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U1o4 to Childless Women. 4:no the virtues of Lydia E. tham a Vegetable Compound is the ttoi to correct sterility in the -f many women. This fact is 4btablished a* evidenced by the ing-letter and hundreds of others e published in these colums. Rai Bluff, Mo.-"I want other n to know what a blessing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound has been to me. We had always wanted a baby in our home but I was in poor health and not able to do my work. My mother and hus band both urged me totry Lydia E.Pink h am' s Vegetable } Compound. I did so, my health im roved and I am now the mother of a de baby girl and do all my own house Pok."-Mrs. ArLIA B. TIMMONS, 216 .limond St., Poplar Bluff, Mo. In many other homes, once childless, here are now children because of the set that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ompound makes women n or m al, ealthy and strong Write to the Lydia E. PI kham Medi ne Co., Lynn, Mass. r advice-it 11 be confidential and he ful, SIT JURY FOR JUNE TE M COURT Edwin. R. Plowden, lcolu. M. B. Geddings, Pax ille. E. W. Cutter, Jordan. D. W. Barwick, Alcolu. C. G. Lee, Manning. R. T. Geddings, Davis Atation. C. W. Brsdham, Davis Station. R- .Watt, Sununertori. R. 'T. HArrington, Manning. J. C. Land, Foreston. C. H. Baggett, Wilson. W. R. Jenkinson, Pinewood. Fl. M. Thomes, Manning. W. D. A)sbrook, St. Paul. . P. H honey, Silver. W.. E. aniels, Alcolu. L. M. J stus, Wilson. C. C. ay, Silver. T. L. Foyd, Turbeville. II. E. DuRant, Alcolu. J. R. Walker, Manning. C. T. Dingle, Su merton. Ii. P. Hardy, Ne Zion. W. D. Scurry, nning. J.'.Scott Burgess, Sardinia. M. F. B rfield, Lake City. W.'XI. CStine, Turbeville. . M. Appelt, Jordan. J. H. Rigby, Manning. J. Elbert Davis, Davis Station. T. E. Turbeville, Turbeville. A. E. Brock, Summerton. C. B. Barrett, Silver. M. B. Barrettt, Silver. M. B. Hudnal, Manning. H. B. Richardson, Summerton. J. H. King, St. Paul. SECOND WEEK JURORS. R. H. Green, Turbeville. John Henry DuBose, New Zion. S. L: Touchberry, Silver, S. C. .C Richardson, Jr., Summerton, I. B. Harrington, New Zion, S. C. RI. D. White, Alcolu. A.. B. Windham, Manning. R. M. Brailsford, Pinewood. W. J. Baker, New Zion., R. C. Wells, Manning. I. D. Beatson, Manning. F. E. Tennant, Summerton. I'. M. Davis, Manning. EI. J. Haley, Manning. B. -E. Chandler, Manning. I. B. Bush, New Zion. Fames H. Touchberry, Paxville. 3. H. Mathis, Maning. I.'~M. Player, Turbeville. r. S. Tobias, Wilson. ['. L. Wolfe, Manning. V. T. Briggs, Silver.* r. 0. Lander, Wilson. L. A. Hall, Manning. Laron Abram, Manning. V. P. Welch, Turbeville. '. N. Ridgill, Manning. .C. Dennis, Turbeville. ~. Henry Curtis/ Paxville. ~. H.f~kton, -S'unmmerton. . L. Broadway, Jr., Manning. M. Hicks, New Zion. .- C. Gross, Manning. .H. Touchberry, Remini. .M. Gibbons, New Zion. Pays 25c a Month l'or Perfect Health For 25 years, E. A. Little Bessnemer, 'e healt. Road what ho tayalo npr G1 nr oadcy un~~to ranger lte If~tt biov no n acovhormllo roa arIhwighly r eede for alckre w i ilt us nes a nd rall fanga Lieregir o rmpl 'atYour drug-o dG uprangera ox Lse Seier htanos e PEANUT V ALUMALI FOR lOD SUPPLY With Irish Potato It Makes Well Balanced Ration for Family. Peanuts after grain as an emer gency food supply is recommended to Charleston county farmers by C. F. Niven, agricultural secretary of the Chamber of Commerce and county demonstration agent, in line with in formation and suggestions on the sub ject which Mr. Niven recently re ceived from the extension division of Clemson College. Mr. Niven has been urging the planting of more peanuts and the information contained in the bulletin received from Clemson Col lege is a new argument. That any family would be well fed with practically a balanced ration, if it had only Irish potatoes and pea nuts three times a day, is one of the statements contained in this bulletin, which is as follows: The peanut will furnish more costly food elements, for human or live stock than any crop that can be plant ed during June and early July. It is rich in protein, which is a substitute for meats; rich in carbohydrates, a substitute for white bread; rich in oil, which is a substitute for butter or other fats required by the human or animal system. Any vigorous family would be well fed with practically a balanced ration, if it had only Irish potatoes and peanuts three times a day. Both crops can be planted on grain lands up to July 15, that being probably the ideal time for planting potatoes for fall crop. The White Spanish peanut is the most prolific variety, and can be grown in rows 24 to 30 inches wide and 6 to 8 inches in the drill. After turning the stub ble, thoroughly harrow with smooth 'ing harrow, and plant nuts, on a level using 900 to 600 pounds of a mixture of two-thirds of 16 per cent acid phosphate and one-third of cottonseed meal. If it rains before the nuts are up, by all means run the smoothing harrow or weeder over the field to kill all germinating rass and weed seeds and to conserve moisture. Shal lowly cultivate after 'each rain, and when nuts are mature rup a one-horse plow (with mould board or "wing" removed) tinder each row. Allow to 'wilt and then stack around polls about 5 to 6 feet high (after nailing two 'strips crosswise of poll, about 8 inches from ground) with nuts toward the poll. Cap well with grass, or other similar material, and let stand about four weeks, or until dry. Haul to barn, remove nuts for family use, or feed tops and nuts to livestock. 0 Sloan's Liniment for Rheumatism The pain goes so quickly after you apply Sloan's Liniment for rheumatic pains, neuralgia, toothache, lumbago, sprains, and its so easy to use. It quickly penetrates and soothes with out rubbing and is far cleaner and more effective than mussy plasters or ointments. Keep a bottle in the house and get prompt relief, not only from all nerve pains but from bruises, strains, sprains, over-exercise andl all external aches. At your dIruggist, 25c, 50c, $1.00.--adv. MILK WAGON IS NEWEST BLIND Atlanta, Ga., .June 17.--Atlanta po lice andl detectives have uncovered so many clever dlodges for evading the prohibition lawv that they are super stitious of any sort of vessel capable of containing a liquid. For example, a milk wagon speeds5 along a prominent thoroughfare in the early morning hours. "John .Jonee, Dairyman, Pure Milk and Butter," or some such legend is emblazonedl on the side 'of the auto. The body is filled with milk cans. None hut an expert in the art of catching tigers would give that vehicle a secondi look. If he did, and if he examined it tak ing off the lids of the milk cans, he would find nothing but milk. But an experiencedl big bamie hun ter~ versedl in the ways of the tiger wvould go dleeper than the milk. lHe would pour~ out the milk and reach down into the can pind lift out the false top), atnd underneath the false top) he would find a fiv'e-gallon jug of blockade liquor. The Beauty Secret. Ladies desire that irre sistible charm---a good - complexion. Of course they d or .twish others to know a beautifier f "'has been used so they buy a bottle of Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDE R and use according to simple direecions. Improve. rne is noticed at once. Soothing. cooling and refreshing. Heals Sunhurn, stops Tan. Pink. White. Rose-Red. 75c. ct 1)~ruggists or by, mall dINeD. Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. Lyon Mfi. Co. 40 So..th Fith t., n-uoln N.Y. And Was Run-Down, Wek and Nervous, Says Florida .LIdy. Five Bottles of Cardul Made Her Well. IKathleen, .Pla.-Mrs. Dallas Prine, of this place, saysy' "fter the birth of my last child...I got very much run-down and weakened, so much that I could hardly do anything at all. I was so awfully nervous that I could scarcely endure the least noise. My condition was getting worse all the time... I knew I must have some relief or I would soon be in the bed and in a serious. condition for I felt so badly and was so nervous and weak I could hardly live. My husband asked Dr. about my taking Cardul. He said, 'It's a good medicine, and good for that trouble', so he got me 5 bot tles.. .After about the second bottle I felt greatly improved. .,before taking it my limbs and hands and arms would go to sleep. After taking it, however, this poor circulation disap peared. My strength came back to me and I was soon on the road to health. After the use of about 5 bqt ties, I could do all my house-wdrk and attend to my six children be sides." You cati feel safe in giving Cardul a thorough trial for your troubles. It contains no harmful or habit-forming drugs, but is composed of mild, vege table, medicinal ingredients with no bad aftereffects. Thousands of women have voluntarily written, telling of the good Cardul has done them. It should help you, too. Try it. it 74 DRYING OUT AND PRESERVING VEGETABLES FOR WINTER USE Cheap and Effective Method-String and Lima Beans So Treated. A method of drying out and pre serving various kinds of vegetables at almost no expense ivas recently demonstrated to a number of county agents in the home demonstration laboratory at the Chamber of Com merce by, an expert of the Depart ment of Agriculture. This method is not known in this country to any ex tent, although it has been used for some years with great success and profit in France and Denmark. The details of the plan have not yet been published in full, but Miss Pearl Na pier, home demonstration secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, has re ceived from Winthrop College some written instructions on the drying and preserving of string beans and lima beans by this method. These instructions are as follows: All varieties of string beans can be dried. If desired to dry them whole, use only young string beans. Wash and string, put in wire basket or cheese cloth bag and blanch in boiling water from 6 to 10 minutes, depending on the age of beans. If it is desired to preserve the green color, add 1-2 teaspoonful of soda to each gallon of blanching water. Drain well and spread on cloths or in sun shine, in order to remove the surface moisture. Place on dlrying trays and put in evaporator or oven at 110 de grees. Slowly increase temperature to 140 or 145 (degrees (in about 1 to 1 1-2 hours) and finish drying at this tempeiature. They wvill (lry in about 2 to 2 1-2 hours. If string beans are a little 01(1 (one-half to three-quarters grown) wash andl string, slice in one-quarter inch strip~s crosswise, blanch and (dry as above. The old1 string beans (not ripe) are hulled or shelled, blanched in boiling water six minutes and dlriedl as above. Lima beans, if young and tender, are blanched 5 to 6 minutes; if full growvn, andl still not hard, 8 to 10 minutes (increasing the heat more slowly in order not to dIry a hard (-rust on outsidle) and dIry as above. When dIrying is complete and while the vegetables are warm, they are very brittle, which soon (disap pears wvith exposure to the air. Then they are packed away in woodl or tin boxes lined wvith parchment paper and with parch ment pap;er betwveen layers, each layer being about one-. h fi inch thich. It is very essential hait dried vegetables be packed close ly andl the package closed, not to be opened until ready to be usedl. To use. merely soak in cold water. The heat must, to commence with, lxe 110 d)(egre'es Fahrenheit (or 43 (de :r('es cent igradle), increasing to 145 le'grees F. (or 0i3 dlegrees C.). In order to take the correct temper ature of the oven or evaporator for (irying fruits and vegetables, put a thermomete'r in a cylinder glass fill e3d with sweet oil, cooking oil, or olive oil, and set in the oven. RESEIIVE OFFICEitS FINE HOD)Y OF' MEN Atlanta, Ga., .June 17.-An army oflicer of high rank wvho has inspected the training school for officers at Fort McPherson, declared them to be the inest body of men he ever sawv, and his estimate of them brings up theo fact that in the membership of the ffteen companies arc represented'h Florida families Joseph Brown Connally,' -Atlanta bachelor and social favorite, nephew of one' Georgia governor and grand son of another, is there with a 60 pound pack on his back, sweating and hiking and studying and drilling. Two nephews of former. Governor John H. Slaton are there, while an other was prevented from entering the school by an jstigmatism, and a fourth by a recent attack of pneu monia, from which he is now recov ered and has ahplied again. These young men are grandsons of a chief justice of the state, and- great-grand sons of Governor James Jackson. Everyone of their name who is eligi ble has either entered or applied for entrance. Robert F. Maddox, millionaire bank president and former mayor of At lanta, has a son in the training school, who left his studies at Harvard to enter, being barely within the mini mum age limit of 20 years and 9 months. Erwin McIntyre, a prominent and wealthy gentleman from Thomasville, Ga., is wearing the red and white hat cord of the officers' reserve corps training school. More than sixty Atlanta lawyers within the eligible ages are undergo ing the intensive training, their prac tice and future prospects left behind, What is true of Georgia is true also of Alabama and Florida. These states may rest assured that their standards will be borne on the battle fields of France, in the great war for human liberty, without dishonor. - - o LAD MEETh DEATH IN A VERY PECULIAR MANNER Spartanburg, June 15.-Lester Tay lor, the eleven-year-old son of J. E. 'Taylor, a prominent resident of Fair forest, near this city, was killed this afternoon when a stack of cakes in the cake room of the Fairforest Oil Company fell on him and crushed him almost into a pulp. The boy was a visitor in the mill and had gone into the cake' room, where large cakes are made from cotton seed preparatory to mixing them for cotton seed meal. While standing near a tall stack of tliese cakes the stack fell, catching 'him beneath it. The stack weighed ab ;it 700 pounds. Stylepus $17 Clothes . D i O 111 MR6~EIU iA No Better Style No matter what you pay, you cannot beat Style plus Clothes $17, for style. Guarantee in the pocket -you must be satisfiecd. All wool fabrics, variety in color and pattern, tailored right. $17-the price again remnains the same. D. Hirschmnann Manning, S. C. "- f 'B GERAN 1UI BOAT. Tank Steiier, Moireni. Sunk After Two Hours' Running Battle With U-Joat. GERMAN PRAISES SKIPPEI One Man .Reported Drowned. and. Wireless Operator DIes of Heart Failure. Washington, 'June .15.-Ameritap naval gunners have met tlfeir first defeat in open fight with a German submarine. Official dispatches today. announced the destruction of the tank, steamship Moreni, abandoned ablaze. June 12 by her crew and armed guard after a desperate runnihg fight in the war zone, which cost the lives of four of her crew. Half an hour aftei- the tanker had - been sent to the bottom her forty three, survivors, including all of the, members of the armed guard, were picked up with thlir life boats by a' passenger steamer. The conm mander had set them adrift after congratu lating the American skipper upon his. game fight and having the wounded men treated by the submarine's sur- I geon. At Long Range. The submarine began the action at a range of 8,000 yards, four nautical miles, when she hardly was visible to the steamer without glasses. Pre senting virtually no target herself, she sent 200 shells at the big tanker, making many hits, while the Ameri can gunners wasted 150 shots without harming the speck from which the deadly hail came. Naval officials assumed that the submarine was armed with the six inch rifles mounted by most of t:he newest undersea boats. No statement was available tonight as to the arma ment of the Moreni, nor as to whether she was one of the vessels that sailed without waiting full equipment, in cluding a range finder. The failure of the gunners to get the submarine was attributed generally to the long range and small target. The action of the submarine con-. mander\in treating his vanquished op ponents with such unexpected cour tesy was the subject of much com ment. Germany has proclaimed her intention to treat British armed mer chant crews as pirates. In this case even the naval blue jackets and their officers, properly prisoners of war, were set free, along with the merchant crews. The story is told in this statement by the State Department: "The Department of State is in formed of the sinking o fthe Ameri can tank steamer Moreni, abrut r o'clock on the morning of June 12, after a two-hour running fight with a German submarine. "An oiler, Edward Cunningham. of ( Brooklyn, was drowned while escap ing to a boat. Wireless Operator G. - Curran, Jr., of New York, died of heart failure in the life boat, and one seaman, E, Moustner, was injured by gunfire and dlied in a life boat. Fire man A. Geeisen also (lied of wvoundls. These last two were treatedl by the - surgeon of the submarine. Praised by Germans. "The German submarine captain congratulatedl the American captain upon the splendid fight he had made. "Half an hour after the vessel was sunk the crewv was picked up by a passing steamer. Forty-three of the original crew of forty-seven were landed. Six of these were slightly hurt and1 placed in a hospital. All the gunners were savedl. "The vessel was first fired upon from an estimatedl distance of 8,000 yards& at 4 o'clock. The steamer, which wvas armed and carriedl a gun crew, returnedl the shots, andl at tempited to escape. There wvas a light breeze and smooth sea. The submarine was hardly visible. After 150 shots in reply to sonme 200 shots fired by the submarine, the crew' abandloned the vessel, which was all aletaking to the Ollife boats in a New York, June 15.-The Moreni, a tank steamship of 4,045 tons gross,i owvned by the Standlard Oil Company, of New York, sailed from here Mayl1 for Baton Rouge, La.; whence she de parte~d for Leghorn, Italy. She was last. reportedI passing Gibraltar June 12, the day she was sunk. The Moreni wvas commanded by Capt. Thomas Tfhos. pson. (roup, Whooping-Cough Relieved Children's diseases dlemandl prepar edness. When the child awakes you at night, gasping and strangling for breath, howv thankful you are to havo Dr. Bell's Pine-Trar-Hloney at hand. y This eff'ective remedy loosens the mu- t cous and permits free andl natural e C the irritated membrane andl arrests further inflammation. Pleasant to E take. Keep Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey C in the house for all colds and bron chial troubles. At your dIruggist, 25c. t ..-.ndv. }r1Yty s S 4tS 1' l .1ihe in t's Rijkt Il the Pot and Cup Bopl Blend Cok ee is not 'nly " ight" when it ij utip to tin, butthe ti, k p 1 the original eshnes and exquisit flavor for you to- enjoy Bo cul Coffee is not a mere mixture of different kinds but a most skillful BLkND of the best coffees, pro ducing delicious flavor and delicate aroma. At All Good Grocers WM. S. SCULL CO. Established 1858 CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY .DR. J. A. COLE, Dentist, Upstairs Over Weinberg's Corner Store, MANNING, S. C. Phone No. 77. G. T. FLOYD, Surveyor and Civil Engineer, Office Over Hirschmann's Store. LOANS NEGOTIATED, 1n First-Class Real Estate Mortgages PURDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys at Law, MANNING, S. C. J. NY. WIDEMAN Attorney at Law MANNING, S. C. ifilees' Adjoining "The Herald" Bldg. W. C. DAVIS Attorneys at Law, MANNING, S. C. DuRANT & ELLERBE, Attorneys at Law, MANNING, S. C. JOHN G. DINKINS, Attorneys at Law, MANNING, S. C. Office in Old 'Court House. J. H. LESESNE, Attorney at Law, MANNING, S. C. 0 . Purdy. S. Oliver O'Bryan. PURDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. WI-EAT IS LAX-FOS LAX-F0S IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA A DIGESTIVE L.AXATIVE CATHARTIC AND LIVER TONtC ,Ax-FoB is not a Secret or Patent Medi ine but is composed of the following Id-fashioned roots and herbs: CASCARA BARK BLUE FLAG ROOT RHUBARB ROOT BLACK ROOT MAY APPLE ROOT SENNA LEAVES AND PEPSIN n L~x-Fos the CA scAnA is improved by lie addition of these dligestive ingreda nts making it better than ordinary CAS ARA, and thus the combination acts not nly as a stimulating laxative and cathar le but also as a digestive and liver tonic. iyrup laxatives are weak, but LAX-Fos ombines strength with alatable,'aro iatic taste and does not rieor disturb lie stomach. One botl will prove ,AX-Fos is invaluable for Constipation, nuditon or 'rpidu iver. Prfc 30c