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P -C0H0L 3 PER CENT. egetbePreparaicafrd sn'!alingtlicfoo4aisu ia e-StoitedSt[sadl r'1 Pro es Dlgstion(atheerf" ness and iest.Containsnteitter Sc rMiocra OTNARCOTC. s40. Ismsed..a y-' Aperfect Remedy forCsIpa tion, Sour Stolntach.-Diatrlm LWormss,Convu lsionts.fowrisk ness ard LOSS OF SLEEP. a i FoSLTie Signamre of t' NEW YORK. .,mot iurte und'ert Food Ezact Ccpy of Wra per. ST i OF HOME, SWEET HOME Nct Written Whi!e Payne Was Pov erty-Stricken. But When He Was Fairly Comfortable. It _:more than ninety years sinc "Home, Sweet Home." was written but its popularity is still world-wid and wherever the English language ii spoken it is known and loved because it appeals to that deep-lying instinct it humanity which is the basis of family life. Many stories have been w?tten of its origin. most of them more or less inaccurate and tending to distort reality by a mass of pleasing fiction. Moving word pictures have beer dr.1Mn of the starving author in hi: garret and illustrations have been pub lished of the original "lowly thatched cottage" for which he was supposedly pining, both affecting and interesting but nct in accordance with the facts. Although he had periods of failur( and hardship, as well as possibly brie! periods of success and prosperity, i1 was not while suffering from povert: that he wrote "Home, Sweet Home, but during a time when he was livinh -comfortably in Paris in the Palai: Royal, and having considerable succes: in his dramatic work. There is also no evidence to indicati that the "lowly thatched cottage" had any existence outside of the author's brain, in spite of the tradition which has been built up about the Easthamp ton cottage. Throughout his lfe Payne hada deep affection for his native land, his friends and his family, from whom he ws for n iny years widely separated. His letters frequently allude to his longing for the society of those he loved and his appreciation of the home and domestic life. He was only fifteen years of agi when necessity forced him to begin his battle with the world, a precocious high-spirited, impulsive, sensitive, am bitious boy, conscious of an intellec1 above the normal. restive under re strai::t, quick to take offense at seem ing slight.-T. T. P. Lukuer, in Scrib ner's Magazine. SHORTNESS OF OUR DREAMS If Natural Phenomenon of Steep Laul ed Longer Than Single Second We Should Expire. Just as sleep is a natural phi nomenon of life, so dreams are natural phenomenon of sleep. The medical man assures us that the long est dream we ever have-even the dream that seems to carry us oi through several days-actually occu pies no more than a single second! Scm e authorities maintain that il any one of our dreams were to las longer than a single second we shouli die. Other authorities are convinceC that we do not dream at all when we are asleep. but only in the fraction a: time when we are (as Shakespear< has expressed it) "'twixt sleep an' wa-ir.' Ita :so urged that dreams ari no'th-::g but distorted ideas and im ages passing through the drows: mia and being no more than extraoT dir.:: n vriations of things that hay< ha :i. or of things that we havy thout or rer,! in our waking mc -ment he can have no possible as soca; :: with our future. But, 01 the ote- - had dreams have bee: crediedt witi. prophetic meaning: sar 1 day when the world wa: vo Ag and rem books are stl publiste" an d purchmased and consult ed by the million. Quaint Eng!ish Ceremony. The quaint ceremony of flogging th commoners was observed as usual thi year at Malmesl-:ry. Wilts, says th Lowrien ail. Six men were admittet to cmmon rights, that is, grant<: o land under King Athelstan's boques of land, given as a reward for 1elp i: fighting the Danes. King A Lelsta) was crowned king of tie Mercians ani West Saxons at Kingston-on-Thame in i2> A. D. Supreme control of Kini Athelstan-s gift is vested in a warde> and "freemen." The six new land holders were taken to their allotments and a hole was dug in the soil int w.hich each new commoner threw s5i" . YEh com:naonor was "flogged with ahz:l tw;ig. the surveyor repea i G te :i form c.: -Turf and twig Ig e thee. the same as King Athe agave to me. and I hope a lovin brother thou wilt be." Childiren Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A ST OR I A CASTORIAC For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the tl Signature of s h in s In Use, For Over th Thirty Years t n OASTORIA THE CEKTAUu CJMPANY. NEW YORK CIT HAVE DISPLACED OLD MAIDS "Bachelor Girl" Ia Better Appellation d Now Given to the Woman Who d Remains Single. o Among the most delightful modern ti products are our bachelor girls. p It has been said that a good wife tl is the by-product of love, and It may |3 be said with equal truth that a bach elor girl is the result of new business w conditions. s4 One thing, however, is certain: The p bachelor girl has crowded out our old E maids. Rarely, indeed, will you come e' across a real genuine specimen of the L blighted love series surrounded with her feline pets, an authority on heart I symptoms and a blender of bird seed. There may be a few of those dear le old maids still to be found in the re- C mote country districts, but in our be towns and cities they are extinct as et the dodo. di Perhaps it would be more correct bi to say that they have "evolved" into l bachelor girls. In the good old days any girl who didn't marry before she a was thirty was dubbed "an old maid." She was frequently a lonely soul and Ie took to reading faded letters and dabbling with smelling salts. - Nowadays a girl who doesn't marry is called a "bachelor girl." She has a good Job and holds It down; has a checkbook, good clothes, lives In a pretty fiat or shares apartments with other pretty girls, and Is looked up to and envied by her married friends. She attends strictly to business and m her relatives are very polite to her because she Is such "a clever crea ture," and incidentally because she buys shoes for their children and pays for Angelna's piano lessons. L The old maid lived in the past; the fe bachelor girl lives in the present and h has her weather eye on things to 0 come.--Buffalo News.e UiZARDS ON GIRLS' BAC~KS w Stenciled Designs on Fair Skin la e Given Out as the Newest Fad h, in New YorkP Art Ilerature, the stage and Green- as wich village were well represented d at the fancy costume ball of the So- " ciety of American Fakers, but what attracted most attention was the sten cilings on bare arms and shoulders x of about 20 per cent of the girls. n, Fully half of the 1,600 present were ni pretty girls, so a lot of the new fad k art was on exhibition. There were , little lizards, skull and crossbones, ' stars, flowers, birds and other designs. Some of the girls explained the fig- F ures were affixed to the flesh by a 'y sort of sticking plaster process, which enables the wearer to stencil herself. There were five orchestras, and It was agreed "Cy" Watrous, pre of the Fakers' organization of 1 dents, was right In saying the . - a great success.--New York :vE World. Mucilage to Stick on Tin. SWhosoever has tried to stick a pa -per label on a piece of tin knows how diffiult it is. Here, however, is a - recipe for a mucilage especially de isigned for this purpose: In 150 cubic e centimeters of boiling water dissolve! -20 grams of gum tragacanth and add a e -paste made of 60 grams of flour and a i 10 grams of dextrine dissolved in 40 x cubic centimeters of water. Dilute s the whole with 200 cubIc centimeters c< s of boiling water and add 10 grams of _ 1 glycerine and 10 grams of salicylic, -acid. Boll for five minutes, stirring constantly. Sloan's Liniment For Neuralgia Aches. Thte dull throb of neuraWzia i- quick Slv relieved by Sloan's Liniwnt, the tniversal remedy for pain. I::asy to L appy, it quickly peetra:es withou rub~i fbingz anil soothes the sure mu-cle~s. Ceamw-r anid mnor-e promptly effret ive Sthau ;mussy plasters or ointment, does not stain the skin or elog the pores. For stitT muscles, chronic rheumatism, gout, iumbago, sprains and strains it ies quick relief. Sloan's Liniment reduces the pain and inflammation in t insect bitEts. bruises. bumps and other. -minor inju ries to children. Get a hot- -- ,tle today at your druggist, :25e.-A.b. Natural Deduction. "Mamma," queried small ialna :i?e [ first time she saw a raulticolored par I- rot, "was that chicken hatched from I en Eastar GI(2'" Whenever You Need a General Tonls Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the welknown tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Bu..d. um the Whole Svstem. 50 cents. Beware of Strange Mushrooms. If strangers appear in your mush cam bed, look out! A professional aushroom grower recently was badly ooled and. with his entire family of tve persons. narrowly escaped death. Hence the mushroom specialists of he United States department of agri ulture have issued a warning to com aercial and other growers of mush ooms to regard with suspicion any .bnormal mushrooms which appear In heir beds. It seems that ocepionally poradic forms appear in rius-,"oom reds, persist for a day or t: ,, and hen disappear. These are generally anure-inhabiting species and may be bserved shortly after the beds have ased. In the instance cited, however, ese fungi appeared in considerable umbers at the time the edible Agari us campestris should have been eady for the market. and the dealer upposed it was probably a new brown ariety and tried it in his own family. .s a result. they were rendered abso itely helpless and were saved after everal hours only through the assist nee of a second physician who had ad experience with this type of poi oing. He Was Prepared. One afternoon recently a New York raveling man called a prominent El 'aso (Texas) attorney into consulta ion at one of the leading hotels. He xp1ined that he contemplated a very erilous undertaking and desired to ake his will. The lawyer drew up ie will, and the traveling man paid im a fat fee, left the document witi he hotel clerk, accompanied by condi ions to be carried out should he ever return, then hailed a taxicab nd went to Juarez, Mexico. where he ought picture postal cards and Mexi an stamps and addressed them to elatives and friends. Then he re arned to El Paso quite unscathed. It wasn't as thrilling as I thought it 'ould be," he admitted. "But I al rays believe in precautionary meas res." "Mountain Sheep Best Food." Howard Eaton. whose big ranch at olf, Wyo., is known to many Phila elphia sportsmen, told me the other ay that Uncle Sam now had a herd f 75,000 elk in Yellowstone park. "We have 45 buffalo calves out iere this spring," added this trans lanted Pennsylvanian. i inquired if iey would live, and he said very near r all of them would. "Mountain sheep mutton is the best ild game food," said this connois iur of nearly fifty years' outdoor ex erience. "Much better than buffalo eat and superior to bear, deer or Lk."-Girard in Philadelphia Public edger. How Catarrh is Contracted. Mothers are sometimes so thought ss as to neclect. the colds which their ildren contract. The inflammation the mucus membrar.e. at irs' acute. wctes ('ronic and the child hay ronic catarrh. a disease that is -eb -m cured and that may prove a lif's irden. Many prlso'ns who have itb athstne disea-e will remersber ha" g had fr' quent c'o'ds at th' time it as contract ed. A lir tie ftret'- ott ht. bottle of Chamberlain's (Couh I R-m l judiciously used, and all this t r'ouh 'iht have been avoided. Obtain d everyrwhere.-A dr. Profit by This. Dont Waste Another Day. Wen you are wcrt'ied by backac~h. By lamneless ntd ur'inarly d iscrder~ Do't expeinft with an untriedi edicine. F'ollow. Sianingit. I"tl-'s e-xamp c Use Deanc's Kidney Pili-. Ver~ify it if youi w%.hl: X'. It. XV hi:e. prop. of grecorv, S. oundar'y St... M:annitcr, sty.- "~'I suf 'red from kidney troubcle fot' years I ad to get up v'ery often during the~ ight to pass the kidney soeretions and iey wet e highly colocred andi contaln I sediment. like br'ick-dust. I suffer 2 costantly from backache and sharp tins 'cr'oss my iomcs. i could har'dly :rn c in bed and tmorningstmy hack as so lame and sore that it was dull lt for tme to dress mn3:self. Nothing elped me until I got Decan's Ku! ney 'ills. \fter using one box. tmy bcacik ido't ache any ccn re' and the iameness ad sore-ntss hcad acli disa~peared I >)'t nlave 10 get it) nocw to piass the idne te retions -aud dami feeIilg .ent'v yeats ounoger.'' S':attfemet iven M\arch 19ith. 1908 ) OVR SlX YE.\IlS LATPE1l. ir. chie said: "'I ahvays~ use Doccn's Kid ev iis when Ii hav e anyi sicn of kid yt ouble, they k~eepl myv harck ccid idnys in gecic condition .' Price 50e, at all daaler Donc't: '(an's Kidev l'cl 'the s:ae:' It White has~ tnidelv r. et cumendld. For a Muddy Cctr.pihrion. ak'' Chamberlaccin's Tabh-: :.nl dea uie-t oif vegtbe and- eure a-stcc5 'ake otdoor exercc ijdily antd c ourc 'mp~ex ion will ibe gitn ti mrd -thin a few mconths. 'Try it. Ob)taccn hle every where--.\d.i Head-Off That All-Winter Cough. At the fir.t sig Of -ole ih oa, gh best occ stu!Ted-u head1. ake a do-e of r' lic uis Pim -Tar-Honyc.4 Th'cc beni-I r nine-tar i,'1 c Iot ing honey' and. ,c -c'. qluic'kly cellev' ic'' cntge:-tion.' own'i :it ple'm and bccilre::k up your 1I the benI:it, icth 'biai' 'iromta' om ac pine- fores. it" P plea"an to : n- l antiseptie. Thec. f'crun'i.a coc th' ott:" tells why it ri'it'ta coum andcc >ug hs Xt sour drtugit. 25e. -.\X For Best Results Ship Your Long Staple Cotton to WHALEY & RIVERS. Charleston. S. C. O riglal promnoers of Staple Cotton ini the Southeast. Constipation Is to be dreaded. It leeds to serious ailmnts. Fever, Indigestion. Piles, Sick Headache, Poisoned System and a scoro of other troubles follow. Don't let Constipationl last. Kep your Kidneys. Liver and Bowels healthy and active. Rid your system of frmented. gassy foods. Nothing better than Dr. King's LNewLif ePills All Druggists 25 cents S A ISATINr OR MONEY RACK Worm Out? No doubt you are, if you suffer from any of the numerous ailments to which au women are sub ject. Headache, back ache, sideache, nervous ness, weak, tired feeling, are some of the symip toi..s, and you must rid yourself of them in order to feel well. Thousands of women, who h a v e been benefi-1 by this remedy, urg.. ou to TAKE The Woman's Tonic Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., says: "Before taking Cardui, I was, at times, so weak I could hardly walk, and the pain in my back and head nearly killed me. After taking three bottles of Cardui, the pains dis appeared. Now I feel as well as 1ever did. Every suffering woman should try Cardui." Getabottle today. E-68 Ringling Bros. Coming This Way. World's Biggest Circus and Spectacie 'C derella" Announced for Early Date. Tuesday Oct. 17. 1;.: nungro;. circus wugv aftt soo ~nd:( nigh: performiane c at Ie famtous showniezi are the sea p: celting an all new and n'onderf : n ram The irimenlldu fairvlat 1 (" taI . " tiC erelia" will app-al both youtn and o'd. " :b* 1.0 l) its Mons take part in it 1: i, :aily t I a *esFt spiec tcre Ringlina lros ha' e ver staeI au" it- 1.1o ions "lialet the Fairies.' with 300 (an -Ii girls. in 'self worth many mie- to st1. Fu low:nt "Gindere: a" 400 arenic arti: apcar in the main tt: pregrian. 1. ciause of the reat European var 11 i:inglinis ha.:e .ecured scores of ci cu: ; er formers never before saon Air:ca. An entire trained auuin show has been made a part of the mai -nat ihis scason. The menagerie oc numbers 1009 wild anamiis. The el phants, including "3ig l3ingo," ti earth's largest pachyderm, have bee increased to 41 and almost 800 hors are carried There will be (0 clow and a big free three-mile street para< show day morning. When You Take Cold. \Vith the averagre man cold is a se iwus matter and should no: be trill with, as some of the most dangero! diseases start with a common col rake Chamberlain's Cough i -me1 and get ridl of your :-o4] ats quickly possible. You are not experiment when you uise this rem:edy. as it h been in us~e for many years and has: established reputation. It contains I opium or other narcotic. Obtatinatb everywhecre.-Adr. SA LE of Personal Property. i':uscan: to an oridert of .Jats( . \'titdhamn. lq.. Judge, oif Probatef (Clarendein coUmty, will sell att pub! auction. for cash. at the late residen, Clams Brown. deceased. near P'ano! on Mlonday, the 16th. of October, 191 at 1:2 o'clock, 31: One Black or' Brov .\are M1ule, as pr'operty of the Esta of Clams Brown, deceased. Julia Brown, A'dministratri Bad Colds From ILittle Sneezes Grow. Many coids that hang Oin ell win t sart with a snerze, at snifle, a so throat, a tight chest. You know tI symrptoms of colds. and you knel p'ompit treatment will break them u Drt. King's New D)i~covery,. with i siothing~ autiseptic balsams, has bet bi rakinr tip colds and healing co~ugl of young and old for 47 year s. D) King's New Discovery looseus ti plegm,~in clears tie head, soothes ti iri ate'd me mbran.' a:.d makes breat ii 'aieri. At yVour'1 druggist. 50c. Notice of Discharge. I wrill nulv t th le J udige of P roba for < larctio'n counaty on thei :b dti of I '-tober, 191G. at 13 o'clock . fr L-.-t tels of D),chatrge its Admiinisi trix o 4f thr l-'state of Clams Brown. Pa ': ola. S. C.. Sept. '.1, 191m,. Despondency. \111 1ou fee] discouri 'ed1 and 4! ,pondt~l( dil not give uip but take a dl) clciee tatin to fee'l all right with a4 V, v < r tw). De)spoudenciy is (411 41u-' I), indig.r tion an'd biliousnecss. f wih the it cah;et s arem epciai Iv: us. O h1tinable everywhiere-.\'l :jThere's a gr'eat var'iety in the kit.!n fro >O.kingu them all in superior' quali' of0 the tiniest blo4ck' tin-.u Piowdkicen utfo n Physical Fitness Big Asset. No woman nowadays can afford not to be well. Ill health-even mere "delicacy," with no positive manifestations of disease-exists too much. There is the obvious, direct expense of doctors' bills and medicines. But indirectly you pay a much high'r price for not being well. If you area wa'ge earner your lost time and energy, due to a lack of physical strength, must also be computed in lost dollars. Poor health will interfere constant ly with your social good times. It will mar whatever beauty you may possess sooner than any other cause. If you are a wife and mother .illness and weakness will interfere with your duties and the comfort of those dear to you. Whatever your station in life you will find that the role of in valid and weakling is no longer fash ionable or popular. For a while you will have the sympathy of your friends. but the best of them will be bored with you sooner or later. They can't help it. A worship of physical fitness is in the air, and, instead of whining and pitying yourself, you must bend all your energies to the task of becoming well.-Exchange. Fumigating Paper. There are many formulas for mak ing fumigating paper, one of the most simple being: Benzoin, 1 av. ounce; storax, one-half ounce; fumigating es sence, 2 fl. ounce; ether, 1 fl. ounce; acetic acid. glacial, 20 drops; alcohol, 2 fl. ounce. Dissolve the benzoin and storax in a mixture of the alcohol and ether, filter, and add the fumigating essence and the acetic acid. Spread the mixture upon filtering or bibulous paper (blotting paper e.g.) and allow it to dry. To prevent sticking, dust - the surface with talcum, and preserve in wax paper. When used, the paper is simply warmed, or held over a larmp. n Keeping Blooms Fresh. Flowers begin to bleed as soon as they are cut, and the precious sap running out of them causes the cells to collapse immediately. To prevent this, the end of the stem must be a quickly closed, and this is best done d by searing in a flame or by placing o directly in hot water. For corsage '0 bouquets the searing process is best, although a little tedious, as each stem must be so treated. Constipation Du!ls Your Brains. T''hat dull, listless, oppresseu fteling is due to impurities in your system. I sluggish liver, eloeLr~l iutestin-s. Dr King's New I fe Pills give pr'onpt re lief. A mild, easy, non-gripiog bowel . movement will tone up your system . and help to clear your inudd', pimply e complexion. Get a bottle of Dr. Kin2's n New Life Pills today at your druggist, s 25e. A dose to night will make you cheerful at breakfast.-Adv. le _.. ..._- - - --- To Cure a Cold In One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE's signature on each box. 25c. BANK t' 1 ~ Of The Scc esfl ui is a~~l ue to ollo: yo can't go far wroncg if you walk in his :footsteps. No man of aflirs today is without a commercial bank account: no business. I however small, can altor'd to be without r one. If you have not an aceount, get inC e line for success by opening one with r 1 e9 dcGa. and Lame 1 t;: . Yoley Kidney Pills will, ir :rnen and women--quick --htthey have done for Mrs. Last. year, I got almost down with r.bc." writes Mrs;. H. T. Straynge of winsille. C'n., 1I. No. 3. "I suf a- ' .afo in :iammation of the blad e- .r t.d henv:r I stopped doctoring 1 - -:re I tried Foley Kidney I . a~ after taking them awhile - . cai-r action becamne regular and C~.inin s. nzation disappeared; m.::.-:..a-a::se : r., back than 1'ye i s:: r..- i alyers and since get 'n. w. ., tayed wcll and had : ' nurz < '':h trouble." e a r o Foley Kidney F-.:I. ei n imrprcy::mant rtdoses, showing I -- - .ct.on kidneys and et -:H bak and zidles, -Diekson's Drug Storec. of us.eful articltie l r uire',.l AFTER SIX YEARS OF SUFFERINQ Woman Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Columbus,Ohio.- "1 had almost given up. I had been sick for si: years with female troubles and nervousness. I had a pain in my right side and could not eat anything with -out hurting my stomach. I could not drink cold water at all nor eat any kind of raw fruit, nor fresh meat nor chicken. From 178 pounds I went to 118 and would get so weak at times that I fell over. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and ten days later I could eat and it did nct hurt my stomach. I have taken the medicine ever since and I feel like a new woman. I now weigh 127 pounds so you can see what it has done fo:- me alieady. My husband says he knows your medicine has saved my life." Mrs. J. S. BARLOw, 1624 South 4th St., Columbus, Ohio. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound contains just the virtues of roots and herbs needed to restore health z.nd strength to the weakened organs of the body. That is why Mrs. Barlow, a chronic invalid, recovered so completely. It pays for women suffering from any female ailments to insist upon having Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con ound. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Sour druggist will refund money if PAZO INTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching. Blind. leeding orProtruding Piles in 6to 14daya. be first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c. t. 0. IURY. K. oI.LvhK 0 sKaVAN PURDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys ounselors at Law. MANNING. S C. G. T. Floyd, SURVEYOR and CIVIL ENGINEER Office over Hirschmann's Store. LOANS NEGOTIATED On First-Class Real Estate ortgages. Purdy & O'Bryan, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Manning S. C DR. .J. A. COLE, DENTIST. jpstairs over Weinberg's Corner Store MANNING, S. C. Phone No 7 L 0. EDWARDS H. M. PERRITT SDWARDS & PERRITT, U CIVIL ENGINEERS iND SURVEYORS. Oflee Over Bank of Mat~ning. MANNING S C. V.C. DAvIS. J. w. wIDEMAN DAV1S & WIDEMAN, C A TTOR~NEYS AT LAW , MANNING. S. C. DURANT & ELLERBE. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MANNING. S. C. JOHN G. DINKINS, JEATTORNEY AT Law.* Manning, S. C. )tlice in Old Court House. . H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, M ANNING, S. C. he Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head 'lYE R~OMO QUUINfE Eibetiter thanoinary uiine and does not cause nervousness nOr ging in head. Remember the full name and >o for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 25c. RUB3 OUT PAIN with good oil linirnent. That's I the surst wzay to stop them. I Thc bes rubbing liniment iss MSTLASTA LHNMENT Good for the Ai!mnls of' Horses, Mules, Cattle, Etc. Good for ycur cwn A dhes, Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Etc. 25c. 50c. $1. At all Dealers. L-MEhR1IORN MON 1ARLESTON. S.C. Do You Own Farm Property? You have always wanted lower rates. You and your ncighbors have cried aloua for cheaper insurance. You cannot act with a wonderful degree of business judgment and at the same time build up a HOME INDUSTRY that conserves safely, fairly and get results if you will but lend your co operation. Before you renew your Fire Insurance Policies get in touch with our Represen tative and talk it over. A Home Association. Managed by conservative businessmen Can be successful and save money for its Members. if the owners of Farm Pr pcrty Will carefully investigate THE FARMERS' MUTUAL PRTECTIVE ASSOCIATION of Sumter. Clarendon and Lee Counties S. C. Sumter Trust Co. AGENT. Sumter, South Carolina. There is a Director in your township. FOR THE NEW CROP OF WHEAT OUR EX CHANGE IS AS FOLLOWS: For one bushel of clean wheat that will grade 60 lbs. to the bushel, we give 35 lbs. high flour and 12 lbs. of bran. Those who want low grade flour or shorts with their exchange, we allow 1 3 more for each pound of high grade flour, or an exchange as follows in any proportion: 30 lbs. high grade flour, 7 1 2 lbs. low grade, and 12 1-2 lbs. bran. Where all low grade is taken we allow 52 1-2 lbs and 1 1-2 lbs bran. CLARENiDON ROLLER FLOUR MILLS. A MODERN TONIC. It is recommended to Improve the Ap petite. give tone to the stomach, build up that run down condition and promote strengjth. Order a bottle today. Dickson's Drug Store The Bailey-Lebby Co Machinery. Mill and Plumbing Supplies. Automobile Supplies and Accessories. 6. & J. VEEDOL Tires and Tubes. Oils and Grease. CHARLESTON. S.C. K ~ you did yesterday. a, Make to-morrow better 't .by starting a Bank' account to-day." If. for no other reason than the unforeseen demands incident o human life, you owe yourself a Bank account. Il's a duty, because you haven't the power tolrpredict the future but yon~ have power to start a Bank account and fortify for hefuture. Basides we want to help worthyyouug men to succeed. The Bank " Wecf