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j |j ''^31 j?i ly. y si m teffe $ l^i M [ *.$ tfci M yi |&?-i km i!"*: w P K V.5-& gsssUa fe fill ?m&M(fv * *? i4 v I iff I ' ^ z * f0 I . ' to get WRI P a ccc'cd p ? p tzr f-iG nar j[| fsaac to ( fir^ NOT YOU r Kidney disease is no respecter of -moms. A majority of the ills affli ^people today can be traced bac kidney trouble. The kidneys are the most impo ^organs of the body. They are filterers, the purifiers, of your bl< Kidney disease is usual2y indicat< "'weariness, sleeplessness, nervous despondency, backache, stomach Me, pain in loins and lower aDac . *all stones, gravel, rheumatism, sci ?nd lumbago. All these derangements are nat - signals to warn you that the kic need help. You should use C. t MEDAL. Haarlem Oil Capsules ii a mimw 01 fJIIQF (IF FVTW WFi VnuUL Ul w.:nr* u^n * "After r. uO ?:> r.c^ -yolcxio Ci ...:.r:./ i *;c.lr.-cc! thob v?c:? r - c. c ?-3 : r.j: lute!*/ r.-lic.1. Z 'z:\y i i c ,r~: Tfroro hcj-r.:.*4cr!r V .*' J: ? P. Lziio' r w :r. ^ -1\...'..1; _'. \ i.c : ; v.j c. cut:c. " i: / c .1::. "Thi"; _t::.t I : C .ls izv r ! c abiil'.y. cu:::: J : tlicr.i I 7 a c:I :*:! 1: j: roc::' - V. cr ?c::.1:::: i r.r..1 c'.ii: :::, t::?v.I:o; "bard c;rc*:c:3 c. zS.l ;j:::n v: "Neolln C:!:o. T-*:y c:~:c i i r:;r. style:. end boc2u:o cf il:c v: they :;" vo, cri a cjrcct economy. And cry rrx-inm will rc-cclc yc "worn sh::: v/iili NcsIIn Seles, vrhi _ 1 "1 1 J. c ,-r,] J are iigiuoiu ?_-.u v/iii/jz \jiuui <-.a >/t?i long- vv'C2rhi> They arc made by 7 Goodyear Tire <?: Rubber Co., Al:rc -Ohio, r/ho c!:o mz!:j Y."n^roo'c Hoe guarantied to outwear all ether hzt Jfeplitt Sole* Icauo JlarK Scj. U. S. i*W. OS. ""NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEME Notice is hereby give that I make a final settlement of the per al estate of Ernest Wise, decease< 10 o'clock a. m., on Friday, the ' day of February, 1919, at the offic " the Judge of Probate for'Newb "County, S. C.. and will immedi* ""thereafter, apply for a discharge "administrator of said estate. Henry Wise ~ ** ' ? - T?f< f O+Q -As Administrator OI U1C UOVUV& Ernest Wise, Deceased. CABBAGE PLAXTS. Millions Hardy Cabbage Plants 1 - selected seed. Any variety, mow, til May. $2 per 1,000; 10,000, per 1,000. Prompt delivery. E jprise Tiuck Farm, Georgetown), ! THE HE] ALU ANT NEWS TEAR FOR OXljY $1.50. -vlv. ' / islOif . /f~~\ ^ t::s L sealed \ ' ' **' C 'v v V, ->' v :\' ^ T*:Vc-2 r> -H ^?fp <t/) \'~- V V^ivS-. P iw V*Vfct?6*W i ; : V / X k.ij 'V-^;'Jv/' / [/ X I / V _ ' /\ >?. \ jf&l of its gooctesss | | seated in ? 1 | Protected, preserved. ^ The flavor lasts! | ?? r, and be SURE |j ICLEY'S. .Efs 60 I r ' C\ /n. % try f** T""? *"> k'i<ki <fcw <*Jj} ki'vM '# ; i ji\j ik&w w iwu^ul =' *<VTVf?nj_f :' i * - * Illltl&S I ERFECT GUM^lMIg /j p ^ * vg* ? *" H Mry^ t R^HEART rS YOUR KIDNEYS per- diately. The soothing:, healing oil stimcting ulates the kidneys* relieves Inflammak to tions and destroys the germs which have caused it. Do not wait until tortant morrow. Go to your druggist today and the insist on GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil >od. Capsules. In twenty-four hours you " should feel health and vigor returning ^ Dy and will bless the day you first heard f ess, of G0L(D MEDAL Haarlem Oil. tr?u- After you feel that you have cured >men, y0urseift continue to take one or two auca capsules each day, so as to keep in first-class condition and ward off the "ro'a ^iinp-Ar nf nfhpr nttanks. Ineys Ask for the original imported GOLD rOLD MEDAL brand. Three sizes. Money renme i funded if they do not help you. r | r- ! Dont Seek Happiness. i Sidney Smith said that a great many P people hunt for happiness as an a%r ij| j sent-minded man hunts for his hat, ; running about everywhere looking for j It, when nil the'time It Is in his hann - ) j or on his head. You can be happy ;> - right where you are. If you can be ' j i happy anywhere. The materials for .2:: ! content are in your hands. Don't hunt. Use them. ^ American Soldiers* Glory. | Attacking with the ferocity of lions v1" i and enduring as only hardy, brave men can endure, the gallant Rock of the IT.; Marne, Thirty-eighth United States io: j fantry shock regiment, broke the ' strongest Hindenburg's lines and j opened a gap through which American | soldiers poured to seal with their bul;u j lets the fate of autocracy. irfi I ao A Bad Prospect. lie "Do yru expect your son home >n? : soon, 11 rs. Grubby?" MOh. no. He thinks he won't be de? -s* | moralized inside six months." i 8 | ACHES AND PAINS -i QUICKLY RELIEVED sonI, at __ ^You'll find Sloan's Liniment erry softens the severe itely rheumatic ache as Put it on freely. Don't rub it in. ' | Just let it penetrate naturally. What a of! cense of soothing relief soon follows! External aches, stiffness, soreness, ! cramped muscles, strained sinews, back "cricks"?those ailments can't j fight off _ the relieving qualities o? | Sloan's Liniment. Clean, convenient, from j economical. Ask any druggist for iU Bara^iiL4ii^U?lipig OXE I Prices: 30c, 60c, ?1.25 \ j INDIAN PROCESS I OSES OVERSEAS AS I i w m t> a Hmm Lb 13 d i bu a l Z I - ii - * | . , | Princess Galilohi, Descended | From Cherokee C i.'C X lllilif Joins Canteen Forces in France, j I A real, sure-enough Indian princess, ; is going to France to help -entertain | the American soldiers and sailors until { the last one of them has been returned J to the United States. | She is Princess Galilohi, -great i granddaughter of the famous King-, i j Cooweeskowee, chief of the Chrrckees, j and her mission in France v.'ill be in ! connection with the canteen work of i the Y. M. C. A. Her Americanized name is Miss Anne Ross and for two years or more she has appeared as a lecturer, singer, dancer and exponent of the tribal life of her chosen people. 'S^e was chosen to pose for the Zolnay statue of Sequoia, an ancestor of the Cherokee nation and inventor of the tribal alphabet. This statute stands in the Hall of Fame at Washington, D. C. The princess will have a rather di: versified program. She -vill sing Indian songs and dance Indian dances ! for the American soldiers and sailors ! ana Detween limes win dispense uie ! dozens of different articles that are ! part of the stock of every Y. M. C. A. ! canteen. She is highly educated and | has several times acted as a mediator | between her people and the white resii dents of Oklahoma, het native state. ! FRENCH H0N9R | Y. M. C. L EXECUTIVE ? . Dr. John P. Molt Is Blade Cheyoli'flu a# T nnpin-i aF TTf>riAr TT.v. i ai:ti ux ui nvi.vi xjA1 tensive Work of " Y " Araa^ ; Poll us. / DR. JOHN R. MOTT General Secretary of National j War Work Council, Y. M. C. A., ! Who Has Beer- Accorded Higl Honors by Frcnch Government. As a mark of recognition and appreciation of the work done for the French ! soldiers by the American Y. M. C. A. forces aorcau, ine rmica gunnuiucju t has conferred the signal honor of i i Chevalier of the Legion of Honor upon ' General Secretary John R. Mott, of I the National War * Work Council of j the Army and Navy Y. M. C. A. | Telegraphic adv;ces from Washings' ton conveyed the news of the distinction granted Dr. JMott, whose home is in New York Citv. The telegram,? signed by Edouard deBilly, Deputy; High Commissioner, was as follows: j i ?t foira nioa<inr<a in notifying you that! X lane v . ^ J the French government has conferred upon you the title of Chevalier de ' la Legion d'Honneur. Please accept my heartiest congratulations." The National War Work Council, under Dr. Mott's supervision, in addi- j tion to its labors among the American j j Expeditionary Forces, has maintained j ! more than 1,500 fovers du soldats, a? | the Red Triangle huts are known b^ ( the French poilu. Up to the irionti ' of October, 1918, close to eight mi1 I lion collars had been expended in "Y" | work anion* the French and other &1' Ited soldier^ served by the huts. "Y" ENTERTAINERS NEEDED n FRANCE While certain branches cf the worL* tlir> War Wnrlc Council Ol the Y. 2u. C. A. has been doing for some time are being curtailed, one type cl service is being called upon for more co-operation than ever before. Although for some time there have, been approximately 400 to 500 entertainers in France, many difficulties have surrounded this type of service and the thousands of shows which have been given in France have only be'en put Qver in spite of almost superhuman difficulties. Now, however, with the period of (^mobilization forcing upon the Army new problems has a real spirit ^of co-cperation been shown by the Army authorities. Therefore, General Pershing has detailed Colonel Kelly, from his own Staff, to act as entertainment officer for the A. E. F., which position places him as the liai- ? son officer between the Army and the "V" T^ntprtflinmer.t 'Rnreaii In Paris. Theatres and large buildings are being taken oyer, mechanics supplied by. the Army are putting them into operation and the "Y" is producing shows, given by soldier talent alone, and also dramatic and vaudeville performances and miscellaneous musical programs, the personnel of all of which mu3t be recruited from this country. Owing to the large number of men in the Army with entertainment ability, no effort is being made to send men from this side. Women, however, are wanted for these positions in large numbers. 125 must be sent out from this country every montn, wmcn win retire the xco-operation- cf every recruiting agency throughout the country. All entertainers are supplied with uniforms, Life, Accident and Health Insurance, transportation, and allow ( $150.00 per month for living expense* , in France The women should be preferably be- j tween the ages of 23 and 30, neat and < attractive . and possessed cf a pro- ! ncunced ability in their particular line, j The field for entertainment now j reaches from the coast towns in j France right up and into Germany, for j while the "Y" cannot do much with the Army of Occupation in the way of < noTitoon _it Mn snnnlv entertalnm",,it I p* v " M x' r ~ j ? -? and is doing so on an increasingly j large scale.' Information may be ob- i tained from W. C. King, Peters Build- j ing, Atlanta, Ga. DOUGHBOYS INVADE HISTORIC RESORTS Haunts of Napoleon Are Home to A. E. F. Troops Through Efforts of Y. M. C. A. Forces to Better "Leave" Facilities. Paris.?Where -Napoleon in and King Edward VII of England spent many leisure hours the American en listed men are now at play. Tlie ram- ] ous yacht club at Cannes, founded and | patronized by Kins: "Edward, and St. ] Sauveur, where the third Napoleon was ] wont to go with his court, indicate the variety of attractions offered by the Y. M. C. A. in the leave area system operated in co-operation with the military authorities. From the Alps to the Pyr- | urines and from the Bfsttany coast to the Riviera, there are seven "Y" leave areas in which 50.0"0 soldiers can be entertained at one time. Preparations are now under way to increase these much-appreciated facilities to double ! their present capacity. ] Representatives of the army and of : the Y. M. C. A. are now traveling from I e end of France to the other seek- ] ing new spots in which to set up leave areas. The experiment at Aix-les-Rains ; ha? been successful from the start, ^ as America now knows pretty well from first-hand information carried ' home by Mrs. Theodore Roopevelt. Jr., 1 who organized the woman's canteen work at Aix. 1 "Aches and Pains" was an ideal spot 3 for the experiment, but six others have t been found and put in operation, each equally satisfactory as the original model. Consequently it is with opti- ( mism that the army and the "Y" seek to increase the centres where sure cures have been found for homesick ' doughboys. Location, climate, hofel accommodations, opportunities for entertainment and sight-seeing and the moral and physical cleanliness of the area are all-important in the selection of a leave resort. As soon as a site is selected the largest available is obtained by the Y. M. C. A. as its mam r^ntor rsf nnpralions, men and women are assigned to service and negotiations are bf'gun to secure reduced prices from such entertainment enterprises as cannot be duplicated by the Y. M. C. A. and every effort is made to sive as much service as possible. The army provides transportation and pays the hotel bills, thereby pnabling the soldier to enjoy all the attractions formerly restricted to kings and emperors and malefactors of great wealth. The Jetty Casino at Nice and the Municipal Casino at Cannes are the centres of attraction in the Riviera for the 8,500 men who can be accom modated fn this area. Many officers favor this Mediterranean section and there is- a "Y" club for them. Everything except the gambling that, was stopped by the government at the beginning of the war is at the disposal of the Americans. Golf and tennis and other athletic sports, bathing, boating . and '..ho companionship of the local population are the most popular '' tractions. < 4 / flHHHH?^>:-> ''::-: -;:'aB9B^ffli BpgaHP^^ 't$M \ W$$m y<$yys; #^^9nHK fSKra9JP?^K1k9&^^^^^^ v V' 1 *Tr?S Gl7DT?r: ' r uloimc and Artistic Dancer Wit Opera House >"ext . iom TBU* " .. j.O&iWKanSXaiRIMm | SPECIAL M I'l'a e been fortun Q to purchase fi 1 lliira** . ifgeikta Iuiifw ? imwik T lis is yoi* > jportusifcy to t good. It h : all of the attac uiator, ruii g devise, rache paper, standard keyboard; a Price II have only five cf these mac to buy a typ writer, don't mi | The House of a ' fmsam&m, ssraaai LETTER TO L. V. LIVINGSTON FROM HIS SON ROBERT Jan. 11, 1919. Dear Dad and Family: Hope you all HTn a loef ire getting ctiimg mueij. xuc icitn. letter I received from home Annie sak! dear old Dad had the flu.' I cer:ainly was sorry to hear it, but hope ie is well now and you all too. I am not feeling very good, but have j improved some. Have been sick in hospital for a week. Think I will be ible to go back to my company in a few days. Well, don't know when we will start tor home. I thought some time ago [ would have been home before now ;hough I hope it won be long. Annie, I received my Christmas box January 2?better late than never, :hough. ? It was really fine, the worst )f it, it was gone in about fifteen min- j ites. The boys all said it was fine, ! , I DON! LET A COLD KIP YOB AT HOB j ?? 1 I Dfo King's New Discovery ' , almost never fails to bring qtzic!: relief ^ Small doses ones in awhile and that I threat-tearing', lung-splitting cough ; soon quiets down. Another dose and a hot bath before jumping into bed, a ?ood sleep, and back to normal in the morning. Dr. lung's New Discovery is well known. For fifty years it's been relieving coughs, colds and bronchial attacks. For fifty years it has been cold by druggists everywhere. A reliable remedy that you yourself or any member of your family can take safely. Train Those Stubborn Bowels Help nature take its course, notx with a violent, habit-forming purgative, but with gentle but certain and natural-laxative, Dr. King's New Life , Pills. Tonic in action, it stimulates the lax bowels. Sold bydruggists everywhere. Prices: 60c, ?1.20, 2."> Next Thursday, if nothing prevents, dewberry will have "My Soldier Girl,' said to be the best musical coined*? company traveling. j g^a&afeM ..-^ vjij ; S"-: pflfcaaaapMftaSI ? ' MHfHW 1 VALMRG Ii "3Iy Soldier Girl" at the Newberry Thursday Night, Feb. 20. ~ ? m OFFER! 1 iate in being able ive Number 5 1 i Typewriters ' ake advantage of something I :hments. Back spacer, tab- I t release for writing on ruled I complete typewriter in itself I .50 m r :hines. If you ever expect I J iss this bargain. 1 i Variety Stores; jj Ihousand Things they wanted to know where it came M H from. M I Have you all heard from Ernest late- 9 ly? Hope he is well? Tell everybody fl hello for me. V Love to all. 1 Rrtht I I Co. A, 56th Pioneer Inf., J American Ex. Forces. i i. co^niuTATioy tax The general assembly has extended the time for the payment of commutation or road tax until March loth, 1 1919. All persons taring not paid J can pay same until -March loth, 1913* i C. C. Schumpert,. Troio Vowhorrv P.n Feb. 13, 1919 2-14 3t . \ ' i TAX RETURNS. I, or an authorized agent, will be at the following places named below for the purpose of taking tax returned? of personal property for the year. 1919: Jolly Street, Thursday, Jan. 23rd. JH Pomaria, Friday, Jan. 24th. Glymphville. Tuesday, Jan. 28th. J. L. Crooks, Wednesday, Jan. 29tii Maybinton, Thursday, Jan. 30th. ^ And in the Auditor's office in the court house until February 20, after which date 50 per cent'penalty will be added. The law requires a tax on all notes and mortgages and money; also Income tax on incomes of over $2,500. There is a capitation tax on all dogs oi nuy cenis. All male persons between the ages of 21 and 60 are liable to pay a poll \ tax of $1.00 unless otherwise exempt. All persons owning property in more than one school district will be required to make returns in each district, as the tax books will be made jp by school districts instead of townships in 1919. T>? 1 1. -A-i. dc wieiui lu stitte wuetner yotl have bought or sold real estate dur. ing the year 5918. y J. B. HALFACRE, County Auditor