University of South Carolina Libraries
This Medicine Recom? setto? he mai This lnent ] to say romedj RU-N? given after c proved and ye well ol tontCB.1 Dr. } own pi all sh medici You m danger endors yond a _ Whs i&Tfl?MB^nar^G cold, o ot the DR. J. H. WAGNER ?* * fmpro? isfy beyond a doubt that PB-RU-1 PE-RU-NA may bo p?rohaaod I .>J? ?J? ?J. ?J? ?|. ?J? ?J. ?"? ?J? ?J? ?J- ?J? ?J. ?l< HONOR ROLli. 4* + - * 4? Walhalla High School. 4* ?j* ?j? ?|* ?j? *!? .*? ?i* ?j. ?j? ?j? ?j* ?j* First Grade - Romaine Sloan, Phalbia Crow, Lydia "Gerber, Lucy Hedden, Elizabeth Alexunder,<Cath erine Dukes, Dorothy Waldt, Earle Hetrick, Julian Humphries, Wade Milam, Walter Moss, Laurie Smith. Second Grade-Carrie Finken stadt, Norton Dendy, Dandy McLees, Crayton Walker. Third Grade-Eloise Burley, John Gerber, June Haynes, Marcus Long, Maude Oe?kors, Thomas Owens, Oc tavia Smith, Marvin Smith. Fourth Grade - Dorothy Brown, Loraboll Lyda, Nettie Wigington, Ei-.| leen Aull, Lee Hunt, Hix Thode, Jos eph Walker. Fifth Grade-Sara Aull. Sixth Grade-Mary Reid Norris. Seventh Grade-Ethel Hunt. Eighth Grade-Nono. Ninth Grade-None. Tenth Grade-John Todd. ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer" is on Genuino Aspirin-say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tableta of Aspirin" In a "Bayer package," containing proper directions Sor Headache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" raeanB genuine Aspirin preaoribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetio acidester of Salioylioacid. , $3,000 Dnmugo Suit Regun. (Anderson Mail, 5th.) Suit has been filed by Dickson & Miller, attorneys, in bohalf of their client, M. C. Pearce, against the An derson Cotton Mills, damages in the sum of $3,000 being asked. This suit arises from an accident which occurred on March 24th of this year. Pearce was caught In a carding machine and suffered a mangled hand. Habitual Constipation Cured In 14 to 21 Days .LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regular action, lt Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60o per bottle. Half Million Tire Plan', Fire. Muskogeen, Mich., May 4.-Fire yesterday destroyed the plant of the Curtis Tire and Rubbor company here, causing a loss estimated at SotKt.OOO. m Joseph J. The Man Wno Hat ants and Ena .Own Their m Probably than ai Anderso Write tor All original idea these prc JOS. J. FF Anders? mended by a Docfoi a a doctor UB68 a medicino bim? ?idea prescribing it to bia patienta it know that lt bas merit, ia What Dr. J. H. Wagner, a prom* physician of Skate, Kentucky, ha? about Dr. Hartman's well-known, r, PB-RU'NA? "? haVo used PB-? . myself for catarrh and have lt to others for catarrh, bloating tating and other ailments. It has a success in all oases with old ?ung men and women. All speak I PE-RU-NA. It ls the best of all Wagner, out of tho fullness ot bis jrsonal experience, for tho good of )k and suffering, recommends a ao which he knows to be good, ay be sure a dootor would not en* 1 his professional reputation by lng PE-RU-NA unless satisfied be \ doubt of its value, thor your trouble bo a cough' Or ai r a moro subito oatarrhal effeetton stomach, bowels or other organs. BJ-RU-NA a trial. Tho immediato emont which you will seo will sat? STA is what you need. mywhoro tu tablet or liquid form, WILL TAKE WARDEN ROW To Courts for Settlement and Con* strucUon of Act. \ Columbia, May 6.-The courts of South Carolina will likely be called upon at an early date to settle a row between W. H. Gibbes, of Co lumbia, chief State game warden, and J. H. Robinson, of Greenville, game warden for that county, who was recently "tired" by 'Mr. Gibbes. Governor Cooper ls in receipt of a letter from the Greenville delegation, in which the Executive ls asked to re-appolnt Robinson, in order that Mr. Cibbes may then take the matter to the courts for setlement. Tho act of the 1920 Legislature provides in one section that the chief State game, warden may dis miss wardens at his discretion. In another section the act states that a game warden shall hold office until his successor has been appointed. This apparent contradiction is the ground on which the Greenville dele gation has acted in asking that the courts be allowed to decide the mat tor. Robinson claims that Mr. Gibbes had no power to remove him, and the Greenville delegation held a meet-i lng a few days ago and drafted a let ter to the Governor, asking for the reappointment, and also a letter to Mr. Gibbes, asking that the matter be taken to the courts for settlement. The lotter to the Governor states that tho county warden was removed because "there has arisen a disagree ment between him and Mr. Gibbes." TURNER TO ?ELECTRIC OHAfft. Virginia Judge Imposes Extremo Penalty-Death Sot for July 7. Lynchburg, Va., May 6.-1-John Williams, alias Joe Turner, negro, was sontenced to the elctric chair July 7 in the corporation court here to-day by Judge Prank P. Christian, for the murder of Police Detective Mann, March 25. The negro was tried yesterday under a plea of guil ty and With waiver of a Jury. The shooting occured in the heart of the city when two policemen attempted to arrest Williams. Williams was also wanted at Greenville, S. C., for the murder of two policemen there. The BEST and CHEAPEST insurance on ead h MYIS IJURE fAIIMT RODUCTS FOR INSIDE AND OUTSIDE WORK USE MORE PAINT PRESERVE AND BEAUTIFY YOUR PROPERTY Sold by BELL'S DRUG STORE, WALHALLA, S. O. Fretwell, i Settled More Ten?* bled Them to Own Homes ny dozen men in n County. Particulars. - i? about handling ?positions. ATWELL, on? 9* C DRV ENFORCEMENT OOST?iYi Congressman Cites Figures As to Number of StUls Captured. Washington? May 4.-Prohibition enforcement ' will cost $88,000,000 annually, Representative Gallivan, Democrat, of .Massaohussetts, de clared to-day In the House. There are more illicit 'Stills now than before prohibition became ef fective, he said, adding1 that the bulk of Anti-Saloon League funds are used to hire special agents tu looate stills. * "There were 2,006 stills found in Georgia in 1918," he declared. "Blind tigers are now surrounded by romance, if not respectability. Members of Congress could toll in teresting interviews with bootleggers who have been respectable cif.txen.B of the communities' in which they live. "During the year when prohibition was young over 6,000 stills were cap tured by prohibition inspectors and 800,000 gallons of moonshine confis cated." Besides the stills raided in Geor gia, North Carolina and Nebraska, Mr. Gallivan said, 752 had been found in Alabama, 488. In South Carolina, 386 in Tennessee, 546 in Virginia, 121 in Koa tucky, 191 in Florida, 40 in Michigan, 41 in Texas and 40 in w%st Virginia. Control of Congress and the Presi dential election may be decided by the prohibition question, Mr. Galli van declared. "You can no more settle the pro hibition question or keep lt out of politics than you can sweep back the ocean," he said. "Every tea kettle and stew pan ls placed under suspicion since the Vol stead act has become effective. It prohibits everything with more than one half of one per cent alcohol, and yet the sap of every tree flows in violation of that law." TAHLAC PROVED REMEDY NEEDED. "For a Year I Was Unable to Go," McCleUan Declares. FEARED THE FUTURE. Williamston Mon Gives Tiuilac Credit for Putting Him Back on His Feet. ? "Tanlac got me back on my feet and proved Just the medicine I need ed." In that sentence J. L. McClellan, of Williamston, S. C., summed up bia experience with Tanlac, 'When I began taking Tanlac I was In a very weak Condition, and I was - told that I was threatened I with paralysis. I became so weak 1 I could not get about at all, and for | one year I was'unable to go.. I had. no appetite and I n?v?r felt well. | Even though I was under treatment, I got no better to amount to ?any-1 thltig, and I had begun to fear I would not be able to get myself back in good shape again. 'I took seven or eight bottles of Tanlac and I am in fine shape now. My strength has increased a great deal apd I am working regularly at night. I have a very fine appetite,, and soon after I began taking Tan lac I began to fatten up right along. The Tanlac got me back on my feet] and proved Just the medicine I needed, and I am glad to recommend iL" Tanlac, the master medicine, ls] sold exclusively by Bell's Drug Store, Walhalla; J. C. Cain, Oakway; Sa lem Drug Co., Salem; Seneca Phar macy, Senece: Stonecypher Drug Co., Westminster; Hughs & Dendy, Richland.-adv. 18-19. Doatlt of Mrs. H. B. Harris. (Tugeloo Tribune, 4th.) On Monday afternoon, April 26th, Mrs. Bertha Harris, wife or H. B. Harris, died at their home a few miles below Westminster, of heart trouble. Mr. Harris lives at the Jones place, known to the older citi zens as the D. E. Smithson old home place. Mrs. Harris was 39 years old and was before marriage Miss Bertha Brown. She leaves her husband, three children and three step-child ren to mourn her death. The young I est child is only a few months old. Mr. ?Harris has the deep sympathy of many friends in his sore bereave ment. Mrs Harris was a member cf Changa Baptist church for many years, interment was in tho ceme tery of the First Baptist church last Tuesday afternoon, the funeral ser vices hoing conducted by Rev. J. A. Martin. -- Dog Meat Feast for Princess, Koko mo, Ind., May 4.-A tribal custom hundred of years old was broken with the birth of Princess Kokomo, of the Igorrotos, here yes terday. The child is said to be the first ever born away from the tribe's nativo islands, mothers always hav ing been sont to their homes In the Phillipines. The. arrival of the girl baby, which was named after the town of Koko mo, was duly celebrated by the tribe of Igorrotes with a dog-meat feast. Chief Panmayagna, who heads the members of the tribe travelling with a circus, and his wife, mothor of the baby, officiated at tho head of a camp fire. They smoked pipes and helped themselves to the meat by lifting it from tho pot with their fingers. Chief Panmayagna mid it was a superstition that a child born away from its native land would have a spell cast over lt. Tomado Injures 18 in Kansas. Eureka, Kans., May 4.-Euroka was slowly recovering to-day from tho effects of a tornado which "dipped" here late Monday afternoon and resultod in injuries to eighteen persons. Six were seriously hurt, two of whom are expected to die. A high sohool and fifteen residences were badly damaged. ?RATITUDE OP POOR QUALITY. So Was tho Liquor that Was Rought in GreenvHle. (Greenville Piedmont.) Man's Inhumanity to man WUB the subject ot a Gaffney citizen's dls ?ourse Wednesday morning as he walked into the office of Sheriff Wil lis and ; requested that a man on whoso bond he had gone the day bo tore hq.arrested again. Tho speaker desired vtjb take down the bond and requested that Sheriff Willis arrest the maM&ost-haste. ' Witm?^^a8ting any time on pre liminaries ne told the whole story In a nutshell. "I'caine over here from Gaffney to go on the bond of a mau who was in trouble and was about to go to Jail. I put up the check for $3 00 after the telephono had been used to find out that the check was good. After I had gotten the man out of jail, he asked me to go home with him and I did so. For the sake of enjoying myself while here and preparing for tho long trip back to Gaffney, my friend suggested that ho could get a pint of whiskey for $20. I gave him the money, but the stuff was not whiskey after all; you couldn't drink lt. Then, to cap the climax, when I awoke -this morning another $20 had been carefully removed from my pants pocket. That . is why I came right on in here to have the sheriff to get the man." Gent Ballow, arrested tho previ ous day on a oharge of transporting whiskey, will be placed in Jail again at the instance of his bondsman, who came in and withdrew tho check which had been put up. According to the Gatfney man who furnished the bond, it has been eleven years since he had been to Greenville, and each time he thinks of last night's happenings, he says it will be more than eleven years before he again sets foot in this city. Clothing . Situation Dark. Ll ttl?. Rock, May 4.-"We are facing conditions wor?e than any that existed In war times," Charles E. Wry, of Chicago, secretary of the National Association of Retail Cloth iers, told Arkansas merchants in an address to-day before the annual convention of the Arkansas State Association of Retail Clothiers and Furnishers; "We are in the midst of fair price regulations," he said, "lt is In the cards to make lt 'hot' for the cloth ing business, and it will take every ounce of our energy to combat it. i hero ls a wide divergence of opin ion on tho part of the public and the courts as to a fair margin of profit. Politics may be in it, but the con dition is, in some respects, only a response to clamor. "Tho public l? looking to us to break the prices, but it ls an utter impossibility when the manufactur ers charge 25 per cent increase on every now line they put out." Can't Electrocuto Wooden Leg. Osslng, N. Y., May 5.-Tho elec tric chair hero has never had a wooden legged victim, and when John Egan, whose conviction of mur dering John 'Klein on June 2, 1919, the Court of Appeals upheld, comos to bo executed his woodon leg will havo to be removed. Major Lawos, .mg Sing prson warden, said that eloctrical contact upon one leg, in stead of two, will undoubtedly bo sufficient to carry the execution tnrough without a hitch. Hugo Dividend Declared. Winston-Salem, N. C., May 6.-The R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company to day declared a dividend of 200 per cent. It also announced that Its charter would be amonded at onee to provide sufficient authorized capi tal. TIRES i only tires built to rtised Ideal -an Id te?y indicates the p?? i the makers of Fis ie Fisk Ideal: "To be the neera in the world to i r, and the squarest concei istence to do business w Next time-BUY FISK MONT AUTO OOM HUGHS GARAGE Walhalla, S. 0. COTTON GROWERS IN SESSION, Sixty Cont? Cotton IH Demanded by tho Oro worn. Columbia, May 15.-Several hun dred farinera from all parts ot the State, together with prominent bush ness men, are attending the semi-an nual convention of the South Caro lina division of the American Cotton Association. . The convention oponed at noon with singing "Organize, Oh, Organ ize," the organization song, to the tune of "Marylhnd, My Maryland.' Among the speakers' names who arel orr the program for the day are^. H. j ? Edmunds, of Baltimore, editor of the, Manufacturers' Record; Mrs. G. H. Mathis, of Gadsden, Ala., prominent woman cotton planter; State Senator Helps Sick Women Cardul, tito womans tonic, helped Mm. Wil liam Eversolo, of Hazel Patch, Ky. Read what ehe writes: "! had a general breaking-down of my health. I was In bed for weeks, unable to get up. I had such a weakness and dizziness, ... and the pains were very severe. A friend told me I had tried every thing else, why not Cardul?... I did, and soon saw lt was helping me... After 12 bottles, I am strong and well." TAKE The Woman's Tonic Do you feel weak, diz zy, worn-out? Is your lack of good health caused from any of the com plaints so common to women? Then why not give Cardut a trial? It should surely do for you what lt has done for so many thousands of other women who suffered-lt should help you back to health. Ask some lady friend who has taken Cardul. She will tell you how lt < helped her. Try Cardul. AU Druggists .' . ) i. er an adU eal that licy and k Tires. best york rn in ?th." [PANY, Ai Geo. K. Laney, of Chesterfield; B. C. Mattox, ifield agent for the Georgia division, and J. S. Wannamaker, df St. Matthews, president of tho as sociation. It was decided to-day that immedi ately after tho convention a State wide campaign for farmers' ware houses in all the counties will be waged. The convention stood firm also for 60 cent cotton. Ora ve's Tasteless chill Tonic ., .cstoro*. vitality and energy by purifying and cu itching th? blood. You can poon feel hf Strength? onlnd, Invigorating Effect.. Pr?fe Ooo. UNDERTAKING Ballenger's, Seneca. Sf G Motor Hearse Equipment. * * 4 * 4 i 4* * 4 4? 4 4? * ?I? *j? ?j? ?j? ?j? ?i* 4* 4* *I* *.* PROFESSIONAL CARDS. * .J? ?J? ?J-. ?J- t>l? ?J? ?J? .J, ?J? ?|- ?J? C. Ii. DEAN, ?{. Surveyor and Civil Engineer. ?$. SENECA, S. C. rf. BUY WAR SAVINS STAMPS. * ?J, ?J? .J? vj? ?J? ?I* ?Jo ?J? ?J? ?J? *|? DR. W. R. CRAIG, ?L Dental Surgeon, .J* WALHALLA, H. CAROLINA. Office Over C. W. Pitchford'* Store. ?J. ?J? ?j? -|? ?|? ?|? ?j? ?j? ?j? MARCUS C. DONO, Attorney-at-Da'w, Phone No. 09, Walhalla,??. C. Office Over Ooonee News. oj? ?J? i.J? ?J? ?J? .J? ?Ja ?f. ?J? ?J, J. R. BARDE, ,,t; Attorney-at-Daw, WALHALLA, g. C. 4 4* 4 * * I * * ?|? State & Federal Court Practice. .$* ?|. FARM DOAKS. .{. .I* BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS. ?J? 4>J* .J* *J* *?* *I* *?* *?* *?* *l* ?I? E. D. HERNDON, ?g. ?I? Attorney-at-I*aw, ?J? 4? WADU ADDA, S. C. 4? .J. PHONE NO. M. 4* .J? BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS. 4* ?j? ?j? ?j* ?j? oj* ?j? ?j? ?j? 4* 4* 4* 4* .J. R. T. JAYNBS, 4* ?J? Attorney-at-Law, ?J? .J. WALHALLA, B. C. j* 4* Bell Phone No. 20. ?J? .I* H fut o & Federal Court Practice. *|? ?j. ? j* -j* -j- *j? -. jo ?j? 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* .f. J. P. Carey, fe J. W. Shelor, -j. .J- Plekens, S. C. W, 0. Hughs, 4 4* CAREY, SHELOR & HUGHS, 4* ?f* Attorneys and Counsellors, ?g. 4* ' WALHALLA, g. C. 4* -|? State ? Federal Court Practice. 4* 4?4?4*4*4?4?4-4?4? 4??4? 4? Kurf00s Paints and ou Qutter and Repair Work. D. E. GOOD, TINNER, - WALHALLA, 8, CV Plies Cured foi) to 14 Days ?men