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ill *vu~rlj??*?~ I m AUtJ KAJ1 I CC jjlj Chang I Neither H condition A#] v\ri !?jj CU AC f-Fi. 11 or Instan postumI been ecoi II tains no'' 1 harmful a I POSTUM is I ? the deli j ' an econd II cious bsi s "ttl ' | I 1/2&F6S B hi r k nit v > A rAtniLi MEDICINE - li Her Mo&er's Home, Says Una - Georgia Lady, Regarding Black Drangirf. Relief Fran Head> ache, Malaria, Chills, Etc. Ringgold, Ga.? Mrs. Chas. Gaston, of this place, writes: ul am a user of Thedford's Black-Draught; in fact. it was one of our family medicines. ,Also in et mother's home, when I 3 a child. "When any of us children complained of headache, usually r-msed by constipation, she gave us * iiose of Black-Draught, which would icctify the trouble. Often in the Spring, we would have malaria and -chills, or troubles of this kind, we '* "would take Black-DraugSt pretty reg7 ular until the liver acted well, and we would soon be - up and around ' *?!n. We would not be without it, :" for it certainly has saved us lots of ' doctor bills. Just a dos? of Black^ Draught when not so well saves a lot of da.rs in be<L" Thedford's Black-Draught has been In use for many years in the treat:1" meat of stomach, liver and bowel r troubles, and the popularity which it -iatfw enjoys is -proof of its merit , Xt your liver is not doing its duty, you will sufrer from such disagreeable symptoms as headache, bilious ' ln<1icroof1nn at/* XHSS3, wusciyavxvu, xiiui5&oh<Avut vW., and unless something is done, serious . trouble may result Thedford's Black-Draught has been tbond a valuable remedy for these troubles. It is purely vegetable, and acts in a prompt and natural way, regulating the liver to its proper functions and cleansing the bowels of Jtamurlties. Try It. Insist on Thed* . _ ford's, the original and genuine. B 7S TinmflF PLANTS. V4?W?)Vl? ? r T.r -? Hiillions Hardy Cabbage Plants from elected seed. Any variety, now, until May. $2 per 1,000; 10,000, $1.50 per 1.000. Prompt delivery. Enter prise T:uck Farm. Georgetown, S. C. f mil^VB m H ji^hair -jBBsP^I Exelento Medicine Co., n Gentlemen: Before I need I ^oar E?l?ntoQuiain? I short, ooene ud nappy. I v?* wnw it hag erowntoSi | *sJfl Sf " JL W inches lone. ?ad is ao soft r^KK ''*ad Jiliy that 1 can do it HR ' ' ' op any way 1 want to. I : +V amsandinc you my pic:W?v o Sore to ?bow yoa how V " V\ t^r pretty Ixelento has mad* H ft. sallibrkkd. Don't let some fake Sink Remover fool yoa. Too really can't atraighten your hair untilitM nice and long. That's what EXELENTO POMADE I removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots of I the hair, and makes it sto w long-, t? AUu > silky. After wing a fewtimea you can tell the difference, and after a little while it w III be so pretty and Ion* that yon can fix it up to suic yon. If Exelento don't do as we claim, we will give your money back. Price 25c by man on receipt of stamps or cola. ASEN7S WANTED EVERYWHERE. Write for particulars. V EXELENTO MEDICINE CO., AtCania, Ga. J -a "wrhn aAA'WWW VVdni'V ' ?< these days seeing not, < becierhealt Economy e From Col OSTU the war nor pn is have as yet in ice of POSTUM C T POSTUM. T~ ?L!~ XL 1 DUUl iunil?>?l lil?S i lomical. Besides, caffeine''or any lubstance. s #ood for -the h grrt of4 young an mical,nourishing / erade. Every-' Reason" forPo, j Iarticles I Od PICTURES ! mtmaasmrn each ' month 8 POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE P IS FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS J A/?k them to show you a oopy or wand 20c for fl AUa UfMif tuMA rvAofnnM VAflT>1f flabifiriotioil 31 IUU 1UVVOV AODUOl * WW. ? r -- Q $2.00 to all parts of the Omted States j | its possessions, {>*"?**, and Mexico. . I PAPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE I 6 i1. Michigan Avww, Chicago, Ul- V I I i Every one interested in the Door o Hope in Columbia' (a home tor re claimed fallen women from over th< State) will please send contribution! to Miss Eugenia Epps at Rest Room Anything of use ill a home, including articles of clothing, groceries, or casl gifts, will be acceptable. We hope t< have a big box, well filled, ready b} first of March. Mrs. A. J. Bowers, Press Supt., XV. C. T. U. I I "Geis-!t"-2 DropsThen to the Dance ! i "Goodnight to Corn Pains?Corna , Peel Off With "Sets-It" Say, girls, you can laugh at ' * % * -1 ?> /wvtm.ntilUnP1 , Ugni snoea, ux u<hhjj, o i weather, big bumpy corns, calluses i on the soles of your feet, corns between the toes, hard and soft coras^ "It'. Ail Off With This Fiene Corn Nowj *Get?-if It Macic." ! if you will just touch th? corn or i callus with a few drops of 'Gets-It.* ! What a blessed relief it gives to , corn pains! You won't limp any ! more; yoa can enjoy the dance ! every minute. Then to see how i that corn or callus will come right j off complete, like a banana peel and i without the least pain, is just wonderful. *Gets-It' is the biggest seller among corn removers in the world today, simply because it is eo wonderfully simple and always works. Be sure you get 'Gets-It'" "fJeta-it." the guaranteed, money back corn-remover, the only sure way, j costs but a trifle at any drug store. I M*fd by E. Lawrence & Co.,Chicago, 111. j ..Sold in -Newberry, aim recommeni I ed as the world's best corn remec j by W. G. Mayes, P. E. Way, Xewber] I Drug Co., Gilder &. Weeks Co. I l 666 cur?3 Chill3 aiiu Fever. ill s wise I t'jss ft frrjwr** Vk?> Dnly jjl :h,hut. |i r in a I a ffee e-war LcreasEREAL always it conother t i lealth |i A - I; OJL \sz\j. c Ideli- I; c/27- i|j stum. I s.S iir i , ,|j| j Letter to Mrs. W, F, StoneI j Cobfcenz, Ger. 1 Jsjjuary 12, Dear Mother: I will try and write yoir. to let ytro i all hear from me. This leaves raej all right, hoping you the same. I received my Christmas !?jc Fri* ' ' ^ T day ana waa sure giaa 10 get it. also got one. lrom the Red Cross today. Tell Geo. Sutoer that cake was. awful good; also tell, him to write, li have written him twice and haven't heard.| from him yet. .Tell poor old dad. he ; could write me a few lines too.. I ! would like to hear from him too. : I have received, several letters t'rcm.i you all and was glad to hear from.! home. I : I have been over here four months} today and have sa-en lots I never' dreamed of seeing.,. ~ j ?' I haven't been to Paris yet, though.I * most of our time we have been on J 2 the battle fields. AH the towns near H 5 were torn to pieces.. You could see J * fine churches worth thousands all torn./ > ub<. '? * TTT1 A * 4" 71/\f O * ! Hfltre UlUSe large WiCiio IAIL UUC C*.. 5 thing could stop them, and several.; f-,have fell near me; near enough that ; i it threw rocks all around me, but ! ! nothing in the world beats luck. iJ ! never got a single scratch. : ; I haven't been'sick but three days.,I since I have been over here, and .' wasn't verv sick then. j Mamma, how is the "fin" over there?.'j (I hope you all won't get it. | Tell Boatman I know he did a fine J . job darning that stocking at the) {Christmas tree. The. little children*; j i io.ver here don't have much Christ-1 ' -- - - mas. JNO canay ana iruiis muca. iwr they are so high. Though there's lots of toys. | I am sending you, all my photos. They look like me only I never got to fix my clothes like I wanted to. ;They were wrinkled' up. Am also isending you a map of the Rhine and Meuse Rivers. i ipq fnn-nc o IJ alnns' t hv>m and j JL lie 1 C ai t IV *? iiO U4* V ** large mountains on. each side. They i are beautiful rivers. I guess Luthe'r Fellers and John j J Stone will soon g*t to come home and bet they will be glad too.. j Don't know when I will get to come,; but I guess when every thing is sot-j i tied up over here. ' ! Am glad Clarence has come home. .'Hope he will stay with you all. Tell Thomas and Oscar I was glad to hear from them. i I will close for this time. Write as often as you can. From your son. Paul Stone. Company B. Pioneer Infantry. I i REMOVAL NOTICE. i- Blease & Blea?c, Atoorneys at Law, Jy' have removed their offices to the rv 'fourth floor of the new Exchange Bank Building?rooms Numbers 403, ! 404, 405, 406, right in front of the elevator. 12-20 lm I MADE SCIENCE OF CHECKERS . s New Englanders Put Pastime on Elevation That Mad? It Far Above $. Mere Game. ? ?'* Those who mention i!ic death of Ly. m:in Stearns. loni; a:i nirent for the % . I # . I'nion. recall always his championship fcv i iiiuii.ir V,...- 11 ..i i--"? ?u? ",,s ?? i ii4iiij .-nil r riu:\.i\n ?'? ? is. Ii seems a minor matter now, f> ; l'i:t there was a time when checkers Je! i were important. observes Manchester fa ; Union. In old times, when the snow jsji ! was deep. the papers not what they i are now, ami the telephone not known, f$j | this game, .so easy and yet so hard, ^ i had its votaries everywhere. A board | j was at every grocery and in every | | tavern, shrewd, usually rather though*- I j ful men with a mathematical turn of I [ mind, held the honors in each locality, p | Here and there notable authorities j were developed. Men walked mile* H j to play with each other. The merits ! of center and side attack, of conser/a- g I tinn r?r U-OPU wi/lolv HahofoH PS Now, the dominating thought of the ^ people has become better expressed :B in baseball. Only a few of the elect i I still make the game a passion. S There is yet to be written a philoso I phy of games. Why are English- H speaking peoples almost the only peo* ? pie, except American Indians, to playH baseball? How does it happen that be- B fore the war one might see a crowd in H Prance waiting with breathless inter- P est the important strokes in a.game ? of croquet? Why do all the South j -1 American nations seem to have little ; interest in any out-of-door sports, ex- j ' cept raring, rooster fighting or bu!l fighting? Why has India no out-oi- ]); door national sport except talking, philosophy and religion? Why is Vki?/itl?i ri/1 >/1 t/k <r< tl f i k'lwudini ui m/u u 11/ ilJOLLclU wj. ! cricket ? Why has Germany produced m< only one or two pugilists of repuratiou? Why have nations that have de- ; l": j voted most attention to hall playing ca j and pugilism been the dominating ones J in commerce and government? wl Recreation is a product of character i be ! expressing itself freefy. What does ^ j the game of checkers mean? Evidently i rc i a contemplative, mildly pugnacious, j calculating spirit, delighting to plan jre | campaigns, carry on defense and of- , fense and at the end feel that one I I made a good contest. That was what? j the New Hampshire men of oast gen- > erations delighted to do in rife. Some | are of that nature still. Some ex-? press it with other games. A faction will forever keep the checker bdnrd in 1 view. Perhaps they are the kind of men who will remain the conservatives* Jn social and political life. Prince Carol and the Throne. Jn J8G6 the Roumanians lofferd their throne to Prince Carol of a side branch Df the Hohenzollero family, who was-1 also. however. connected through his mother with the dynasty of Napoleon. Austria and Russia were not enthusiastic over seeing a HohenzoIIern reign- | ing at Bnkharest. but Bismarck saw j A chance- to put a friend of Prussia \ In the Balkans am! urged tlie young [ prince to accept. William Stearns Davis in "Roots of ' th^ War" fOntnry Magazine) in re- } Jnrirrs: the in cider?? quotes the great j minister ;is- saying: "Even if yon fail j von will always remember with pleas- j ure an adventure which ran never he j a reproach to yd'i." Mr. Davis goes j on tiy relate that through fwr the j prince traveled down tire Danube dis- j gmsecf as a serond-efass passenger un- | til at Tnrnn-Keverin, on Konmanian soil, he* left tfv^ boat and was greeted i fly his future prime minfsfer. Aus- ! tria fumed an<f might have taken no-[ fion, br7t her great *rar with Prtrssia j was ah?/7ir to break out an?3 she soon j had more grievmrs tTfwMes. The oth- ' er powvrs (npfiinpo i<* rni?rrt?nt?,.: and the- .?ntt?n ?f Turft-ey. fPie prince's | nnminaf sirzenrfn. confirmed the new f railer. Tlius J'rmee Car**! kep-5 his i tSirone. c \ Hebrarc Fdea of God. The Ifebraic kiea of Oorf as jrn ab? ; solute. fmmut;?M'e. transcendent Being, J who yw reveaJs himself ?od works out ! his wiPi* rn and thmagh the Jife of j Ifcraef his people; who is at once fribal antf universal ?t ooce a metaphys- I; ieal principle stml a very present help Jj ill time of 3>eett, at once independent jJ of all human nsrenry ami in some war ! enable to fulfill h/mseFf except throng,! ihe striving of men for goodness?that. j Mea is typical of an attitude to the-1 wnriil vrbrch c?rn defy logic without j sinking b>ro mysticism, ami can insist j on the application of abstract prior-1 ciples i?r Immaii life without malting-1 human fife The slave of abstractions. " In every manifestation of the Hebrew I. spirit the attitude can be discerned. Ir has still something to say to the j world am} in the Jewish Palestine of I the future its new word wilt he spo- i ken?imi merely, perhaps not pri- j marily, through literature t?r art, but j through it.s particular way of lian-1 dliug the practical problems of ?*rganized human society.?From "The Future, i.'f Palestine." by Leon Simon, in Asia magazine. Pat "Produced the Goods." A zealous excise-officer was sent to | Ireland to try to locate several 1 "moonshine" stills which were known ! to exist. i *??-- t ha i\r /.! i.'ti I' n lire T7A1.10C UU11 VI I approached Pat. saying: ( "I'll give you five shillings. Pat, if j you can take me to a private still.** | "Troth, an' 1 will, sir," was Pat's | ! repfy, as lie pocketed the money. J j "Come with me." I For many weary miles over moun- j tain, bog, and moor they tramped, j until tliev came into view of a bar- { racks. Pointing t<> :i soldier seated oa ! a stejt inside the square. Pat said: "Ther" von a re. sir. my hi other ! Mike; he's heen :i soldier tor ten ' yeai>, an' he's a private stili." ! wc^ I I i I 7 * v * 7 r" 9 rr? r"? r ! 1 tiA V& urvz UJf t ! ] Imperial Ringlet Bar; for which I paid $25. bred pullets. I will se No. 1, at $5.00 for IE Pen No. 2, Thompson but not direct, 15 eg) Thompson has won eve at Madison Square Gar John B. I V EASY JVAY TO REDUCE FLESH ;ick Hot T?7afcr and Take Tassco. Haven't 307 often wished for a edicine to reiuce your flesh? 'Somein?r that docs not lequire dietirg or listheriics? Well, sight here you ve it in o-^rain tassro tablets. " ' - ycu may secure at i:*.e :\ewrry Dr:g Co. They are pleasart to ke. perfectly harmless and cause *:o stricti'ors of habit or eating, and i duce the flesh, little by little, unMl iu are down to the number of The More Yoi The More You Your car's usefulness It is becoming more f< to you?both in your b rt -4- tt/\# 11 MDCAtl rui LJLLai V CI J ivaovu more than ever. The out-and-out def tremendous a demand times of war is just as d It reduces tire troubl multiplying the usefuln* the cost of operation 01 United States 'Nobby* are the most popular fal all the strength and stam have taught us to put ir There is also the Ui the finest cur built for f Our nearest Sales and exactly the treads you i roads you travel. He will gladly help y< XI wammmtamammaaamm r.Qf B. THOMPSON'S jj red Rock Rooseters J HO Matprl IV! nnr#> ?j W? AVA1A%W?A -9W W Jg 11 eggs from this pen, 1 > eggs. jjj U \ i Strain Barred Rock, | 1% for $2.00. I ry first prize offered I den for past five years. | Mayes | pounds you wish to weigh. Too much flesh is urdesirable, as most quit-* stout people will readily admit, and it detracts rrom one s gooa appearance; makes one clumsy and short of breath. There isn't any r.-ason why anyone should he too stout, when there's this much-tried, perfectly satisfactory remedy at Newberry Drug Co. Tassco tablets (donl for?et the name) are recommended by physicians and are guaranteed to be perfectly harmless. Refuse substitutes, if you can pot come to our store, we will mail tassco to you. r7eod . | V EW-, ill '! ppS' - wiHWjjjjp*'- ? 1 i Use Your Car Need Good Tires is increasing, every day. / md more of a real necessity usiness and home life. you need good tires, now, ) >endability that created so for United States Tires in lesirable today. es to the vanishing point? ess of your car and putting 1 a real thrift basis. , 'Chain', 'Usco\and 'Plain' brie tires built. They have ina our years of experience ito tires. nited States 'Royal Cord', passenger car use. Service Depot dealer has leed for your car and the ou pick them out tates Tires kJ Tires I \ - i . i- ' " ? - / '* - ... iATzlflEr ?/ *.'4./ vV?wfcidl*-* --?J