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ITake The task of c many econorr there is nothi It Burns I It Cooks L It is' Econ It is Clear It is Odor] No Ashes No Green and burn. We have a k of giving you a I Rigby, F. P. Erv P1 "HARDWARE THA CONVINCED Of ANAC BY AID GIVEN 1 E Husband Says She Added Fifteen 'ink Pounds on Four Bottles 11 cif DOUBLE ENDORSEMENT de 10 Knew Tanlac Would Help Him te Greatly When He Bagan It, And e He Tells D~etalls. Cases in which two or more people a~ in the same family have been so w greatly benefitted by Tanlac that they n have offered a dlouble endorsement of -s this famous Master Medicine ared common. When you see a person re Jeved of suffering and made strong fi (n4~, It is the most natural thing in ti Sworld for you to want the same *fits. This is how Charles E. r '" t ore, of 103 Blradford St., Al- v ;, N. Y., happened to take Tanlac. 4y wife, who had been all run v *do;#n and nervous and getting weak- 1 er right along, began to take Tanlac,"i Mr. Whitmore explained. "Well, of c -- grse, I watched the results and itC Swondlerful to see the way it built jp. On four bottles she gained ~pounds. I had been dloubtful - Tanlac, 'but that settled me. wi.AI startedl Tanlac I could hard ly eat one goodl meal in a whole week. Fromf Buffering with a bad stomach I Shad become nervous and restless at night and all run down. Instead of diresting, my food would lie like lead onm my stomach and sour andl ferment and( form gas. Because I had sour stomach--acidl stomach-so long, my n outh had gotten sore. I could not pel restfully but would wvake up hour or two andI would roll and I was tiredl in the morning and -4 id-afternoon I was so tired out ijed I couldn't get through the had lost all ambition andl I dt dcare. Seeing what Tanlac had Sefrmy wvife encOuragedl me to -ike it, and I was not surprised when t began to brace me up right away. It did as much for me as it did for ler. I slept right through the night, woke up restedl, with a goodi appetite n was able to enjoy my meals. My aol digested, and the gas, bloating nvl sour stomach disappeared. I ett lIke a new man, and the old1, red(, worn out feeling wont with he rest of ray troubles." Tanna, the Master Medicine, is so1(d t~Dickson's Drug Storo, Manning; I. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw & Plow en, Now Zion; Farmers' Supply Co., ilver; D. C. Rhamo, Summorton. the Di ooking is a big one, iical household artic ng that will compare The 0 Terosene. ,ike Gas. >mical. dy. less. to Lift. Wood to try >ig Stock of these L; )emonstration. We in, I. I. Appelt, and Sowden lT WEARS" 111,688 DEATHS FROM "FLU" is is Record of Only 46 of Larger Cities of the Country. Washington, Jan. 5.-The influenza idemic which swept the country dur g the latter part of last year caused ,688 deaths in the forty-six largest ies and increased the combined ath rate for those communities in '18 to 19.6 per thousand, according statitics made public today by the naus bureau. Total. figures for the untry were not available. Baltimore, with 26.8 per thousand, ~d Nashville, with 26.4, had the high t rates .of the registration cities, hue St. Paul, with 13.9, and Min 3apolis and~ Grand Rapids, with 14 th, had the lowest. Grand Rapids owedl the smallest Increase, the lath rate for 1917 havIng been 13.1. There were 442,374 dleaths in the rty-six cities, the estimated popula on of forty-two of which aggre ated 20,514,620. There was no esti at.:s of population for the other four. 'eths from influenza totaled 69,439, ith 42,149 deaths from prneumonia. The year's total dleathi rate in New. ork was 18.6 per thousand, compared rith 15.2 for 1917; in Chicago it was 7.1, against 14.9 the year before, and i Philadelphia, where the influenza pidemfic was very severe, it was 24.2, ompared with 17.1 in 1917. NOTrICE TO CREDITORS. All persons having claims against he Estate of JTames B. Brown, de easedI, will present them dluly at ested andl those owing said Estate vil make payment to the undIersign iualifled Executor of said Estate. Redford Brown, Executor. hmmerton, S. C., Jan. 2, 1919.-3t-p. NOTICE TO CRcEDITORS. All persons having claims against i'e Estate of A. Preston Brock, de :ased, will present them duly at estedl andl those owing said ftstate vi~l make payment to the undersign iualifled Executor of saidl Estate. Lucy S. Brock, umnmerton, S. C., J1"n. 2,1993-. ADMINLTRATOR'S SALAE Pursuant to an ordler of J. M. Windham, Judge of Probate, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, an Wednesday, the 15th (lay of Jan nary, 1919, at. 11 o'clock A. M., at the residence of the late W. P. Web ber, the following personalty, one Chevrolet automobile, 130 bushiel corn, one lot of plows, 3,000 poundsE of hay, one mower, one farm bell, twe mules and one two-horso wagon. James V. Ilurgess, AdmniInis trator Kngstrco. St C(L R. F. D. -udgery and one that is genera les on the market to( a with etroit Va DETROIT ibor-Saving Stoves on refer you to some of thers. Hardu : COLDS AND GRIP C DOCTORS ADVISE 'he Improved Caomel Tablet That Is Entirely Purified of All Nause- I ating and Dangerous Qualities. Physicians are warning the public against trifling with colds, influenza and grippe. T1hey say that a brisk calomel purgative, preferably Calo tabs, the newv and improved calomel tablet, should be invariably taken at bed time and repeated the second or third night, if necessary. In the earliest stages, one Calotab is usual ly sufficient unless the case particu-t larly severe. Physicians say that it is a waste of time andl is dlangerous to experiment with other laxatives, as calomel is absolutely necessary sooner or later. One Calotab on the tongue at bed time with a swallow of water,-that's all. No salts, no nausea nor the slightest interference with diet, work or pleasures. Next morning your cold has vanished and your whole system is purified andl refreshed. Calotabs are sold only in original sealed packages. Price thirty-five cents. Recommended and guaranteed by druggists everywhere. Price re funded if you are not delightcd.-adv. CIIARGED WITH PEONAGE Abbeville Plap ter Said to Have Mlade Chfildren Work. Greenv'ille, Jan. 5.-According to statements from officials of the Untited States marshal's office here, wvho have investigated the ease and brought the charges, Jesse Barnes, a planter of A bbev ille County, has been charged with peonage, was recently bound over for trial before the federal court at a preliminary held at Abbeville, and wvill1 prob~ably be tried at the February term of the court in Greenwvood. Two negro children are involved in the case. It is alleged that Barnes forci bly assumed custodly of the children antd put them' to work on his place after their parents, wvho owed Barnes some money, had run away. A Tonic Laxative thet will remove the blie from the Liver and ceanto the System THIOROUGIILY wIthout griping or disturbing the stomach is truly a Perfect Lax ativo, LAX-F'OS WiTh- PIPSIN Is the name of a Reliable end Perfect Laxative which soon relieves Sick Headache, Dizzinesa, In digestion, Stomach Trouble, Gas and Piles caused by a Torpid Liver and Constipation. Always use a Reliable Latsativo Ia the treatment of Colds, Grip and Influenza. LAX-FOS WiTH PE.PSIN is aLiuid Digestive Tonlo LI ativo excellent in its effect on the Systemnt,3h i tonio an a a itlye tl nad a n~rcnnn 1 om nth e t pu e Pan Out C illy dreaded and cou lay, and many of tl >or Oil 6 why hand and would ap our citizens using th uare C( LROINA BOYS TO POW CROPS bor Secretary Sets Week for Signing Up EUROPE NEE)S MORE FOOD Ir. Wilson Urges Youths to Work as They I)id in War Time, for Others. William B. Wilson, Secretary of La or, has requested( the Governors of e various States to set aside the reek bcginning Monday, January 20, 919, as national enrollment week for e United Stat-s Boys' Working Re crve, that branch of the -United itates Employment Service that aidee mater ially in food prodluctions on he farms last summ er. In designation th . week of January 0-26 as enrolment week Secretary Vilson says: "The importance of setting aside a pecial week{ in order to bring to the ittention of the young men of t he iation the all but overwhelming lees of impoverished Europe is so )bvious as to require no accentuation rrom me. A vcry large part of the ask of rebuilding a djevastatedl worldl elongs to the young men of this na lon. It is not enough that the whole nation shall have been mobihized to win the great war, it is vital that the ,uole nation shall he mobilized to eip broken Europe to Its feet and to st it once more into the paths of felicitious progress. "I trut that the young men of the rountry. of sixteen years and over, not owv permanently empjloyedl, and esp)e rially the boys in our high schools, will resp~ondl to this new appeal, as they so finely respended to thsat other pal made to th m one year ago, that they wvill enter heartily into the work of bringing relief to po milations5 jpalligly destitute, and that ,they ill join the United States Boys' 1L2 sorve to finish what. las been so well egun. The war has heen won. Tho far more diflicult task remains to se cure for the fruits of victory." - ----- 0 lEAD1 IN I'RET'IING CAREER Brooklyn Paiper Recall Character istice of thme Tlwo Calhouns. (F~rom the Brooklyn Eagle.) Roscoe Conklin i. -reditedl alth s'ry ing that the careers of dJohn Cald well Calhoun, the grandlfather, and! lohn Caldtvell Calhouin, the grandson, "e~itomizedl the beginning andl the end of the great, struggle that divided this country." The deaths of the financier naturally recalls this dictum. Of Irish colonial stock, the grand father, a Yale man, a keen lawyer, p~eerless dleba ter, a genuiine sta tesmar and a patriot accordhing to his lights came to be regairdled universally a~ the father of the scheal of interpreta tion that made th'. federal Constitu *,on a W.Cre 'Xague of States froni which any member could withdraw a dhisreti'n. The germs of this theor: if Cooki nted as a drudge. The 1em that are real help tove. rou can Bake Any ou can Cook And ou can Cook a N Lie you are waitii d or coal stove to .n fact, it makes pleasure. preciate the opportunit is stove:---Charlton Dul >mpany Lucky resolutions, but Calhoun's re lentless logic in developing them won for him his distinction, enviable or unenviable. Calhoun married in Thi 1811 his cousin, Miss Floride Calhoun. The oldest son was Andrew Pickens Calhoun, father of the man who has just died. The grandfather stood for ac a slave-holding aristocracy, with no rights for a Ilelot population of 3,000,000. His character was Spartan. so His ideas were Spartan. When the Confederacy fell the ideas fell with t1 m, but the character stands in his tory. o '1 he grandlson's place in A mericantr annals is not fixed by his achieve-tr men ts as a railroad organize'r or by " his substantial success in WVall s street, but by nis instantaneous ac- 0 ceptance of the settlement of the civ il wvar, his instantaneous dletermina- th tion to use new social forces as they "'I ought to be used. lie had been a " sophomore in the South Carolina State I U niversity in 1801. lie had gone' as tol an enlisted cadet to see the bombard ment of Fort Sumter. lie had fought me ad suffered for the cause that was bl< lost. liut common sense taught him. that in the long run continued denial sI or rights and opportunities to the D) black men must be un fortunate for M the wvhole South.M keep up the flow of labor that slave selling had always before susta ined', i P from the Atlantic seab~oardl St ates to I b the M ississip~pi valley States, to keep t o is up by a strong appeal to the self- pi resp~ect andl the legitimate indlustrial tI aspi rations of the former IIe(lots. Co- A ope r'tive t enantry mnight be the sal- na vation of the cotton interest in the p Yazoo Valley The'b scheme. worked 11 I OW~hRiiORN SON CHARLESTONA, S.C. mg. re are s, but thing. thing. [eal gfora get hot. N Cooking N y very much R Zant, J. W. ANNING, S. C. A WOMAN'S BACK Advice of This Manning Woman is of Certain Value. ,any a woman's back has many ies and pa'ins. )fttimes 'tis the kidneys' fault. ['hat's why )oan's Kidney Pills are effective. 1lany Manning women know this. [lead what one has to say about it. \irs. B. F. I.oueI, Iinken St., says: had a slight attack of kidney mbhle about, three years ago which irted with snmart pajins through the all of my back. Iloeulachies bother mle a glood deal and1( sometimes I s so1 ner'vous, I couldnl~'t holld any ing flinimy hand1(. I was bothered th dlizzy spiells, too, and bhcl. i'eks often came before me, in fact, vas feeling all out of fix. A frien l dI mei about D)onn's K idney' Pills und got s01me. D~oan's not onily helped but (eured 1me entlirely of the troui as I haveni't be(en bothered since."' Price (00e, at all dlealers. D~on't uply ask for a kidney r'emiedy-tet )an's K idney Pi lls-the sameii that r's. L oudler had. Foster-MPdilburn Co., fgrs., Buffalo, N. Y .--adlv. romiises were faithfully kept. Tlo aick mn as to whiite men03, the na me Calhoun meant goodl faith, honest irpose, coniservat ive methlods. L ater vo) hig settIlmenIts were mladle inl rkanisais. AIt ogthe moreIi~l t hani 5b,000 'grots were t a .en to new fields, and rhaps1 non ever( 0'(i regrettedl the shi ift. wt'identalIly, tiut of the plrosp~erouls 3litaltin so1554 cr'eatedt, .Johin C'aldwell alhoun~l, thle grards' oni, net ted thle I1t00,000t with wvhi lhe enttered the 31a1iail field ini the mei(tropol is. Wh1en3 the com11plet e storily of thle mug stru'iggle omf thbought ful roen3 to ilve the race1 probhlem i justly and1( .3fely com~leS to lie written theit pairt f theu youniger Calhou 110 an(13tnot be i oredl. Nor' eann thle spirit oIf the (lunlger' Calhoun hile tool hii ghly raliisedI. If the South had followed Ils 'd, if invitedl ctoperat ion by negrotes istead of suppre1'ssionl had beeni the eniera~l 11olicy, mo(st (of us5 enn see ow what (list urban~lces 1mighit have een1 avoided and how muiich mior'e a polid oud hiav e been the pr'ocess f re habilitationi. IIEl~II' IS SENTI OUT Newv Yor'k, 1Dec. 31 .--ThI le fol owin able, juist rocei ved from~l Charle Y. O aites of the Amiericani ('0omm1it tee for rmi'en ianl and Syr'ian irel ief: "C(onstant inople, Dee. 27.-. -When vill the r'elief expedition fitt ing out or' Tur31key sa ilI? Gr'eatest need for imste. (Conduitionis hiere are'e no n iing Iesper'ate. TPurikey currency' much(1 de' irecitted. Exped(1it ion ship ' I' i. told, food and as much coal as' possi ile. l'housands of p(eople Iv ing of :liate regiot. Every mlonthl's delay ;rnm nom on mans 20,00 nat. "