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j Make This Ban Over the I i It takes j k Top" in t! P Machine G It also tak( some of th . of life and ^ Income, bu Don't wait W OPEN AS, ^ The Exg Of Ne< i " The Ba\ By ft ^?^Larger H ^Mpr Packag IHB^ ' AHW I GRANDMA'S Vl Your Gi Pimej Woods Social Union, r:" Piney Woods Farmers Social 1 . will bold their annual rally in o* Piaey Woods parsonage Fi A Aug. 30, 1918. The public is cor ?&inyited to attend. Come prepar Append the day as there will bi jHUdresscs :n the morning and ti evenin j. jL THE YOUNG PEOPLES SOCIETY OF BETHLE Wm "The nr Peoples Society of leher^ xr*1] Mve a (birthday par *irkn ?.->"hnr?1 hi'lSB on PridaT ] Ifi^L Ang?:~- ' ). I e crs-m will be s IPlBfrree . Thsre ""ill be music and ? r'ain 1 ng f 3at?r es. ^^^^fcverybcdy is cordially invitee i. one spoon, please. 1?|W ;;: Maka one sr>?w>n of sugar j? ::: juo ma wort oi two. W Keep the program going ; TJntil tlie war is through. Rxtleato KedidneCo., ;: ' Atlanta, Gv Gentlemen: Before I ns your Cx?tonto Quiniij |RHfl? Pomade my hair w thork, coeree and napp ba*Bow >* k*3 K10*11 *? lnchea lone. *?<1 is so k JSBkS? aa(i a'^y 1 can do OP is; way I waat to. . ::i;>:$t*8HHr amae&dinc yoa my pi {nH?V ' '^ tire to show yoo b< ," ' &W pretty Exelento hat ma |ffig?|!p^jfc/L ft. . SXLLISKSED. fr Don't let som^fake Kink Remover to you. You really c*n't straighten your ha untO it is Slice and-Jons, Tha t's what EXELENTO POMADl' does, removes DandruC, feeds the Hoots ( the hah*. and makes it ezow Ions, soft ar siiky. Af'.or using a few times youcan U tha difference, and sitera little while will be sc pretty and l*n? that you can f it jp toeuic you. If Exelento don't do i We claim, we will give your money back. ' " ***" - * M nf stami orc^ia. BACEXTS WANTED EVERYWHEHi K- Wri to for part icu Jars. MCOICiNC CO., AJIanta, Ga. \ k Your Business Heir,e 5 Top? lerve to "Go Over the lie face of the e^my's uns, but it means Victory. ;s a little nerve to forego e extravagant pleasures save part of each month's it it means Sure Success. > another day. * VWCQ AffftllWT ftviuuj m>iA/um ? ' hange Bank wberry/S. C. nk of the People" . , ryThta Soap 's Powdered! Don'tivgct confused?not washmjr powiler, but powdered Sfljep. Use it for every cleansing peruse?Ja?tider tbe clothes, sensb the floors, wash the-dishes, clean the w?*<fows and wood rw?nt -r-ereryin i?g m iuc uuu?ch?1d?and save the bother of ?hipping, slicing and rubbing barsoap, and i he wastefulness caused by bar soap lying around io water. It cannot harm ttie most expensive silks and it works wonders when res oteaeiug fine furniture. i Powdered Soap ocer Has it I Eeeij Hirer Associate*. Jnion The annual meeting of the Reedy front Ri^er Association will mee with the riday. First Baptist church at Whitmire on Sially Tuesday and Wednesday, September ed to *rd and 4th. All churches are urged > two to appoint delegates and forward tha no in names of all desiring entertainment to the chairman of the enterainment committee. J. W. Hipp, j- ? Chair. Entertainment Com Whitmire, S. C. I Beth- ? Thf j.ITTLETOJT COLLEGE Has just closed one of the most erved other success*ul years in its history. Til* 87th annual session will begin Sept 1 to 25thHk Write for new illustrated cat?logu?, ? also and QUICKLY for particulars concerning our special offer to a few 1(nni ^irls who can not pay our catalogue a rate. Address J. M. Rhodes, Little1 ton, N. a ji j G66 cures by removing the cause. jj|| 8-5 tf 55? J Wood's Seeds f j Crimson Clover Riiili eases vi vj/ J/I vuuvtion, improves the land and makes an excellent yt | grazing and forage crop. 2 WOOD'S FALL CATALOG M - ___ si Just Issued Tells All About ft 3 Crimson Clover, Z Alfalfa, Fulghum Oats, 0l | Abbruzzi Rye and all other Farm and Garden Seeds E i FOR FALL SOWING. | Catalog mailed free. Write for ^ i it, and prices of aky Seeds reit | quired. ; ! T.W. WOOD & SONS, * i s. Seedsmen - Richmond, Va.' ? j , ' COG cures ?.:l;ojs Fever. '1 i 1 WHEN HE MADE RECORD JUMP: i Youngster Was Trying to Escape Dog He Thought Was Mad, So There Was Abundant Reason. Commander C. B. Frv, %vho hns tern porarily relinquished athleticism in order to train boys for the navy. described to me the other day h?w he J first came -to discover his ability as j a jumper. "When ~*dte a youngster," he said, ' "I w^s one uay strolling along close to | I our house, when there came bounding | along the road in ray direction an *?xI ceedingly wIcked-k?oking terrier 1 had . | nx'or.Hy become possessed of. "The animal was foaming at the, ! aiouth and showed other unmistakable 1 signs of excitement and distress. Hy- ; dropfirtbfa was rife in the district at | the time. A horrid fear gripped me. I Turning swiftly aside, I took the dirch | and hcfigp bordering the road in one j w:!d leap, landed safely in aa or [ chr rd on the other side, and was up a plum tree a few seconds later. "The (Inc. however, followed through a gap fn the hedge and sat at the bottom of the tree, hat he brought a toad In his mouth, and I perceived he was not mad beyond the degree of trying to eat the toad. So I came down, and went to have a loot at ^2 hedge I had jumped over. "It was much higher than tny head, not to mention the ditch. It was many years before I jumped as high again." . ?Pearson's Weekly. ?????? IRON FOUNDRY IN WAR AREA; Mow Women 6f France Are "Oolng Their Bit" to Keep the Wheel* of Industry Moving. j An interesting narration of opera-1 . tlon order unique and difficult conditions v. ib Iron foundry in the war area la given by the correspondent of ? a British paper writing fpona the firing j line in Franoe. He relates: One does ! not see raach foundry work ent h&i?e, ' b?t a few weeks ago I was billeted tn ! a town near by, and actually saw a . cupola ftk -Toil blast. I at once got peri mtsdAa to ha*e a lo?k nronnri. and ! was greatly swiprised at what I siiw? ! frtMhrtw w?s n xvm Drimitlve af -? ? V- ? V,?. V.? J " ? fair?feat a little Jobbing shop?and I was woKtlfr tub hr French women and ! girls, superintended by a few men. These women were making work up to three or four hundred pounds in ; wj^ght, and in aflittle side shop some half dozen women were making component parts of machinery by the simple method of beddtng-in. I afterj wan! saw some of the finished work, anil it woold put to shame the work I done by many of our so-called moMers | at home. The women work in ordi nary dress, and work rery clean and ! exact in both iron and brass, and also >i?d0r shelf fire and air raids. In the shop was a great hole where a German ha& dropped a bomb the night before, bat the women still u;orked on.? Scientific American. i r i j Reservoir Dams in Tunis. j Already the French are looking for- ; . ward to the rapid development of the province of Tunis in Africa. Accord- j ing to a civil engineer who has been . investigating the matter there are | about 35 localities in that country j where dams could be constructed, with : i reservoir capacities ranging from 3.- ' 000,000 to 400.000,00ft cubic meters, and water power ranging from 30 to 6,000 horse power of continuous energy. The engineering difficulties are stated to j be small in comparison with those of .' dams already built in Europe and the : United States, and the utilisation of i the water for irrigation, electrical * | power, and in one case canal navign tion is estimated to furnish a good I margin of profit. The numerous mine of Roman dams found in Tunis show by what methods the country became , "the granary of Rome" under the emI pire and the ruins of large cities, with : coliseums, batli and temples of great size standing in what are now bared plains, are evidence of the success of organized methods of irrigation of 1 those ancient times. i ! Made Brave Rescue. j Once a terror to mariners, Minots j light, which stands on a reef off Bos; ton harbor, has another thrilling story ; added to Its history, says the Popular Mechanics magazine. Three, days b&j fore Christmas, Captain Octavlus : Reamey, the keeper, approached the tower in his motorboat, which was loaded with provisions and fuel obtained on the mainland. As the craft drew up, it was overturned by the waves that'were breaking over the base of the structure, leaving the captain battling alone in a tossing maelstrom of icy water. The assi??tant keeper was lowered on a rope from the door fifty feet above. He managed to seize the drowning man before it was too late, and both men were pulled from the ! water by their companions to the door! way high in th? tower. , ! Great Apple Industry. j The apple industry in the United ; States today represents a stupendous ' i commercial achievement. It had grown to 60,000,000 barrels In 1916; i it dropped to 28,000,000 In 1011, and ; went up again to 40,000,000 barrels In 1912. From this date forward there is a continual increase in the production. for the great cities of the world are crying for apples, and people everyI where are just beginning to apprehend j the actual value of this delicate fruit, j We are turning backward to our heri- , i tage, for in the days of our great; grandfathers the common adage was: ! "An apple a day will keep the doctor j awaj.' Fruit as a part -of the diet 1 ; rfprvsente " most health-giving ele? ' ment.?Christian Jrieraia. i j ^ ? I ? II Conder The Nation Newbe From report t Showing Condition > Loans and Inv< Liberty Bonds U. S. Bonds Cash and due i U. 5. Treasu Capital Stock Surplus and Ur Circulation . Dividends Unp Deposits Bills Payable (i erty Bonds) Rediscounts wi THE NATIONAI B. C. MATTtlF.WS, T. K. J< President. State, Count ' - 1 Member ( REW BESPOXDEST OYER HER TREBLES f One Was uMost Wretched Person,* | Says Urs. Greene?But Jfow Is Hap . 1 py?Gained 10 Pennds After Taking j Tanlae and Improved Considerably. | ? I "Before I began taking Tanlac I was the most wretched person I expect you ever saw, but now I am happy as I can be over the good that Tanlac has done me," said Mrs. Maggie Greene, .-of 1219 Avenue A. Ens- pc ley, Ala. a* le '"For a long time I suffered from je indigestion and stomach trouble," she Q< cU continued, "and had grown so weak gj from loss of energy that i really took I g no interest in anything. I would suf- se fer for hours from gas on my stomach ai that made me dizzy and gave me pal- .. Ditation of the heart. I fell off until ai I weighed only 95 pounds and was sc so nervous that at times I trembled to do any work about the house. I was po nervous that at times I rrembled h; all over, and I got so cross and fret- ^ ' w ful I was not like myself at all and ai was growing more despondent every bc day. P* h( "iXothing I took seemed to reach my m tronbles, and I just went from bad i I it to worse. My husband got a bottle j of .Tanlac for me. and as soon as I j ^ began taking it I started to improve [ fc and began to eat and my appetite got SG better every day. The disagreeable fulness does not trouble me any more ti after 'meals, and I just feel fine. In * fact, I do not know what it is to have ^ a pain now. I sleep like a log at _ night, have gained ten pounds, and ^ everyone tells me I look like a different woman." ? - ? ?' -i- v?a n I (inner a weeits, .\ew-ni), o. )() Prosperity Dru<r Co., Prosperity, Lit * np tie Mountain Drug Co., Little Mountain. S. C.. W. C. Kolloway, Chap- ye pells, S. C., Whitmife Pharmacy, Whitmire, S. C. Pn & ^ Koirw av aooj^s n i ?;3Q^o,i yn> no A. TiaiJ/k , ilJ^T V "',!iM . ? ot 1844 ised Stater OF a! Bank of N rry, South Carol o the Comptroller of the Ci at the C1osq of Business RESOURCES sstments . . $ 7c 1( 1C ? rom Banks and irer .... '6 $ui( LIABILITIES . . . . . $ 1( idivided Profits 1 1( ? X V aid ? ... 1 5* secured by lib! 1( th Federal Bank 1( $?o( J >. V. i " ) _ I I. I ; BANK OF NEWBI DHNSTONE, H. T. CANNON, Cashier. Assistant Cashier y and City 1 Federal Reserve Sys 4 . V " V I Atl :OULD HARDLY I STAND ALONE S ? i towns erriUe Suffering From Headache, j terry, Sideache, Backache, and Weak- to ele ness, Relieved by Cardni, Penslc Says This Texas Lady. ' o I oU p ' y ' No. Gonzales, Tex,? Mrs. Minnie Pbil- No )t of this place, writes: "Five years 10 I was taljen with a rain & my ft side. It was right under my ^ ' ft rib. It would commence with an XT No ;hing and extend up into my left No loulder and on down into my hack y that tim6 the pain would be sc ; ?* ivere I would have to take to bed id suffered usually about three day: 3:00. . I suffered this way for three years i -*?id got to be a mere skeleton and wa? | plea > weak I could hardly stand alone ; promp ras not able to go anywhere and had j 2n<j \ i let my house work go...I suffered , ' yful with a pain in my back and 1 < id the headache all the time. I just as unable to do a thing. My life as a misery, my 6tomach got in an ivful condition, caused from taking ___ > much, medicine. I suffered so much ' SSflft lin. I had just about given up ail jpes of our getting anything to help One day a Birthday Almanac wat lrown in my yard. After reading s testimonials I decided to try Car ' ?a ill, and am so thankful that I did '1 |ij >r I began to improve when on the'j :cond bottle...I am now a wei! oman and feeling fine and the cure r~ is been permanent for it has been I vo years since my awful bad health. I will always praise and recommend I irauL" iry <jarcui umay. a 4o . EW REGISTRATION TH S TEAR. " v or This is the tenth year since the ople registered for voting, and a J;in < iw registration must be made thir , ar. ' flour The registration booits will be open | the store of R C. Sligh. under the D >era house, from Tuly 1st to August j lr,?u: ' en ith, bofh Inclusive, for the registra- ?caut on ot voters in accordance with law., Pot ^ .. ' one he law requires that every man snail mea' resent himself for registration in in' c srson. R C. SLIGH, j p? ember of the Co'.nly Board of Reg- j istration. - 6-21 td Ot ^ I 6G6 contains no alcohol, arsenic nor [ ia; I CO ]ipr roi^onous tfrn' j. S-5 rf i : : - -nent ? <a lewberry ina arrency June 29,1918 58,414.41 >5,400.00 >0,000.00 i2,213.80 >6,028.21 >0,000 00 l? ^71-54 L ? A W * )0,000 00 t,044.00 (2,80714 )1,000.00 >1,805.53 >6,028.21 ERRY, S. C W. W. CROMER Assistant Cashier. [Depository tem v nation Cenfederafcs Veterans., \ Confederate veterans cf Newoounly will meet in their reve townships (Saturday, August 0 elect one delegate from ea#h hip to attend a meeting at New-. S. C., in the Cour U Chamber ct a Pension Commissioner and >n Board for next year. 1 meets at Council Chamber at >. m. / 2 meets at T. W. Kitts at 3:0< 3 meet3 at JVIaybinton at 3:00. 4 meets at Whitmire at 3:00. 5 meets at Jalapa at 3:00. 6 meets at Longshore at 3:00. ? - _ X. ft . AA 7 meets at cuappens ai ?kuu. 8 meets at tUtopia at 3:00 9 meets at Prosperity at 3:01. 10 meets at Little Mountain at * 11 meets at Pomaria at 3:00. .se have your delegates on hand rtely at 11:00 o'clock, September 918. W. G. Peterson, Chairman P- Board. ^ .^|Kui^ er T7. S. Food Administration. 'Tatpr ''cm* he fxoin' to nighty nigh king er de rocs' g garden sass folks. We alia iat him as a 'tater boiled, baked. , stewed, cooked wid cheese en gettin' so dey make im inter : so's we kin "substi-tute" him y'neat flour. He's 'le "su^titu5t" of all de vittles. he sez. ; udder-garden sass folks lak ns, tomatues, cabbage en turnips quash don't need to git peeved, ?e dey's goin' to be room in de fo' de whole tribe. " Ev'y las' on 'em can he'p save wheat en : f*r de boys dat's doin' de fight>ver yander. 4 FRIDAY nz meaz. ^HEAIXESS e jko bread. OLMSXMJ8. Taffl j 111 lltiSfe* rm an eeiajoast roans ntaiking -whxax