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Vote For H. For So g? > /^ . ^V ^**3l? f.- , rv. I.AUBENS BAB ESDOBSES BLACKWELL. Laurens, S.' Sept. 4, 1916. To the Voters of the Eighth Judicia1 Circuit: We, the membe" of the Laurens lar take pleasure saying- to the voters of the Eighth Judicial Circuit that the Hon. H. >S. Blackwell is a man whose public and private character is above reproach and a lawyer i.. fei-L ou&iruiiig CLULL i cw5ui^cu \jL vim*y j at this .bar; and we feel that if elected . Solicitor, he will perform the duties) FRED D( The Next Coogressma |BBS .A v.. " ??*' jS^iali53c%BWw8i88HEgiS^ff& own $A ,* N < ? -J '$!&' ' ; ifcr s xgs s MHH .yi, IHNBi^re?$?&&? '" ? i'.V' "'" |S?|?|^ UA k ac st flrnarl JL AW 1IU0 %JL g wva m petitors in Ander Newberry. He is wood and leads Ai by 200 votes. He votes striking evei I Abbe/iHe county, Dominick has tlexperience to rep Third District. Th to have a represei of any man in the I FRED DOMINICK ??? i in rmmmtmmt If you want to vote cast your ballot on r\/ hKLJJ 1A After October 31 the Southern Cultivator will be two years for $1.01*: ? after then I cannot sell suhscriptioi: ; i for 50 cents a year . The othe~ j paper prices are* the same. Needle-1 xj-iaft 25 cents a yearf McCall's maga i for 50 cents a year. Thet otiier i frve Parmer, $1.00 a year, Woman ?. World, 35 cents a year. Please give me your new or renewal euUscriptions. Curtis I. Bpting, 17*04 Nonce -Street, iNewberry, S. C. * S. Blackwell lir.itor WMmm cf the office; "with diligence, fideJi.y anc ability. (Signed; Members of Laurens Bar, H. Y. Simpson, R. A. Cooper, R. E. Babb, F. P. McGowan, TI. B. Dial, W. R. Richey, "W. R. Richey, Jr., A. C. Todd. . D. Barksdale, James H?. Siullivian, W. B. Knight, R. P. Tra^yn/ham. )MINICK n from Third District w | He Leads the Race 1,000 Votes in the | First Primary With Four Competitors. ead over all comson, Pickens and second in Greenken in Greenwood ; lacks only 150 _ !iL A :i n wiui 111 Aiken's home. te ability and the iresent the great is district deserves itative the equal National Congress. ; IS THE MAW ; for the WINNER September 12 for )M1NICK ??- IIIIIIT WANTED?Four Demonstrators for nearby South Carolina territory. Reference required, but no experience necessary. Our representative in tbis city receives $60 per week. Call on him at Mrs. M. A. Gilbert's, Main street, at 7 p. m. Tuesday or call him at 364-3. He will explain the work and put yoj in touci with the company. 0. E. Baas, "TSe Wear-Sver Man.", 8-l-8t-3taw. Ml'ST CONSIDER KKJHTS OF .V/MEEilCAXS IN >IKXI<'O i Only by Full and Free Discussion Can Solution lie Iteaclied. New York, ?e?t. 4.?The personal rights and economic interests of Amercans in Mexico must be considered in reaching a permanent settle ment of tine difficulties between toe United States and Mexico^ Secretary Lansing said here today in an ad<hess at a luncheon attended by meralers of the American-Mexican joint commission. Conferences lookng toward a solution of international problems confronting the two countries pre to begin shortly at New London, Conn. Secretary Lansing declared thut "if suspicion, doubt and aloofness" mark ec the deliberations, the commission vrould leave the two nations "in th?* same tangle of misunderstandings and false judgments as in the past.'" Luis Cabrera, chairman of the Mexican commission, in reply said hb commission seeks tha same result sought by the American delegates. Secretary Lane, chairman of the i Ampriran commission, told the Mexi con delegates that the rights of Mexco would "be respected and that fct United States would expect Mcxico to respect American rights. % Secretary Lane announced that the commissioners and their party would sail cn the presidential yacht May-? flower tomorrow morning for New London and that beginning Wednesday two two-hcur conferences would be held each dar. Luis Ciadrera and secretary Lane will alternate as presiding officer of the meetings. Secretary Lane said that while the proceedings would be confidential some arrangement probably would be made to give daily statements to the press. MORE MEN THAN WOtfEX HATE APPENDICITIS Surgeons state men are slightly more subject to appendicitis than women. Newberry people should, kno^ i fho* o foTf nf simrile buckthorn UlAMt U *.% ?? _ bark, glycerine, etc., as mirfed in Adler-i-ka, often relieve or prevent appendicitis. This mixture removes such surprising foul matter that ONE SPOONFUL relieves almost lAN"S CASE constipation, sour stomach 01 gas. The INStTANT, easy action ol Adler-i-ka is surprising. Gilder an<3 Weeks Co., druggisti. What Did H? Say? Oliver Wendell Holmes once told Professor Poulton he would never repeat to any one what Tennyson said 'tc him when he entered his house. Wil "? *-*? J llain James pressed aim r<> uu mi ?hu the assurance, "There are no reporters | here." But Dr. Holmes replied, with emphasis: "I have said that I will uev er tell any one. It was not a thin? that I should have supposed any mar would say to a guest he had invited t< his house." | Simply Terrifying. An old lady was in tHe same railway car as a party of golfers. "I found fearful trouble this morn ing," said one. "At the first I fel right into the middle of a blackberry bush and at the second I was stuck ui 011 the top of a tree. I pitched out o: bounds into the farmyard at the third got caught by the wire at the fourth stuck fast In a deep hole at the fifth found myaelf buried in mud at th< sixth, I was lying in a heap of rougl stones at the seventh, got lost at th< eighth and finished up at the bottom o that dirty ditch at the last hole.'! "Gracious me!" cried the horrifiet old lady from her corner in the car "and they told me that golf was ai old man's game! I'll never let my Ed win play again;"?Exchange. Ilfilinatfi Woman Is Truly Grateful For Stella Vitae i i ^ Mrs. Paralee Frazier, of Long- w k. view. Tex., who had been in bad I I health for two years, writes this I j heartfelt letter in behalf of this w (great preparation for women. 1 "I have taken a few bottles of STELLA I "VTTAEand am now almost well from a ^ long1 siege of sickness. I crnnot say too I I much for this wonderful m* cine. I had I taken other female medicine or two year3 I with no good results. I am - ri^y grateful for the good Stella Vitae has u n. forme." w w MRS. PARALEE FivAZIER. STELLA VITAE is guaranteed. | ^ If you are not benefited with the ^ (first bottle, your money back if I you want it. Do not delay. Begin I taking it now. At your dealers' . I in $1 bottles. THACHER MEDICINE CO., ' CHATTANOOGA. TENN. i invigorating to Uie Pale ana SicS?y Tfie Old Standard general strengthei in? tonk: GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives ou? olal'via.enriche it^eblood.andbuilds apthe^ysfern A true tome . For adults ?s4 cb JdreSL 5Dc : THE HOLLYHOCK. i A Flower That Is Intertwined With Our Colonial History. j The hollyhock ire is its nnrue from!] ! two words tiiat indicate its origin in j , ' the Holy Land ami its membership in ^ ; the mallow family. Lint apparently it ! was known in India before it flung its ] { cheerful banners to the air in I'ales , i tine- , ; W herever its first home was. it lias , become thoroughly acclimated in New 1 J England. We think of it as a eliarac I teristic New England flower. It decorates our colonial history almost back to the days of Governor Bradford and Roger Williams. It is forever peering out of the pages of New England fiction and poetry. There is no flower that more completely embodies the spirit of our eighteenth century romance. Some of the old colonial blossoms are shy and modest, but the hollyhock has the courage of its convictions. It knows its beauty, as it should, and has no mind to hide it under a bushel or beneath a hedgerow. It is the prov| ince of loveliness to display itself, not ! vauntingly, but with a due sense of 4t?s ' i *rr/M?fh An/i tho hnllvhofk. the state j liest of our "old fashioned" flowers. I aspires unabashed. j In two books of "popular quotations" I ' there is no reference to the hollyhock. though the holly has its fair share of | space. But it can afford to be thus osI tracized.?Providence Journal. | FAMILIAR FHRASES. A Few of the Many Gems We Get From Alexander Pope. j With the exception of Shakespeare. V Pope is the author of more familiar phrases than any other writer of mod ern times. Here are a few ofc ms gems: ! j "Shoot folly as she flies." "Hope I springs eternal in the human breast.1' "Man never is but always to be blessed." "Whatever is is right." "The proper study of mankind is man." ! "Grows with his growth and strength, j ens with his strength.'" "Order is ! heaven's first law." "Worth makes j the man and want of it the fellow."' | "Honor and shame from no condition 1 rise: act well your part?there all the honor lies." "An honest man's the noblest work of God." "Thou wert my i j guide, philosopher and friend." "Woj man's at best a contradiction still." j "Just as the twig is bent the tree's inI clined." "Who shall decide when doc1 J ~ ~ ~ ' A 1 iff I A lAorn^nty I'Q q I tors uisuyietrn. uu>c iotiuuiS ^ ~ I r j dangerous thing." "To err is human, j to forgive divine." "Beauty draws us with a single hair." "Fools rush in where angels, fear to tread." "Damn with faint praise." ' The many headed $ monster." i ' The Blow on tha Jaw. A man struck with any degree of force upon the mental area of the jaw. L' although he may be in perfect physical I condition, instantly collapses and falls to the ground, says a medical journal. The attitude assumed in recovery, which may be instantaneous or delayed some minutes, is most characteristic. I I He squirms about, raises bis bead and I I rolls his eyes in an attempt to locate j ' U! ?TT~ fn rrat nn his Strip ! ' LlIHiStii. lie LI lu 0\,S. .- ~ and elbow; he endeavors to rise upon i his hands and knees. If he regains his ; feet he staggers like a drunken man. i The blow is practically never fatal; the heart's action is never unduly acceler: ated; the pulse and respiration are nor i mal; the pupils are normal; there is no > headache, no sweats, no cold extremities, no pallor?none of the ordinary signs of shock or concussion. How to Be Happy. There are two ways of being happy. 7 We may either diminish our wants or augment our means. Either will do. 14 1 If io fAl* I j Tne result is iue same, emu it 10 Iivi i each man to decide for, himself and do ' | that which happens to be the easier. If J you are idle or sick or poor, however hard it may be to. diminsh your wants, ' It will be harder to augment your ' means. If you are active and prosper* ous or young or in good health it may " be easier for you to augment your J means than to diminish your wants. ' But If you are wise you will do both at the same time, young or old, rich or poor, sick or well, and if you are very wise you will do both in such a way as * to augment the general happiness of 1 society.?Benjamin Franklin. A Celebrated Suicide. Haydon. the celebrated historical painter and writer, at a time ra his rohon Jio tvne nrprpomp l)v debt. | j lllg ?T - ; ? ! disappointment and ingratitude. l.?.id j clown the brusli with which he was at i i work upon his last great effort. "Alj j fred and the Trial by Jury," wrote ! with a steady hand. "Stretch me no j j longer upon this rough world." and j then was a pistol shot put an end to j his unhappy existence. j (Dressing the Pillow. A little child, not three years old. was sleepy, and his mother carried him to his crib, but the pillowslip had been removed by the maid for the I | laundry, and the child. looking up beI! seechingly into his mother's face, said pleadingly. '-Please put a shirt on my I pillow." * Remembered Too Well. I Howard?Did your aunt remember you in her will? Ilenry?She sure did. Directed her executors to collect all the | loans she had made me.?Puck. I Holding His Own. "Stingy, isn't lie?" "You're said it. Why. he holds fast to I everything lie gets bis clutches on and even bolts down his dinner." Public opinion, though often formed Upon a wrong basis, yet generally has t a strong underlying sense of justice.? ' Abraham Lincoln. 1 i Out of Abundant Caution. There is a property owner in Pennsylvania who has endeavored to inculcate in his tenants the principle of sy titration with reference to their dis> putes. offering lnmseu as aruiter. On the occasion of the last dispute of this sort the owner before undertaking a solution put to one tenant the usual question: "Now, William, if I consent to arbitrate will you abide by my decision?" William hesitated a moment, then said: "WTell. sir, I'd like to know what the decision is first."?Case and Comment. Going All the Way. "How's farming?" "Kine! l'ou know ttiat aoanaonea farm I picked up?" "That prompted my question." "I sold quarry rights to one crowd and rented the surface as golf links. Now. if I can lease the air to some wireless company I'll have about everything under cultivation. Who says intensive farming doesn't pay?"?Chicago Journal. I Spanish Law. The dilatoriness of Spanish law is almost lncreoiDie. a waicn was siuieii; the owner immediately informed the police of the robbery. Seven years afterward he was called upon by the authorities to give evidence as to the robbery. His Reprieve. Mose Possum?Ah thought yo* was goin' to work today. Peto. Pete Persimmons?Ah got a reprieve. Mah wife died " suddinly dis mawnin'.?Topeka Journal. Not Edible. ? a ?a? y-v f T n DnhAiWA turn?Are yuu iuuu v;i m* . Her?I don't know. It depends altogether on what kind of dressing you put on it.?Toledo Blade. Sad. "You look worried, old man." "I am. I'm afraid all the money will be worn out before I get any of it."Pittsburgh Press. ??? ?p? PIANO B Our second band piano departsfcnt is crowded to* the limit with Read carefully the man; musial bargains is used, worlce repair eepartmenL Judge for yourself tbe marked do*n prices at a savin* tt 1? $900.00 Steiff Self-Player Piano, dull and ] 2?$ 150.00 Stieff Upright, dull and polished 2?$750.00 Shaw Self-Player Piano, dull and 2?$450.00 Stieff Uprights, dark Mahogany ( 1?$450.00 Stieff Upright, Oak case, (used sevi S375.00 Shaw Upright, polished Mahogan 2?$550.00 Bennet Bretz Self-Player Piano d 3?$300.00 Kohler & Campbell Upright Piano; 2?$300.00 Harvard Upright Pianos, Mahogar j? $350.00 J. & C. Fischer Upright Pianos, W 1?$350.00 Mathushek Upright Piano, Mahog II?$300.00 Adam Schaaf Upright Piano, Wall i?$450.00 Mason & Hamlin upright Piano, 1?$450.00 Chickering upright Piano. Kbony < 1?$3oo.oo Ernest Tonk upright Piano, Wain \ 1?$450.00 Stit-ff upright Piano, Ebony case (1 STI 219 South Tryon St. I SUMMERLA1 For the higl ? or youni For Catalogue mation address P. E. MONR Leesviilc Get a Ford the come. Price no1" Touring Road Detroit. Distributor for No 4 T j When S!*.aw Was f/arrieci. ! "1 was very ill avKmi ! \v:;s married." Bernard Shaw once wr< te. "alrogotbt : I e wreck en <rut.-lies :>in: in :in oM jacj et which tlie crutches had worn i-> rags. I had asked my friends. Grab;i Wallas and Henry Salt, to act as wi ....., ^0 .,?wi ,,f cititiv in honor of t] < I i ?uiu. ? occasion they were dressed in the-" best clothes. The registrar never imagined 1 could possibly be the bridegroom. He took me for the inevitable beggar wLo completes all wedding precessions. Wallas. who is considerably over six feet high, seemed to him to be the hero of the occasion, and he wr.s proceeding to marry him calmly to my betrothed when Wallas, thinking tbe formula rather strong for a mere witness, hesitated at the last moment and left the prize to me.*.'?"George Bernard Shaw?Hi? Life and Works.'' A Snake's "Leap." ! A naturalist denies that it is true I that a sunke ever "leaps" at its foe or prey. Except the cobra, no snake can raise more than a third of its length from the ground, though there are instances in which rattlesnakes, prob- fl ably unconsciously, have gained an ex- 8 ? tra leverage from a wall of rock im* ! mediately behind them and so struck I farther than the ordinary range.?Lor1 don Spec tator. A Long Lived Pike. *? * ?(~s"7 TXTOtl rtonohf ' ID Ull tTLKJl JJJVUJ1 |/iac no?vaugai| In a lake near Haillerum. tn Suabl*.: | with a brass ring attached to it, en-1 ! graved on which was a statement thar I the fish was put in the lake in the i year 1230. thus indicating that it must have lived at least 207 years. Tactful Discretion. "But you listen to people *ho talk i gossip." j j "Always." replied Miss Cayenne, "so as to know what topics to avoid in my j own conversation."?Washington Star. His Lesson. "But, you silly boy, if I married jc:i with'your means you, couldn't even ? j dress me." a "Perhaps with a few lessons I could 1 learn."?Exchanjrj'. J ARGAINS i piaooes of bms) ntrj sake takes in nchaagt Ut Ac Popular Stieff J over pianos, main almost like new tj experts in tor up-to-date > you of from $50 to $75. Is litis not worth Jooiong ato" solished Mahogany (used for dem'tion) J700.00 Mahogany {used slightly) each 360.00 v poiishcd Mahogany (used sev. months) 575.00 used several years) each 250.00 :ral years) 225.00 y (used 12 months) 250.00 all Mahogany (used 10 to 12 mos.) each 400.00 ?, polished M "hogany used short while) 200.00 ly case, (used short while) each 200.00 'alnut case (used short wnne; ioo.w i any case (used short while) 200.00 lut case (used short wh le) .' *55.?? Ebony case (used short while) 200.00 ;ase used short while) 200.00 it case (used short while) ... 150.00 used several yoars) ? 195.00 EFF I CIvfctc, N. C. ?????? RD COLLEGE 1 ier education ' Y urnm^n 9 " W"1VM | and other infor- I / OE, President, \ i, South Carolina. S :n you can go .and w only $360. Ister $345 f. o. b. P. B. O'DELL, nwnshin Whifmird. S. C. 1 W I I UV111J* J . , - ^