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r. I Iry it J 9 W" . 7 M If IIV^JLA W>. coffee 1 -?-for ar I you We ' 1 moneys . B ^Wrfciori H I Every y I drink I ? Try i*t y I -find "There ARTICLES | I | PICTURES each pggjg MONTH I POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE 9 IS FOB SALE BY ALL N?WSOULERS I Ask them to show you ? copy or tend 20c for i&tMt iMDA. DaetDoid. Yearly Bubscription I $2.00 to all parte 'of th* United butea. 1 Its powlnrn, Canada, and Mexioo. | I e^TSuSiSA^^^GSSK^UL | I 1 .. jj a \ ?<s? ??? change from, seems desira ly reason ? z Lirfc Jco yc 3 worx.tx in so.*1 V 7 <5 ??' tfiXV ol CUT jZ rear more pec 5ostum. WI 1-A \/A7 uuu 5 j vi 1 a Reasc INVENTITE GENIUS MAKES ASPIRIN SAFE FOR HEART i improved T^Met, Called Aspitone, j Retains All the Medicinal Virtues, i But is Slightly Stimulating Instead' ei Depressing to the Heart,?Does N'ot Upset Stomach. 1 | Physicians and druggists are de-i lighted with Aspitone, the improved, aspirin tablets, that do not depress * " -./A? vn?ot fho Rtnmn/>h All : "" ~ "j who have tried the new tablet are de ; lighted with its quick and agreeable eil'ect and claim that it is much more effective and in every way superior ro the old style aspirin. Physicians; maintain that its safety atone should ?ive it preference over all other rein-; edies for headache, neuralgia, rheumatism and especially for severe cold ?? >'9i9 er moody e "HI i II ! * and I' | 5ur I j vU/is lof I | >ple I i V' 8 yji ' I | m i ! _J i s II ! ) and influenza, in all of which dis* | eases the heart is said to be weaken-; ed and should be stimulated rather than depressed. The new Aspitone is slightly stim-i ulating instead of depressing to the * 3 4-V.^ heart- it relieves pain, icver, dim mc tendency toward congestion and pneu- j monfa quicker and more completely' than does aspirin, and is entirely free: o? the heart-depressing effect. Aspitone tablets may now be had, at all first class drug stores every-' where, in sealed packages, price I>5, cents.. They may be obtained locally, at P. E. Way's Drug Store and at: Gilder & Weeks Co. (adv.) \ 666 ctirsa Chills atiu Fever. ^ l THE HERALD AND NEWS ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.50. t 1 i HBL? INSTITUTE..'CHICAGO TELLS OF HIS ; FIRST AIR RIDE Telegraph Operator Describes His Sensations. j i ASKS ANTICS BE COT OUT i j Says Gullet Camped on Roof of His Mouth While Enjoying His Firs$ Trip Aloft?Nose Dive Seemed to Last Two Months?Earth Seems Like Relief Map or Mechanical Drawing of Some Kind. ; j j (teorre T. Secrist, telegraph operator of I.m-ynis. ().. and before the war , siwleiif :it the Ohio State university, well known :iniong the telegraph ope- j rators of the state, now with the signnl corps at American post office Xo. ! JW)2, somewhere in France, writes as follows to his parents concerning his experience in riding in an airplane for the first time: "1 happened ro meet one of the follows I had known in the States who had just returned from the front, a licensed aviator. He promised to ? take me for a ride and, having always had a longing for a little joy ride through the clouds, I decided to take a ; chance. At a set time I met him at an aviation camp, where he Invited me to get into his 'red devil' bombing plane. I couwi see notning reu auout it excepting the stripes on the bottom of the plane. I jumped into the seat, from which I could see the top of Archie's head from his eyes up, so I couldn't tell whether he was laughing (or not, or wore a serious smile, but his eyes twinkled merrily as we arose from the meadow into the unknown ether. < Sublime Sensation. "The earth seemed to be dropping away from us, rather than that we were moving. I had previously told the old kid that it was my first trip aloft, and because ?of that I would rather not have him try any antics with his steed for fear of upsetting my digestive apparatus; so, without mishap we climbed, coasted and remained motionless, then climbed again. \ "If one can call a sensation 'beautiful' this would be the place to use that word. A more beautiful, serene or sublime sensation cannot be found ou land or sea. It makes a fellow feel as though he were suspended from heaven by a nianila rope and that one . of the angels were swinging him around. "Once in a while the top of some church steeple would be caught in the sun's rays and reflect back a sharp ray of light, which only added to the novelty of the event I was thus amusing myself by taking a glance ? -? - ?i^*i^ aownwaru once iu a wuuc, uul uc?ci for very long at a time. The earth seemed like, a relief map or a mechanical drawing of some sort. I was rudely awakened just about that time by Archie sticking up his index finger and glancing at the 'ometer.' I forgot just what kind of an 'ometer' it was, but I read on it, to ray amazement, that we.were up in the air 5,000 feet; a mile in the air and I felt as safe as though I had been riding.first class in some French 'cheinin de fer* (railway train). "We were gliding along at the rate of just 100 miles an hour, but the earth didn't seem to be retreating that fast. i Prepares for Worst. "But, hist! the plot thickens. Upon commencing the downward glide I noj ticed a peculiar twinkle in the optics | of Archie, and I propared for the j worst. I knew he was going to try something, and sure enough he pointed the nose of the consarned chariot of ; his right down toward terra firma, and if I hadn't been buckled in | tigliter'n a clam in jthat gum-foozled j bucket I'd have been left far behind, ' probably hanging on to one corner of the new moon or landed on one of the ! race tracks of Saturn. / "At any rate, the sensation you get when you come down on a fast eleJ vator has absolutely nothing on this [ sensation. My entrails, including my gullet, were camped right on the roof j of my mouth, and, although this nose 1 dive of his only lasted a minute or two, it seemed as though it must have been | at least two months. But the toboggan finally righted itself and we coasted a good ten miles before the pro- i i peller started its monotonous humming again. "Oh, it was a gay life, but he didn't j try any more tactics, but volplaned to ! the earth as beautifully as a chicken I takes a dust bath, and it was only an hour after we had started until we landed again in almost the identical spot from which the ascent had been , rv> ftiln i lilt IUC. 45 Cars in Wilson Party. That a fleet of 4* cars are attached 1 to President Wilson's party, now touring Europe, is the news received at Bucyrus. O. Tne information cones from Private Garlen Fairchild of that city. He is with Motortruck Repair Unit 30S, and is one of the men in i charge of the Jleet i Bags Trumpeter Swan. The State Normal Training Museum j of Natural History at Pittsburg, Kan., ! * . ' | Has U rare uuu in uic siiupc t?i a Li uiiipeter swan, rare in this northern latitude. It was killed by a young man while hunting on the Spring river. He took it to several local naturalists be- ! fore it was iden-jf 1 BEAVER ^flFOR B ETTERWi Solid G>mforl Within Be* there's solid con: vo U can't expect spruce fibre of t rosuus''unieps<t1iis heat, cold and sc !hedeb krko^C ?r ?ther W?J1 bu board you buy. You don't hav ing Beaver Board ^ 7^^ quickly nailed to the ra&Virtti or d*rectly over old piwitin Beaver Board jSIR just the thing to He for the building of Bpace in the house. In a new book Farm Home," youl wthAr with an artn Newberry Lurr AGE MAJ. F. W. R. NANCE DEAD. Abbeville, Feb. }2.?Special: Major F. W. R. Nance, a Confederate veter-: an. after a lnos: and checkered career, died at his residence here this morning, at the advanced age of 85 years. Mr. Nance was born in -Laurens county in 1335. His father was a wellto-do planter in the ante-bellum days and afforded his three sons and one daughter the best educational advantages to be had. Mr. Fred Nance ' graduated from Erskine College in the early days of that, the oldest denom-1 inational institution of learning in the South. On the same day of his grad- j uation he was married to Miss Jane Ao-norr r.f r>iiA Wpst Soon after their .? j v* marriage Mr. and Mrs. Nance moved their residence to Mississippi and engaged in a farming enterprise until; the breaking out of hostilities between the States, when he returned to South Carolina. He entered the service of his State and for three years served in the cause. a ft or thf> war Mr. Nance returned to Abbeville county and for a period lived in Due West. He served his county as supervisor for a number of years. Later he was elected sheriff of Abbeville County, which office he j served faithfully well until declining j health required his resignation, a pe-. riod of eight years. Mr. Nance was twice married. Ofi the first union seven children were j born, four of whom survive him. His { second marriage was to Miss Mila j Huckabee of Lowndesville, who sur-; vives him. Of this union there were j no children. The funeral services will be held tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock in Due Y/est, the Rev. James F. Pressly i officiating. The body will be laid to rest in the quaint semi-rural burying ground of the little village of Due West. I I I Hon: Hub's Bill. Greenwood Index-Journal. Not the one gallon bill, but the bill j to make it a misdemeanor to sell cotton for less than 35 cents. This; measure Hub insists is no more frivolous than his other one to make it j a gallon a month while the getting is ! good or permissible. Before serious discussion starts, we just take the oc- j casion to remark that Hon. Hub Evans has in these two bills manifest- j ed as fine a sense of humor as has ever l i adorned any bill on a legislative cal- j 1 endar. - f f ErdexrtoMedidneCb., 1 Gentlcr^cn: Boicre In?er! fiagHrel y?ur Exelento Cuinir.e /. y.O- SjXgSpS Pomade my h^r was ' ' ' 6hort, cuarse and nappy, I but row it has grown to 82 jfiffi&gjgflf inches lone, and is so soft J and silly that I can do it ! ?P *"7 w-T I want to. I ; g'^Hr am sending you my pie' 'r|f ^ Snre to show yoa how J vC 'J ' V-'-.i? pretty Exelento has mad" it. S1LLIE EEED. j j Don't let some fake Kink Remover fool | you. Yon really can't straighten your hair until it is sice and long-. That's what EXELENTO PCMADE I | does, removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots o2 j the hair, and makes it grow long:. soft and I - ?~tJi | (nl'.ky. After using a lew uar-ayuaw,. , the difference, and after a little while it | u^ilbeBO pretty and lonT that yon can fix i it up to suit yen. If Exclento don'tdoas we claim, we will give your money back. Price 25c by mail on receipt of stamps or coin. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. Write for particulars. \ EZELSNTO MZCIC1NE CO., Atlanta, Ga. kBOARD \LLS & CEILINGS ( t^Hot or ^ Cold aver Board walls and ceilings * ifort. rhe closely-meshed pure his good lumber product resists >und better than lath and plaster * ilding materials. e to depend on outside labor for buildvalls and ceilings. Beaver Board is studding of new buildings or partitions cracicea piaster ana amgy wan paper, has endless uses about the farm. It's, le your work shop and it's even better a beautiful new room in some waste :let, "Building More Comfort into the1 find many suggestions. It's free, toal piece of Beaver Board, if you ask us. iber Company NTS NOTICE OF JUKI DRAWING. Notice is hereby given that we, tlie undersigned jury commissioners ior Newberry county, shall at 9:00 a. in February 28th, in the office of t'le c^ert: of court, openly and publicly draw the names of 36 petit jurors toserve during the term of general sessions court, convening on March 17tk. " * " ? ?? -?J ?*Uaa 10 At tne; same ume aim pi<wc 10 jurors will be drawn to serve for the year. C. C. Schumpert,. J. B. Half acre, Jno. C. Ooggans. Jury Commissioner* Feb. 17th, 1919.. SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY. Pursuant to an Order of the Probate Court of Newberry County, South Carolina, the undersigned will sell, ta the highest bidders, for cash, at thelate residence of William Lake Dominick, deceased, near the Town of Prosperity, S. C., on Friday, February 21st, 1919, beginning at 11 o'clock a. m., certain personal property of theestate of said William Lake Dominick, deceased, including two mules, twowagons, buggy and harness, farmiag implements, etc. Terms of sale: CashPearl E. Dominick, Administratrix. February 5, 1919. SIMPKINS' IDEAL PROLIFIC COTTON. One of the best and most productiveearly cottons; grown ninety days fron* planting to boll. It has produced as much as three bales per acre averaging 40 per dent, lint and in tests made at the Arkansas Experiment Station it averaged first out of twenty-eight varieties tried. This cotton also took first premiums at thfl North Carolina State Fair for several years. The advantage of planting an eaxly-> maturing cotton lik ethe Sim jkins i? well understood by all cotton growers, . , particularly where danger of bool weevil exists. By express, freight or parcel pastper bushel f. ,o. b. Georgetown $2.5$'' Prompt shipment. Order now for spring planting. ENTERPRISE TRUCK FARM, Georgetown, S. C. *?DI7CE YOCR WEIGHT at the rate of 10 to 35 pounds per month. Ey simply guaranteed, safe reliable treatment, tassco will reduce your weight without unnecessary exercise and dieting, and will not injure or weaken your system. Write today for FREE 50s box enclosing 10c in c.lver or stamps with this add to tb? Tassco Co., Boston, -Mass. For sale the Newberry Drug Co. CITY LICENSE. Get your License at once. License for 1915) now due and must be paid at once. By order of city council. J. W. Chapman, 1-.3 9t. Clerk and Treas. RE3T0YAL NOTICE. Blease & Blease, Atoorneys at Law, have removed their offices to the fourth floor of the new Exchange Bank Building?rooms Numbers 403, 404, 405, 406, right in front of theelevator. 12-20 lm THE HERALD AND NEWS ONB YEAR FOR ONLY $1.50. .ii i ?