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II6W CLEOPATRA'S NEEDLE WAS SAVED New Process Invented to Preserve Surface of Monolith in Central Park. MERQGLYPHS OBLITERATED. 334cior6 of Western Climate Caused Khedive's Gift ts Disintegrate. Painting Ancient Obelisk With Special Preparation Stayed Decay?Ruined Porj tions Restored. New Yorkers awoke one morning to find is their breakfast headlines the aews that a zealous park employee had discovered signs of disintegration on the surface of the city's most treasured antique?Cleopatra's Needle. Photo< *rar?hs revealed that the monolith was peeling, large pieces of sandstone having fallen from the tall shaft, carrying "With them part of the prized hieroglyphs. * London's twin sister of Cleopatra's Needle was reported as resting comfortably and enduringly on the banks of the Thames, and the rival port wondered whether a preparation would be found to stay the attacks of their Korchup Such a preparation was soon forthcoming. A new -/aint combination as * preservative for stone was invented THE OBELISK, The Obelisk was presented to the City *>f New York by the Khedive of Egypt. Lieutenant Commander Gorringe. U S. N.. after a three v ? years* effort, obtain ed possession of it I ( and moved it to its > '|p present position, at -,g an expense of nearly t:-\i $100,000. It was fiTially swung into po- r ' ^ monument, from base ?rement of the base. - ' Jj^lBM??3is3 j|? square through ^ts ' ^ Inches. The entire :?5. weight of the mono- ||| v'|p|?jKgrcg Since it was quar- f-:'-.aPfaBSBr' Tied hear the torrid xone. it has traversed =the entire length of S^l^^gwjKjow;;' : * SBgarpt. most of that ftr :... -?r the Mediterra sean xea ana me >: : "width of the Atlan- :: tic Ocean?a dis- W* tance of 6.400 miles? 'proving its=elf a. first rate traveler for one -A' ' ' whose age has ex- gSw&ffiTOa'..- '} c e e d e d thirty-five centuries. In the [ ; ' course of its exist- &. ence. it has seen ?... ::? Pharaoh and hfs host ? going to tUeir de- '.. struct ion in the Red '' ' Sea: Shishak march- . ; ? lug to the Conquest : :0!$# of Jerusalem: Cam- '. '$ t>y:-es desolating the 1 a ? / : Herodotus. :/ ' ' Plato and other Greek ' .' " -students engaged in ' - : .pursuit of Kgyptian : * % '&\ Jore; Alexander . the ,3 Great on his victori- -V ; ous expedition ? * through the land of < ?>. '<Gosljeu; six and a half centuries of . Roman sovereignty ; ' *nd Christian strusr.gle at Alexandria: all C the lotu line of Mos lem rulers since Caliph Omar; and now. leaving aliogether its native land. .it stands looking upon the million dwell-ers in this metropolis. whose site jivas u:i*nown to th.' Kastern f?v?g:':'. world at a tinie whet: g|Kjig: > in ex is- ence for i\\'u j ^ Kaiicj \-n-) VL- W?"yO.' ''J>*'Tr-K'i^>*?l "by Dr. William Kuckro, chemist of the I -.Metropolitan Museum of Art. Many years previous coating with parailin had been tried, but ihe application had ? not entirely accomplished iis purpose, rv . The new painting process, however. , - a success. Disintegration was halted and ;lie damaged parts restored. New York breathed easily again. v V'OAINT PROTECTION AND ITS ECONOMY. ?~ I The ' preservsiion of structural ma-' 1 f '* terials, which may !>c* obtained through She application of paint, constitutes a ' most v':nl : cans of/nrthorln.ir ;::o tois- ! . servanon of our natural resources. If | is, moreover, the most economical j -method of sustaining the appearance and gcnorai upkeep of any cominu nity. /S .. ..? . ,t t.t. .t ... ?e T? . A-^ruciure coaieo mm smro ?u IU. dia rubber would not be as well protected from decay as a structure coaled wfth 4 -?<>dd oil paint. This is due to ^?$6* fact that * sheet of rubber is not jso durable or as waterproof as a thin r^fcied film of paint. The Jatter mater rfon"when applied dries to a continuous - elastic film containing finely divided -^particles of metallic, wear resisting 1 Tptgiaents. A square 1001 <u suiu ?> -Sim upon * wooden surface costs less i than a penny, yet It will beautify and protect * dollar's worth of surface for "-many yean. This is a low rate of in Jitirance. Dwellings, barns, outbuildings, sheds, ' -posts, fences, stock enclosures, wagons, implements, windmills and other structures, whether of wood, iron or cement, should be preserved, through the use of paint, from rapid decay. High grade paint may be used successfully for nil such purposes. Colored paints will ho fouml tl.e most seviceable, the coloring matter in the paint adding from twoj to three yeats to the life of the coating. ; v DOC FED TIMPPE8 FKIHW MaMacWuaatta Farm A|**t T?lk Ka- . markahlt and Touchinf St??-y *f Canint Affactian. In the Telegram. Worcester. Ma*s., Jolin R. Dearth, field ageut of Worces ter county farm bureau, teHs this : story of the intelligence, sympathy, af fection and clever understanding on j the part or a dog, which came uuoer | his observation in a recent visit to Princeton: A Princeton man who is fond of I horses and dogs owns a fiaely bred ! hunting dog and he missed it for sev- j eral days. He made inquiries all j around, but no one had seen anything J of the animal, and afUr a week the wner gave it up as lost. One of the j farm hands was rambling t'firough a j ' chopped off wood lot a few days later i and came upon the dog caught In a ! i steel strap set for a skunk. Both fore- j i paws were held in the jaws of the j' trap and the dog could not escape. j < But in spite of its terrible predica- i ' ment it was not emaciated, and al- 1 though in pain had not gnawed its forelegs as many animals will do when < they are in the torture of a steel trap. 1 m " ? ? ? ? ! ?11 i 1 Strangest 01 an, scauereu mi ?n>uuu i j were hones and scraps of meat. Sev- 1 eral hen bones and beef bones, vith shreds of meat still clinging, were an- | der the captive's nose, and it *fas | chewing a bone when the farmer Cfts- , covered its plight j i The trapped dog was carried hcju*e ! j in the arms of the man who found it, i and then, a little later, the owner went ( ' 1-V /X /VM if U?if hf?AV. C^ll t , to tne trap 10 set; ?nu ui ?n<u invito,*.*. , , those bones and scraps of Jog i ] food to thf? suffering captive. While j | he stood silently regarding the li:tle ] heap of bones and scraps, another dog , from his own kennels came through i rhe brush with its jaws fdled with i chicken bones, meat trimmings and Dther gleanings from the kitchen gar- , tmge pail. The dog dropped its load < dose to the trap and sniffed around as 1 if it were worried. i ~ "" ? ' ^ 1-! ^,T-T._ . Calling tne aog aner mm, mc -?u.- , er went back to where the injured log was licking its wounds. When ihe other dog saw the rescued animal t barked, capered around, wagged its tail almost off, and then lent its own "Dioist tongue to the hcaiing process on its friend's sorely bruised paws. Empires That Have Fallen. Six empires have disappeared within the memory of living men, remarks a writer in the Brooklyn Eagle. Nearly 800,000,000 people, close to one-half the world's population, have been released from the shackles of imperialism since 1S71. History has no parallel for such changes. In the retrospect of history 50 years are but a flash in the march of the ages and yet since 1871 the doctrine of republicanism has been embraced by half the * O AAA world. Not an tne preceding years of mankind's march toward liberty records such progress. Six emperors have laid down crown jind scepter since Theodore Roosevelt became the exponent of the strenuous life. Three have died, one was murdered, the other two are in exile, while of the three still living, only one. the boy emperor of China, is still enjoying the luxuries that sweeten life for those in high places. It was Napofeon III j who led this debacle of imperialism,! nf nrii7.il wnx n^rt and the! Inst of the Manchu dynasty followed. The crash of the three remaining European empires. Russia. Austria-Hungry ant! Germany, resulted from tlie Avar 'or democracy. When it comes to nAre kings, memory cannot recall them all. for they have tumbled everywhere from Hawaii to Portugal, 4" <1 C.I v/inv tr\ Rnlfflrll I ; 11 VIII >?4lAVAi%* IV j Record Apple Profit Seen. The ai?|sle growers in four north-1 western states will receive S'J1,0<K>.0oC j ' fur their 1918 apple crop, according tc j ^ reports from those states. This is N>n- j si d era 1>1 y the largest sum they have: ever receive*! for tlieir apples and is ^ 1 ihK I u<>t due to the large crop, as uie hmc; ?rop was not a record crop. The | afgor returns from the Northwestern! orchards the last year is due mainly to. *he exceptionally high prices that havt'j )een and are being received. A fair estimate on the 3018 produc-] tion in Washington. Oregon. Idaho iiin];^ Montana puts the apple crop at J e ' tM.rt-mv i - Ci.rv. A Car OI appies i:i;> 1.: 7;~G boxes, as against (530 in fonut'i: t year-;. This jjiws a total production ^ of approximately ]." /.boxes. i ?Rural Life. ,S I I World's Wheat Consumption. 1 IVr eonsumptIon <.T" wheat 11 for ;?!! purposes during the ton years jD02-]J>11, averaged S.SO bushels pot y year in France. 8.20 bushels in Be!- v sriuni, (?.M 1 bushel? in the United States (J.21 bushels in Italy, (>.17 bushels in: r?m I'nitMft Ivinirdoiu. 4.<50 bushels in 1 I lit: v- 1*1 ?. ^ Austria-Hungary. 4.21) bushels in t':t v Netherlands, 3..'5S bushels i: <"arm:mj i (rye consumption being high), O.sr a bushel in- British India, ami 0.f& ^ bushel in Japan, rice consumption be-i r ing high in the last two countries. f ^ The Better Kind. "Don't you think pilot gunboati when they go to sea in a fog ought tc s take signal guns?" v "I should think they could thread \ their way better with needle guns." t Tightwad. "Why don't you ever call me up?" "Since they put in metered service > I'm not as liberal with my conversa-, tion as I used to be." t ( American Wheat Fields. t The wheat field of the United Suites t >n ]:"1- was four-fifths the size of the . 1 ^ kingdom or Austria unu mwc eight times the sizf of Belgium. ftitm Tt NKEW PtIMtTS Englarjj and ft??t{an4 Havt Alrsaiy StartW k RflMt Tret Out D?wn During th? War. England and Scotland ar* prcpnrfns: to replant forest?? which have been cut to provide war supplies. Tliey arc not waiting until peace is concluded, hut | are doin>: it now. Never before hnve 1 those countries been so bare of timber. Hunting ranges and sporting grounds have been sacrificed to supply munition factories at home and armies abroad. The old forests were primarily ornamental and incidentally useful, but those which are rmw being provided for will be primarily useful and incidentally ornamental, savs Robert H. Moulton in Popular Mechanics Magazine. In the Uuited States we are not In bo much need or tree piannm: as mey j are in the British isles. But there are two fcinds of timber which th? war demand has greatly dopletcd. nrH tV --- !-! *#!? /v# rMiirtK f Tin wtVfo ? cnt*.v art* Miiii> iri iiiui , . locust and black walnut. There is another point to hp oons'd- j pred in the planting of th^se treps: i They can he grown on sandy tracts of j land which are now considered <tf no i raltie, and thus reclaim tlie land. An excellent illustration of what onn I be accomplished in the way of reclaim- j' 1 ? ^nnimli tlin n'oiitinti I Illg UNfltfNN liJIIU tllf'SU^li i??* t"(,:>,|,Mk | of trees hns been carried out during j the last six or eight years by n resident of Whiteside county, Illinois. Tn these years be has accomplished the seemingly impossible task 'of turning j some 70 acres of sand, formerly as bar- j * - <? CI..1 ? I pen as rue neseri ui o;ui<uu. nm> o flourishing forest. Nor is that all; , for this forest, acting as a sand hinder, has heen the means of saving orVr fertile acres from the inroad of Hip drifting sandp and the total result being that the farm has increased sev ' eral times in value. The sandy tracts svhfch, before being planted to trees, tvere practically worthless, arc now worth anywhere from $50 to $100 an j1 icre. j . j; FINISH THE JOB i Success of the Victory Liberty , Loan, the fifth government war loan, t will depend largely on the savings ol , the people of the nation. To insure its success, we must save NOW?to practice anew the great lessons of the war. thrift and economy. 1 Aside from the loss of respect for ourselves as a nation, every family will ; be unpleasantly affected, if the coming loan is not fully subscribed. Unc'e , Sam's war exchequer is compelled to a +/n mointoin tVio armv of sptjiiu muuc.r uiaiuwrn j __ occupation, to rehabilitate the woun ed, to bring home the victors and to carry out the program of recon?:ruc- i tion. This money is being borrorod f t? the banks cf the country, and " cl Sam is issriinc: ?hort-term c?rf* :e? < or incenreaness m fuiuciiuun; u i-ic. coming Libertv Loan and of the fed , eral incomrt taxes. If the hanks we~G nut s*:jc.!'1v p..:J !rr.th^ir r. = -::rcci-N won'-i he cror.e. ::nd ?s tbev omuH no loans, credit on^-ul'^n^ would he hamnered and bus::.n -?s stven^t0 ; How about it? W:!1 we fl'ii'-h. our ] job?that rf pavinr the wrr V!'=. a = our immortal heroes firi=hed the'r* r\ vanquishing the Thin? Thev wep? net quitters, even when cal'ed on tc make the sunrem" -icrifice. V."!1 < be quitters, when there is all to gain and no+hing to lose? A little saving now is all it v'U cost ana tins saving wm m^cu ? ? ? w j-.m prip on the future. The Victory Liberty Loan will soon be offerel. Will tou b# ready to do your part? 1 As! BACK AT WOR! V TUAWITi TA DEI iimmbj iu i LI GRATEFUL 0 \\ a'king vigorously and her cheeks ] iright with color, AIi;s Amy Wheeler. 1 i 1'orth. -Main street Columbia, entred a Columbia drug store. "Give Lie two bottles of Peplax, please," she ; aid. The Peplax man. who remembered ; liis Columbia girl's appearance of j iiree weeks ago. said: "You are look- j ng; so much better I hardly recog- . tized yon Peplax has helped voli , wonderfully." "Yes." she replied..] but I can't sttop to tell you about ft \ io\v. because I must hurry back to ? fork, but I will come in this even- [r tig." And she did. "Yes, I am back j \ it work, thanks to Peplax,'' Miss j; Vheeler said. "For five weeks I ha-1;. tot been able to fill my position butjj. oday I started again and I am very j Lappy. "About six months ago I began to i uffer from catarrh of the stomach. I ] vould have gas and bloating and I vould feel as if my heart was papi- i ating some times. My food Woald | eem to sour instead of digest and I l vould have heartburn and headaches hat were terrible. < "I lost weight rapidly and my appe- ] ite failed and I could not sleep well, j )ne night I fainted in a theatre and hat frightened me terribly. I was 111 ; bis condition when I had an attack < )f influenza. It was only a slight at- j nek or I do not believe I would haw T*sfr Your Living j v ViY&2?utfcr:a.'<sy CosS | ' Y."o ars all .1 point. ; Hie u:-.e cf ?rc co~ ion ^nsc i IS.19 l'nrri rr y: .... on ? *- K. peuds >;ros\ if4- r4 hr?-.': Even at r :t hl;.h rrfc*s j:> c ^ j an .1 ' : i early all cot*on, *t .:" j ^ oocl : r v. present prises j a sir / : ch rt c.i crodit, and i X mi *. jccI i\.:Z i nre higher i i j E pro. r i ti:. i a..*3 rrc3e::t cottc i i F"ic. j * '.Ia-a J v y V V ? O * r sa' . : : nroduvo ail osr-HI:; j ;;r: .: : I: fhtv cn y:; acr- ; ! ; c::: .. i. 3 ctcro L..I. ; A good pieco r! garden ground, | rightly planted, rightly tended a:: i | t kept planted C.ie year round, can he | made to f*:rnish nearly half your liv- j ing. It v. "i save you more money j than you made on the best two cr ! ' three acres cf cotton you ever prow! j / ini!) Son.1 Book tells a!l i about the right kind of a money sir- j ing garden and the vegetables to put , in it. It tells about the farm crops cs j well a: "*. shows you the clear road to ! real rc^rular farm prosperity. It-'f, i Fre^. Send fr- 't tnflav to H. G i \ HASTINGS CO.. " anl ,0a.?Advf | \ I winuwn MMMMMOM * SUMMONS i )H Hi:LIEF. j |,j (Cornplr o Served.) j ? ; i |; rHE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA ! .-j', County of Newberry. j jp Court of Common Pleas. jji 0. S. Miller and A. H. Miller, partners in trade under the firm name and style of Miller Brothers Company, plaintiffs i j against ! rhe Capitol Food Company, Southern Express Company and American ? Railway Express Company, defend- j/. ants. ' ro the defendants above named: | R Vmi iirp her^bv summoned and re- [* quired to answer the complaint m * this action of which a copy is here ; % 5 with served upon you, and to serve ? a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the suscribers at their ? office at Newberry, South Carolina,] within 20 days after the service here. , if: exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer tbe fc complanit within the time aforesaid, j the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded > in the complaint. The defendants are notified that if* they fail to answer ^ the complaint herein within the time ; specified, the plaintiffs will demand $ judgment for the possession of the | personal property described, in the affidavit herein and in the said com nlaint. or for the value thereof, and M for the costs and disbursements of this action. JVJ Dated March 13th, A .D., 1919. Blease & Blease. j Plaintiffs' Attorneys. Ki ther Stfca 3TATE 0? ?0:*TH CAROLINA, ^ea( Xewler'rv County. st< To the defendant, The Capitol Food a<?" Com pan v: a\"?,: Wltl You will take notice that the crig- suie inal summons and complaint in the p*fr above entitled action has hecn. t?s Tk one the dr.v o: March. 1919. file! i?i land the ofHr-e of the CI?*rk of the Court of Common Pleas for Xewherrv tion County, ?o:ith Carolina, and same ire now on file there. , f Please & P>lease ' as Attorneys for Plaintiffs. : |y Attest: j Jno. C. Gossans, i C. C. 0. P. & G. S.f Xewbcrrv County, S. C. mbbm??MPBiwaPBg?imqwafts?aaacsra>a=?ag? Af KNOW i 8 H??" HAPPf ! L UXlilt juikt * ?. OLUMBIA GIRL TELLS ? II mlled through. I lost fourteen pounds | i nd was too weak ty work. That was ij jrt'lien I decided to try Peplax three I! j *''? -H i! vviion T Jonkfd so ! ad I! ' '.Now, I have gamed six pounds al- jjjjf c -uy.ar.d I am so much stronger I 0^ v k::ow lnvself My stomach i o;:hie has passed away. I can eul ilmost anything I want now hut be- [___ ore I began Peplax I could not touch m ^ ..( ii ihiu^ a-? pork or veaal. I didn't I arr i. rc oavegc.a les like cjbbaue. tarAt <t> sips or beans, and I could not drink ^ nffee without being sick right after. ture ."Peplax is wonderful. Xot only did alon ' i u....i ii:i* i i) right awav, but I know rene rem< it ha? helned others. I took it pnrri K'cause a friend told me how it had W eiieved her in two weeks and I told conG i friend of mine about it in Charleson and she has taken it and has Med jained nine pounds. She told me ir. The svas my duty to tell people about Pep- 13 ? nx after what it did for me." ! flp Peplax is the stomachic, system pa- Xjfl rifier and builder composed only oi* the Nature remedies that everybody inows. ! 13 Peplax, the famous Nature medJ- j Dine, can now be obtained in New- J jM yerry. It is specially recommended! Ijj| it these leading drug store: P. E.! ||^ Way. Newberry Drug Co., W. G ! S Mayes. Gilder & Weeks. Peplax is I 5old in Prosperity by the Prosperity B Drug Co.. and by the leading drug- H ji'sts everywhere. ^ 30 V* SaU I W>Wt^ Y/ \[\hz l ???>'fn ?</ 5Ju t? fc&OiCvj. Be SURE to fist WM >3- PV& uitf uk ik? 4te^ a 'H f* !****> "***1 *7*5 ///?? s,^ V^Ww^ W J 'i t? f ,'3 'j F/ V^Sv a . . kJ3v! But**! ><3? \ The ? r* ^ <*>-> ??-> )M W '??? V >W ? C?. w O ??<-?co 3 U -| T' " *'v 1 '"l"1 i * . vV? .1 (DNEYSWEAKl idney troubles don't disappear o: nseivcs. uney grow siowiy dui idily, undermining- health wilt 31y certa-nty, until you fall a vieto incurable disease. 3p your troubles while there is time, 't wait until little pains become big es. Don't trille with disease. Tc id tutu 2 suffering: begin treatment 1 GOLD ?-IEDAIj Haarlem. Oil Cnps now. Take three or four every until you are entirely free fron i. is well-known preparation has been of the national remedies of Hoii Tr\ 1 <!qij a <-r/~vtorfl. I i. U I ^Iliuucn, ill iUtf V w *?C5 f>V? Vi ? tt of the Netherlands granted s rial charter authorizing its preparaand i^le. I 600 CHICKENS ter Being Relieved of Or anic Trouble by Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ""*rAn. 111.?''I took Lydia E. Pinki s Vegetable Compound for an or ganic trouble which !, i, 11, ,; i i i 1111 i' lilpulled me down unI P til I could not put my \;J \ !{ foot to the floor and 1/ ^$T.4 j could scarcely do my P wor'K? an(* as I live vWj|j |! on a small farm and j r ^^Tj|! ! j'raise six hundred ||l 'Uj! j1 chickens every year !' [' ''aW jayi it made it very hard % jior me. ' * saw ComgMggfeadfr pound advertised in K our paper, and tried it. it ftas restored health so I can do ail my work and ) so prateful that I am recommendit to my friends."?Mrs. \L>. M. ers, R. R. 4, Oregon, 111. ily women who ha-/e sulTored the tors of such troubles and have dragged g from day to day can realize the if which this famous root and herb edy, LydiaE. Pink ham's Vegetable ipound, brought to Mr9. Alters, omon everywhere in Mrs. Alters' iitlon should profit by her recomdation, and fi there are any comitions write Lydia E. Pinkham's icine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice, result of their 40 years experience ; your service. BKloortorI fP THE RED BALL TRADE MARK "Modem" || firearms $ Ammunition j 1 % Slitfj T-' ?!s| C if: sllL EPT secret H and special 1 . csuu KCiduuai ivi m WRIGLEYS 1 V in its air-tight l l sealed package. A goody that is Sj worthy of your I lasting regard I ~ because of its I 4 Easting quality. B \ B3 5K5T" 1 LOOK OUT! f [ The housewife of Holland would al* I n ~ f/NAn Ka W'UVlAnf + r\r\A TTT1 t V? - CL25 SW11 r> itiivuc iwv* uo vr?vu out her "Real Dutch Drops," as she quaintly calls GOLD MEDAL H.tarlem Oil Capsules. They restore strength : and are responsible in a great measure ) for the sturdy, robust health of the t Hollanders. Do not delay. Go to your druggist and 1 insist on his supplying you with GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oii Capsules. Take ^ i them as directed, and if you are not satisfied with results your druggist will gladly refund your money. Look for l the name GOLD MEDAL on the box and accept no other. In sealed boxes, three sizes. - For Pastwra^s in 6 to 8 1 V/ecIi6 Sow Dwarf Z^ex 1 n a P F" ! i J Ma'c^? sotoadii Dti*r?t!ons paxtn**a?re ; ; -:t! e. ii??: su"et< a-i;' poultry ! within y'x to eight weeks. Many report that its faiUuirig qualities are better than that of clove'-. It ia the . j earliest pasturage and rn? of the j bv?.st hog feeds you can grow. Plant rape now. Save money St>eat for feed. ! WOOD'S SEEDS 1 For Farm end Garden | are seed of proven worth ? tested for r both purity and geriaijaatiun. Grass and Clover Mixture Our jraas and clor-r mixtures yield i i mor* hay. better and more permanent pasty ra^f than when only two or . 1 three kind* of graa* or clorer are sown. Catalog and Wood't Crop Spe riul. yivtny fttray mjormaiion j atui enrrrnt prices, mailed fret 1 upon request. T. W. WOOD & SONS Seedsmen RICHMOND VIRGINIA | ou>p nosuug ?vo|> Keasure Oct What MM 6CC cures Bilious ^ever. 84? it .'. ? ..[ ' t;: ,