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HEAD OF GREAT FIRM . DOUBLES HIS WORK GARLICK AMONG NEW YORKERS DOING GREAT THINGS. WAS "ALL RUN-DOWN.' Widely Known Business Mun Tells Story that Will Encourage Hundreds. In the list of the inen of New York who have done big things is the name of Monia Garllck. This ma^.is sec retary o? the Down Town Taxpayers' Association of Brooklyn, represent ing $10,000,000 in realty holdings alone in the heart of the great busi ness district. He was largely re sponsible for Brooklyn's noted Flat bush extension, the greaftrafllc ar tery from the new Manhattan "Bridge, He ie head of M. Garll?k & Com pany, of 181 Gold street. Prominent In the real uplift work of the world's greatest city, he holds the deep respect of thousands with whom he comes in contact in busi ness, political, church and fraternal affairs. Since boyhood, and for 45 years, he has labored. Ho is now 57 years old. It ls only natural that, with all his activities, the strain should begin lo tell. "Maybe I have overworked," said Mr. Garlick, "but, at any rate, I be gan to suffer from broken rest, loss of appetite, iailure to assimilate the nourishment I needed, and nervous ness," he explained, "lt is what the average man calls 'all run-down,' and there are a lot of us in every city. I felt as If I needed something to build me up-something that would bring back the strength I was losing-something that would help take away the worries, give me a real appetite, tone up my stomach and whole system and quiet my nerves. Through friends 1 heard of a new medicine, Tanlac, and de cided that if it could help others it ought to help me, too, so I tried Tan lac. And now," he continued-for work is his big thought in life-"I oan do Jwlce as much work as I could before. My nerves are quiet. I rest well, I enjoy meals because my sto mach digests my food. I am stronger and feel wonderfully better." When men like Morris Garllck en dorse a medicine there can be no fur ther proof asked. He felt it was his duty to tell of Tanlac to help others. No other mod'cine ever h tts won such support. Because Tanlac in the re cast! uctive* system pu ri fl oi Hn'd sto mach tonio, supreme for weak, new ons, ailing mea and women who need more strength, better digestion and revitalization of the nervous sys tem, lt receives endorsement Uko this. Tanlac, th? master medicine, ls sold exclusively by Bell's Drug Store, Walhalla; J. C. Cain. Oak way; Sa lem Drug Co., Salem; Seneca Phar macy, Seneca; Stonecyphor Drug Co., Westminster; Hughs & Dendy, Richland.-Adv. .. - p Fighting Men Urged to Insure. Washington, Nov. 21.-All officers and enlisted mon and nurses In the army and navy were urged in an ad dress Asued to-day by Secretary Mc Adpo to apply to the bureau.of war risk Insurance at Washington for government life insurance before February 12, next. Failure to apply by that time, he explained, would bar them from the benefits of what he characterized as "the greatest measure of protection ever offered to its fighting forces by any nation in the history of the world." Dependents of any man killed be fore that time, however, will receive insurance payments, regardless of whether applications were made, in asmuch as the government considers all of them insured,, automatically until then. The war risk insurance bureau to day Issued instruction? that members of the officers training camps may apply for government insurance be fore the close of the camps next Mon day. Utah will get no more sugar un til after the first of January, All the ^surplus sugar will be shipped East until the shortage is relieved. Auto-Intoxication Causes Death Do you know why you have sick ?headache, diabetes, neuralgia, rheu matism and liver or kidney troubles?) It's because you are hoing poisoned by products of your own body. Tfoui? ^organs of elimination are not work ing properly. Waste material that should be thrown out is being retained to .poison and intoxicate your system. That could not happen if the bowels were kept open with Granger Liver Regulator. This splendid preparation is purely vegetable and non-alcoholic. p. Demand Granger Liver Regulator a? your drug store-20c. a box-and take no other. There is nothing "just as gdod/* i* %ct Ula Be GRATITUDE is a virtue too However, it does not follow thu ously deficient Disappreciation ti mini ly openly acknowledging of blessings. An individual to pressions of thanks runs the risl of suspicion. In its innot' tabernacle thc praises for a continuance of bles of such thoughts develop a ber thrill and inspire when oceasic heard. The nobility of oin* th of our own words determines < is more a matter of attitude thai This does ?ot mean that w euee of an abundance of good Providence ami by friends. Or ful heart tho mouth should spc cannot be stilled-true cha rael when words are scant. Thanksgiving should be a mockery of insincerity. Such nant among our pious New Kn to-day. Comparatively scant grievous ns were their privation find mitch occasion for daily tin devotions a dav of special thanl ed meet. And thus was born annual Thanksgiving. .I* *?* *?* *?* *?* *i* *l* *?* *?* *?* *?* *l* ty LUTHERANS ON RECOUD. A ty ty ty tty ?J? ?J? ty ty ty ty ty ty tty ?ty Tho following resolutions were adopted at the Evangelical Lutheran Synod of South Carolina, at Pomaria, on November 14, 1917: Sunday Observance. In view of the growing tendency of the people of our country toward the desecration of the Lord's Day, an evil that is increased daily in our State lately on account of the abnor mal conditions, this synod hereby puts itself on record as favoring a more rigid enforcement of existing laws, on Lord's Day observance throughout the State, while lt ap I peala to its. own people for ;i better anet more faithful observance of lite Christian Sabbath! lu .. ii connection, we heart il) commend the Ministerial Union, the city conimisisoriers and The Sinte (newspaper) of Columbia for their strong stand against the opening of moving picture theatres on Sunday. We would also commend other cities whore a Uko positive stand for the right has been taken In regard to Lord's Day observance. It is mani fest that the Christian'people of South Carolina are still vitally con cerned for the moral and spiritual welfare, not only of the young men of the army camps, but also of all of the young people o? the State. This is as lt should be. Resolutions on Loyalty. That In view of the-"vltal import ance to the Lutheran church In Amer ica of the implied challenge, in the public press, of our faith and patriot ism, we as a Synod hereby solemnly reaffirm and confess, for ourselves and for our congregations, "the principles of the Protestant Refor mtalon as embodied In the Confes sions of our Church, especially the doctrine of tho sole ^authority of the Holy Scriptures; of the person, of fice and work of Christ, of salvation wholly by grace and justification by faith alone; of the efficacy of the Holy Spirit through the Word anti Sacrament; of the Church as the COIK. grogatlon of ^saints* and true believ ers, as requiring no modification or amendment." That we reaffirm our loyal adhe rence to the fundamental doctrine and historic practice of our church In all lands, of patriotic devotion to the dag of tho country, of respect for civil authority, our obedience to lhe; laws of the land, and our readiness to-day to defend our national Inter ests and Institutions, as attested by Hie history of our people In every time of crisis In tho Stnte, and espe cially exemplified by the great num ber of our young men in uniform In this crucial hour of our own nation's life, by our fortunes and our blood. That synod now appoint the first day of tho new year, 1918, to bo ob served by all of our congregations as a day of humiliation and prayer, whoa humble confession of our per sonal and national sins be made to Cod, and fervent prayer be made for His forgiving grace, and for, tho speedy return of peace to our own beloved land and to all the nations of .he earth? Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard f enerol atrenffthenlng tonic, OROVK'S TASTKU?99 chill TON IC, drive? out Malroto.enriches the blood,rend builds unthesys. tem. A true toute. For adulta nutt cliildrcu. 60c ) TTbankful I often inadequately expressed. ? it wo' are wholly or even seri bcoause of failure to bo con- ?? indebtedness for a multitude 0 quick or too profuse in ex- * t of being regarded with a bit ? 1* ; bumble soul itiuy daily sing ?sings and by a predominance tu ty and richness which will ?u demands that it. should be ^ughts and not thc multitude >ur character. Thanksgiving ii of speaking. It ia spiritual, e should bo dumb in thc. pros things showered upon ns by it of the abundance of a grate luk. A virtue well developed er speaks through" every act, daily devotion, unmarred by devotion was more predomi igland forebears thou with us as wove their blessings and is, they sincerely professed to inksgiving. Even with these tsgiving and praise was deein the beautiful custom of our PACKAGES OFF FOH FRANCK. Seneca Folks Pack 22 Boxes- Fili pinos Moving to Training School. Seneca, .Now 19.-(Delayed in transmission.)-Special: The Chris tian Endeavor social at the manse last Friday evening was a decided success. Games, followed by light refreshments, constituted the pro gram of entertainment. Jas. H. Thompson, of Atlanta'; spent the week-end here. Mrs. Thompson returned with, him to At lanta after a visit of several weeks. News has been received hero .by Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Todd of the safe arrival "Soihewhero" iii France" "" of their sons, Joe add (jordon Todd. The Baptist denomination ha's1 bought tim rosidonee on -Fair Pia) street belonging lo B. O'. Hopkin?, and will use it as a parsonage for tho present. A train load of Filipinos passed through Seneca Sunday for a point in Virginia, where they will continue training for tho navy. Friends in Seneca of our boys in the army and navy packed and post ed 22 Christmas boxes last Tuesday. The men and boys In twon contrib uted Smokes" and the entire con tents were such as to appeal to the boy away from home. Charles Strihling will go to Green ville next Sunday to take up work in the Bank of Commerce on Monday following. Door Closed to Russia. Washington, Nov. 21.-American officials have been instructed to stop all Russian bound exports already on the docks until there is a clear, con vincing indication of whose hands they fall into. . Bolshevik! suprem acy or a protracted civil war would tighten the ombargo already in force. Mrs. ^Waite, a Baltimore woman, in her will provided for an eques trian statue of Gen. Robt. E. Lee for Druid Hill Park in that city. It will cost between $25,000 and $35,000. _ MAGASINE 300 ARTlCllg? ^?^ltt?STRATtONS BETTER THAN EVER 15c a copy At Your Newsdealer Yearly Subscription $1.80 Sand for our new free eat' olog of mechanical book? Popular Mechanics Magazine O North Michigan Avenue, Chicago POISONS HARY BY DR.'S ADVICE. Chicago Mother is Executing Death Seutenco by Dr. Hasoldcn. A recent dispatch from Chicago rays: A y> tm!; mother hugged her baby to lier breast, sobbed ns a gasping breath tacked the child's slight frame and then poured from a bottle a dose o! medicine and gave it to tho baby. As she did so sho broke down com pletely. Por the drug she gave was not su< h Utf other mothers have given-a soothing curative Tor tho ailments of childhood - but a "death potion," which brought just one day noaror to a close a little Ufo, hopeless from the first, which is being gradually and knowingly snuffed out uifder tho di rection of nr. Harry .1. HaBOlden, so that its possessor may not grow, up a helpless imbecile, a charge upon the community. . Tliis is believed to have been tho first, time i lint a physician deliberate ly and openly has pronounced the dealh sentence on a child who other wise would live, and left lt to a mo ther to carry out the sentence. The mother, who daily administers tho deadly potion, that in two or throe months, will have its final effect is Mrs. Pauline Hodzlma, who lives In a tenement in the roar of 718 N. May street. The child is her second son, Paul, two and a half years old. 'Her husband, Stephen ll od/.I ni a, an employee of the Automatic Electric Company, earns but $17 a week and cannot procure the services of the nurses and specialists who might make tho life,of the child bearable If hot useful. Hence the death sentence. "You soe,'' Mrs. Hodzlma said to day, "how hard lt is for him to breathe, lie's well formed otherwise and would ho all right were it not tar the awiu? hard breathing. Oh, I love my baby, but ! can't bear to see him suffer. I have been giving him" the medicine prescribed by Dr. Has eklon, aud have made up my mind it ls for the best. "1 would bte to keep him, and it nearly break;; my heart to think of his going, bul I don't want him to be a burden loi himself,-al ways suffering. .1 have had nothing butv sleepless nights since ho was born. He cries continually ami ls unable to sit up. It is seldom thal I ever get to sleep be fore 1 o'clock In the.morning." Dr. Has<Mon's new baby problem has stirred the medical profession, ? following his announcement that be was treating a baby, with 't.- parents' ! consent, so that tho child might di? peac?fujly In a tow weeks and not live a hopeless idiot, physicians and surgeons to-day expressed violent disapproval. "The medical fraternity never will accept or approve such practice, '* Dr. C. E. ILumiston, president of the Chi cago Medical Association, said. "Our association o'f course, will take no action In this matter, because Dr. Haselden no longer Is a member, and any action designed to? prevent such practices must come from other sou reos." ' s "Dr. Hase.lden'8 course ls absolute ly unjustifiable," asserted Dr. A. A. O'Neill, former head of the associa tion and ono of the leading members of the American Medical Society. "There are ways in which pain can be alleviated without causing the death of the sufferer. No physician has the right to cause death or, for that matter/ to refuse to prevent death under any circumstances." "Dr. Haselden's method, if he has been quoted correctly, ls nothing more than taking human life in order to make death less painful. 'It can not be tolerated by right-thinking physicians." ^ GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER Has been used for all ailments that are caused by a disordered stomach and Inactive liver, such as sick head ache, constipnttor., sour stomach, nervous Indigestion, fermentation of food, palpitation of thp heart caused by gases in the stomach. August Flower is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both in stomach and intes tines, cleans arid sweetens the sto mach and alimentary canal, stimu lates tho liver to secreto tho hilo and impurities from tho blood. 25 and 75-cent bottles. ( SotfTby Boll's drug store.-Adv.2. -^ Southerners Won't Ent Onions. \Greenville News.) Southern boys don't like onions. Officials at Camp Sevier, who num ber among them a fair proportion of Northerners, claim that they have demonstrated ^t beyond the. shadow of a doiibt. Recently the quarter master department ordered what for an equal number of men from tho North would have been a usual amount of onions, but tho boys of tho 30th Division took so unkindly to this article of diet that no less than $500 worth spoiled on tho hands of the government. Monday the air In the vicinity of their storage place fairly howled with tholr odor, and so they were removed and de stroyed. Itt Contents 15Fluid Praohia m ? ALCOHOL-3 PBB OBNT. sf> AVc?ct?blclVep?fBu^ftfcrAs s?milntin^Uic?bod by Rc6?lal Untithc Stomachs and Bggjser_ lr ^Thereby lYomoun^sttta 1 neither ()g?m,M()fpto^ Mineral. NoTgA?OOTWl /Han/tt?nSmt \ J I .1 k ?ti- ^?sfi roc-SlmiteS^ntrto?^ ? ii i mn Exact Copy of Wrapper. New Substitut? for Salvnrsnii. Philadelphia, Nov. 2 2.- Dr. Simon Flovner, head of tho Rockefeller In stitute, to-day told the National Academy of Science In convention here, that the Rockefeller Institute had discovered an Improved substi tute for salvarsan. %The new chemi cal-agent, he naid, ls .still unnamed. Soon, he added, lt will be given the medical profession free. "T1K> new chemical has many ad vantages over salvarsan," said Dr. Flexner. "Where salvarsan costs $3.'J0 a^doso,, tho Improved Substi tute costs about five cents n dose." Salvar?an was a Qornluti product under the control of a (teriann man Helps Sick Women Cardui, the woman's tonic, helped Mrs. Wil liam Eversole, of Hazel Patch, Ky. Read what she writes: "I had a general breaking-down of my health. I was In bed for weeks, unable to get up. 1 had such a weakness and, dizziness, .. . and the pains were very severe. A friend (t told me I had tried, every^ thing else, why not. j.iCardui?... I did, and ' soon saw it was helping me ... After 12 bottles* 1 am strong and wen." TAKE The Woman's Tonic Do you feel weak, diz zy, worn-out? !s your lack ot good health caused from any of the com plaints so common to women? Then why not give Cardui a trial? It should surely do for you what It has done torso many thousands of other women who suffered-it should help you back to health. Ask some lady friend who has taken Cardui. " She wilt tell you how it helped her. Try Cardui. All Druggists i.? For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria THC CCNTAUn COMPANY. M KW VORN CITY ufacturer. Since the war it has boon impossible to Import lt. Dr, Samuel Meitzer, also of tho Rockefeller ?Instituto, ?howed., lan tern slides portraying how eclontlsts of the institution hod cured tetanus (lockjaw) with Injections of Epsom salts. RHEUMATISM Why will you suitor froni this most droadod disoaso, whoa T&Rl??uTtto hus pfovoli rho groat 08l roin?dy fm'Ihr pafct 25 yours ? Thousands of people testify io its won dor ful euros. This proscription should bo' in your home. Take it whoa you feel that first pain. De mand tho bottle with big "L." -FOR SALB BY Bell's Drug Store, Walhalla, S. C. Roofing, . Repairmi. Kurfoos Pal Iiis and Oil. Gutter and Repair Work. JD. JE. GOOD, TINNER. - WALHALLA, g. fl. 4* *2* *I* *I* *1* *I* *I* *I* *I* ?I* 4* ty PROFESSIONAL CARDS. tfc. \w 4* 4? 4? 0?[ 4* 4? 4? 4* 4? 4 DR. W. R. ORA IO, WALHALLA'! ?"CA?IOLINA. Office Over O, W. Pitchford'* Store. * L* * 4 4? 4* * * 4 4? 4? * 4* I* 4 * 4? I* 4 4* 4? 4* 4? 4* 4? 4? HARRY R. HUGHS, Attorney-at-Law, Walhalla, South Carolina. 4% MARCUS C. LONG, AttOriioy-at*Law, rhone No. 00, Walhalla, South Carolina. Office Over Ocoi/eo No wp. J. H. EARLS, Attorney-at-Law, WALHALf/A, S. O, -J, Practice in State and Federal ?f Courte. ?g, FARM LOANS. {j --- A E. L. H El RN DON, <$ Attornoy*at?Law, Walhalla, South Carolina. o$ PHONE NO. Ol. r? A Practice in State and Federal ^ It. T. JAYNEH, Att?rnoy-at-Law, Walhalla, South Carolina. Belt Phone No, 80. Courts. 4. J. P. Carey, J. % Sbelor, # A Plckens, 8 C. W. C. Hqghs. 44 A CAREY, SHELOH A HUGHS ?I? Attorneys and Counsellors, ?St ?j. Walhalla, South Carella?. HW A Practice In State and Federal ty A Courts. ) " ?|< ffe'4 4* .4* * * * "fe * ? * A * &