Washington, March IO.- Wfrth s?v irai big warships speeding 'to Vera Ortiz lo exercise "moral coercion" on ; ?en. Carranza, Hu? Washington ad- j ministration to-day turned its atten tion to Hie problem of providing j means of getting United States titi- j -tens out. of Mexico City. Secretary of State Bryan to-day innounced that tho food shortage in Mexico City was Increasing in seri m s ness, and that the warning issued to Americans last. Friday to leave Mexico City was based chiefly upon lie shortage, and generally upon Cond.:tions prevailing in the city." Although Carranza's answer to the lemands of the United States was understood to be on its way to Wash ington, tin- aili iiorii ies facer! a new situation as a result ol' the reported rn nation of Mexico City by Gen. rjhregon and his Constitutional isl troops, lt was pointed out that Car ranza could not very well ho held re sponsible for what happened in the Mexican capital after his forres sur rendered control and Zapata, who is reported to have re-entered the city, took o p >t he reins. The greatest fear of the govern ment, as stated by President Wilson ind Secretary Bryan, is for outbreaks rf mobs driven desperate by hunger, ind it is to escape these consequences hat tho Slate Department is rylngto /et oui ail tho several thousand Vmerli ins still in Mexico City, who le, ire lo leave tho capital. There was a tendency on the par' >f officials, however, generally lo be lieve tha'l the change In control in Mexico would sirve to improve the situation hhere. lt was suggested that Zapata would reopen coin mun i .ation wi:li the northern section of the rou nt ry, and thus to Hie United tates border, through the Villa 'one-;. Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly The Old Stim?:nrd srenernt strenftlhcnlnfl tonic. GROVK'9 TA.iTKLKSS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria, enriches the blood, mid t>i?i1deeply Religious. (Greenwood .Jou rnal, I Mu.) Albon Tolbert, condemned to die tor 111<> nm riler of bis wife, bas ad dressed a letter to his friends through the Journail. Sheriff Me.Mil lan, who delivered the message, said he thought .less Clem did the writing nil the dictation of Tolbert. IL will be recalled tha.t Tolbert claimed in his statement on 'the wit ness stand that he could neither read nor write. With a few corrections in spoiling and punctuation, the letter in aili other details follows: "The Life of C. A. Tolbert. "Sinners all take warning by me. This life will do to live by. but it won't do to die by. You forsaken the Lord and he will ?ave you if you give up your sins to him. I went banishing his spirit too long, and you soe where I am. My ure is not long. Cid your heart right with God and work for your Heavenly Bather while on this earth you stay. If you are en joying good health and out ol' 'trou ble get right with Hod before it is too late and he will help you. You know that you ain't got long to stay hore and you must get your heart righi with Cod or you will be lost. .Vow I am lo bo electrocuted for the sake of sin. If I had been a Christian I would have lived lill Hod called me home. Young men, take warning, take warning by me. Never pince your fond affection on a green grow ing tree. If you do you surely will bo like I am. behind the jail house bars (onde.nned to die. (?ct your bea nt right ii li ( oui. I n ( ?od we I rust. "Now, boys, you have your labors. Ho keep it if you can ; And when you walk the streets, dear friend, Don't break tile laws of man. If you do you sundy will. You surely will be like I. Selling in some electric chair. Whore you're condemned to die. "Warned by C. A. Tolbert." As this letter would indicate, Tol bert has shown a deep religious spirit since ho was sentenced last Saturday. Shel iff .McMillan stades that the prisoner has Caused him no trouble whatever. Tolbert will be held in jail here until the Supreme Court hears the appeal for a new trial. Mystery Heaths Accounted For. A recent dispatch from Paris says: "Tile legend ol the asphyxiating properties of the three-inch projec tile," says an artillery officer, "has M il accounted for. We often lound in the trenches bodies ol' soldiers who appeared to have been struck hy a thunderbolt-ho trace of wound, no blood to be found on their bodies. lt was filially decided to ( lear up Hie matter and autopsies were made of such cases. Mach time there was found somewhere in the body a small fragment of our th ree-i ne h shell, hav ing made an lni|)erceptible wound, but having penetrated to a vital spot, causing mortal internal hemorrhages. This is due to the marvellous shell which breaks on the average into 2.000 pieces, about half the length of a lead pencil and thc tickness ol' a \ isii ing card." X-ray apparatus has recently been used in examining bailes of cotton when suspected of containing muni tions of war or other contraband goods. "Tl/" PUTS JOY IN HORK, ACHING FRET. Cse "Tl/" for Tired, Tender, Swol len, Sweaty, Calloused Peet and Coins-H's Grand! "TIZ" makes sore, burning, tired ?eel fairly dame with delight. Away L-o tho aches and pains, the corns, callouses, blisters, bunions and chil blains. "TIZ" draws out the acids and poisons thal puff UP your feel. No matter how hard you work, how long von dance, how far you walk, or how long von remain on your feet, "Tl/" brings restful foot comfort. "TIZ" is magical, grand, wonderful for tired, aching, swollen, smarting feet. Ali! iiow comfortable, how happy you feel. Your feet just tingle for joy; shoes nover hurt or seem tight. Get a 25-cent box of "TI/" now from any druggist or department store. Bod foot torturo forever wear smaller shoes, keep your feet fresh, sweet and happy. Just think! a whole year's foot comfort for only 2f> cents.-Adv.