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A x- CROSS ANCHOR NEWS OF WEEK - after eitery meal fj§ ( s i . r ‘ \ r- ■ Backache Is a Warning! Clinton Folks Are Learning How To Heed It. Are you miserable with an aching back? Do you get up lame and stiff; drag through th? day feeling tired, weak and depressed ? Then you should help your kidneys. Backache ; s often the first sign of failing kidneys. Uri nary troubles quickly ydlow. Neglect ed, there s danger of gravel, dropsy, or fatal Height's disease. Don't wait for sefhms kidney sickness! Use Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys, before it is too late. This Clintpn resident tells an experience: H. Y. Abrams, barber, 44 Academy St., says: “My kidneys acted irregu larly and sometimes the secretions were scanty in passage. My back gched’ and at times, it was an effort to stoop, as my back felt sore and itiff. 1 used several boxes of Doan’s Pills, from Young’s Pharmacy, and they were the means of relieving me.” price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t sim ply ask for a kidney remedy—get I Doan's Pills—the same that* Mr. Abrams had.' Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Farewell Service Held For Rev. and Mrs. <£. F. Root. Personal Items of Interest. Cross Anchor, Aug. 10.—A very touching farewell service was held at Yarborough's Chapel Sunday evening, August 9th, in honor of Rev. and Mrs. E. F. Root, who came here from Michigan two years ago, ajid who left Monday for Ohio where they will make their home in the immediate future. Mr. Root has served success fully Yarborough’s Chapel and Har mony church in Anderson county since coming here and has made many friends outside as well as in his own congregation, who are sorry to see him go away. In all his labors and successes, Mrs. Root has been a true help-meet, and shares with him the friendship of those with whom they came in contact while here. Words of hearty appreciation of the lives and work of Mr. and Mrs. Roo^ were spoken by jthe other local pastors, Rev. James X. Barrett of the Methodist Episcopal church,, and Dr. J. W. H. Dyches of the Baptist church. Mr. Root responded beautifully, express ing his abiding love for the South and southern people. Miss Gladys Briggs, of Atlanta, has returned to her home after an extend ed visit to her cousin, Miss Loree Simmons. J. J. Brock, of Union, is the guest of his daughter, Mrs. Charlie Lamb. Roy Taylor, who is working in Greenville during his vacation from Furman, was at home for a few days last week. Boyd Bobo and Mrs. Bobo arc spending a few days this week at the home of the latter’s father, th^ Rev. -r H K* Ezell. Poultry Wanted^ The Clinton Produce . Company , Mrs. S. P. Hair and children, of Fountain Inn, are visiting Mrs. Alice Webb. Prof. Boyce Ezell, of Stetson Uni versity, DeLand, Fla., and his family, ar$ spending the summer at .their home here. Miss Virginia Barber, of Fort Mill, is the guest of Miss Martha Dyches at the Baptist pastorium. Clarence Wilson, of Nashville, Tenn., after visiting his father, Mr. Lon Wilson, left Saturday for a visit to his sister in Atlanta. The Rev. and Mrs. E. F. Root, fhe Rev. O. B. Wilson of Thomasville, N. and the Rev. and Mrs. H. K. EzefFwrre dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Yarborough on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dyches, Mrs. Mary Dyches and Mr. Jones, of Co lumbia, Mrs. J. B. Ross and Miss - -r: JOHN T. GRAVES DIES AT CAPITAL Offers the following prices for!J u l ia of Barnwell, Osborne Bar- Poultry: Hens .... 18c lb. Fryers .... 25c lb. Roosters 7c per lb. Delivered at their plant in Clin ton. Prices will change weekly. The above prices are for the Coming week. RENT A CAR Drive Yourself Widely K—urn Writer Born At Abbe- viT*. .Wm Speaker of Flrat Rank, Anther and Editor. Washington, August 8.—The body of 4phn Temple Graves, widely known Southern writer, who died here' early today, was on its way tonight to Atlanta, where funeral services will be held Monday. The body was accompanied by mem bers of the family who had ' been called here several days ago when Mr. Graves’ condition became critical and hope for his recovery was practically abandoned. Death came after an illness of sev eral weeks of a complicatien of dis eases, the most serious of which was hardening of the arteries. He was unconscious p^great part of the time during the last few days. Funeral services id Atlanta will be conducted by the Rev. Dr. Dunbar Ogden, acting paStor of the Central Presbyteriad Church of that city. John Temple Graves was a grand son °f William, the eldest brother of John ,p. £alhoun, and his father, James Porterfield Graves, was a gen eral in the Confederate army. He was .a distinguished jnember of the Southern literary group. He was graduated from the Univer sity of Georgia in 1875 after winning a college reputation as 3 debater. His inclination for oratory continued and he became known throughout the nation as a speaker of the first rank, as a writer and as an editor. In 1905 Col. Graves entwred^the campaign for United States semftor from Georgia, but withdrew on ac count of ill health. « He was the can didate of the National Independence p^rty for Vice President in 1908. Among the editorial posts Held by Col. Graves were those on the old Florid* Union, Atlanta Daily Journal, Rome(Ga.) Tribune, Atlanta"Georgian, New York American and West Palm Beach Post. In addition he contrib uted to many other publications. The inscription on the monument of Henry W. Grady at Atlanta, “And when he died he was was literally loving a nation to pieces,,” came from a funeral oration delivered by Col. Graves over the body of the famous Georgia editor. Col. Graves was the author of many books, his writings tending toward WHAT IS a SPRAIN? , 1 I ♦' .1 « ' ^ I DR. KRBDKRM7K R. JMItav KRK7X R •# “MBA liTH* A LADY going down the street on a winter morning, stepped on a slip pery, icy spot, treacherously covered over by loose, newly fallen snow. She krent down,she felt a shnrp, tearing pain In one ankle. When she had been helped to her fwt, she found she couldn’t bear any weight on that foot. When she got home and removed her shoe, she found that her ankle was swollen, extremely painful, dark red wlttp" ' “black and blue” blotches below and behind the “ankle bone." It was sev eral weeks before she was ahl£ to walk and several months before she was free from pain. Yet to nil her Inquiring friends she made the cheer ful response: **Oh, no, nothing hmkeu, fortunately. Only a sprain." Many people cherish the delusion that in a sprain nothing. Is broken. The Joint Is only “strained.’’ So It Isn’t anything to worry about or to’ give any great amount of rare. If told that, as the result of a fall, they had broken a bone, thejN^re unite pre pared to go to bed, to Rave a sur geon make a careful examination, to wear a splint ora cast as long as may be necessary, and 4o keef the limb «»r the Joint-quiet until the bones have grown together. But a sprain is nothing to • wqgte any time over, he ft song of sixpence, one is dry^. bur and twenty bar Unis, A yelping for minee pie, - When the pie was opened, Those birds began to .sing, Sweet Adeline' and Old Ben Bolt, Hoo-ray—the very thing. cause “nothing is broken. historical subjects. One of the lastU*!^ structures are torn, the blood Now the truth is that, in many cases, a sprain is Just as serious and deserves Quite us much care as a fracture. For in any sprains of any consequence something is broken quite as much as in a fracture. Only it is muscles, tendons and .ligaments, instead of bone. \ i ■ 4 . Every Joint' has three kinds of, structures by which the bones which form it are held together. The/se are the ligaments or ties which ruh from one bone to another; the synovial membrane dr suck’ which surrounds the whole Joint, to hold the lubricat ing fluid. Ju$t as the crank case sur rounds the gears in the auto; and the tendons or cords of the muscles which move the Joint. In the normal Joint, all these are tight, smooth and easily working. But when the Joint Is violently twisted, as in n fall or a wrench, any or all.of DEVELOPING Let us do yours; our work is absolutely guar anteed. ' SADLER-OWENS PHARMACY- AT UNION STATION TEL. <04 \ ft “Why, But For This Glo rious Medicine I Don’t See How I Could Do Housework Today, Much Less Feel 'So Splendid,” Says Colum bia Woman. and chest I couldn’t sleep. I tried co many treatments without results that I was alarmed over my con dition. “But, oh. what a bleeding four bottles of this wonderful Karnak has been to me, I began improv ing from the vary start, and now all that awful gaj and indigestion has entirely gone. The pairs have disappeared from my .side and chest and I eat just Whatever I - “I don’t believe I would even be, able to be up and doing my house-< want^and as much as I want now : & 2a. 1_ _ V. * i ? /» ! £ 3 V* -* »■» y-w ai i to v work today if it hadn’t been for' without it hurting me one moment this glorious medicine, Karnak, afterward. And nights I simply ~ * Te 1 1 much less feeling so splendid,” de clares Mrs. Daisy Moore, 6f 128 sleep like a child. ep UKG ‘It just seenvi almost like n Sumpter St., Columbia, fe. C. miracle that four ly-ltl'M of ICan did suTer from inui- 1 'iak could have done whnt it ’m? OPEN AND CLOSED CARS DAY PHONE 357 NIGHT PHONE 156 Ellis Auto livery J. B. FRONTIS JEWELER ber, Misses Virginia and Louise Bar beri and. Miss Evelyn Mills of Fort Mill, were guests of the Rev. J. W. H. Dyches and Miss Martha on Thurs- (Jay. J. W. O’Shields and family of Bo- gansville, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Brewington Sunday night. L. B. Templeton, superintendent of the Piedmont schools, was the guest last week of his father, L. B. Templet- ton, Sr. Kerfoot Burch, of Clover, Va., is the guest of Garland and Gregory Dychqs. Miss Agnes Dixon has returned to h$r home at Seneca after a tw6 Weeks’ visit to her brother, W. P. Dixon, of the agricultural department of the Cross Anchor high school. Dr. J. W. JJyches, pastor 'bf New Hope Baptist church, has gone to Clover, Va., to join Mrs. Dyches and the children at the home of C. A. Gregory,, Mrs. Dyches’ father. Misses Mabel and Dorothy Wingo of Inman, are guests this week of their aunt, Mrs. R. W. Poole. Ed Purdy's Philos “Pete Ralston got Marne Dunkin so mad the other night she cried—on his shoulder.” i CLINTON. 8. C. SWIM IN LAKE THOMAS public posts he held was as resident commissioner for the Lincoln Memo rial here. Col. Graves was sixty-nine years old and was born in Abbeville County, S. C. The funeral services and burial will be at Atlanta, Ga., on Monday.' Interment will be in Park View Cem etery. No services will be held here. A firm advocate of the doctrines of the Christian faith. Col. Graves, durihg the last few months, had dis played an intense interest in the con troversy surrounding the evolution theory, terming himself an “old-fash ioned Christian.” He was a member of the Presbyterian Church and had urgently declared that religion was the needed element in modern life. One of his most widely heralded lec tures wa's on this topic. Because of his eloquence, Col. Graves early in his life was prevailed upon by Chautauqua managers to make speaking tours. During these tours he delivered addresses in al most every important town in the country. Among his most noted lec tures were the “Reign 'of the Dema gogue,” “The Twerftieth Century Woman,^ “Aaron Burr,” and “Arma geddon.” “The most eloquent man in the South,” was the tribute of Robert G. Ingersoll to Col. Graves, despite their widely divergent views on religion. Col. Graves’ most notable volumes were “History of Florida of Today, “History of Colleton, South' Carolina “Twelve Standard Lectures,” “Plat- jrn. the vessels are ruptured as tb& bones are pulled apart, hemorrhage takes place under the skin, just as in a bruise or a black eye, and injury is donp to the* joint which may take weeks dr months to heal. /<£). 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) SWEET DREAMS For Mosquitoes 35c the bottle. SADLER-OWENS PHARMACY AT UNION STATION TEL. 400 “Oh, how T did gulTer from indi-‘ !ia k could have done what it C on and gastritis for the past 1 - 01 * me. I can never p.^ise it years.* I had Just gotten in 1 enough and I wane to hejj every such a wretched state of health TI person I can find oat about this didn’t know what to do. The gas I wonderful medicine.” ^ pains in my chest and around my heart were so terrible I just felt ike I like 1 would smother. And nights, I had such fearful paind in my side]. Karnak U mM in Clinton exclusively by Sadler-Owen* Pharmacy; in Craaa Hill by Craas Hill Pharmacy; and by the lead- in ever in* dru**Uts sry town. Am Why Wouldn’t It Be A Dandf Plan .. r -1 For you and the undersigned to have a mutual understanding? - You tell us that you want your clothes cleaned, repairej^or pressed better than it has ^ver been done before and weil under stand what you mean—and do it. Our method of pressing clothes is sani tary and we absolutely guarantee .unex celled results. Buchanan’s Pressing Club Phone No. 28 Opposite Bailey’s Bank Blonde Bess Opines “One yirtw may c0T« k multitude. forni of Xoday> . ..gpeeihe. end S« of sms—which is more than can — for Schools” and “The said of bathing suits.”. ^HAT DO P, S. /*- JEANS DO? W A NTS A New York embalmer met a widow pt the undertaker’s parlor, they fell in love and married in four days. Everything is easy when you know how. lectiona Negro.” ^ ' / Surviving Col. Graves are his wid ow, Mrs. Anne Cothran Graves; two daughters, Mrs. Frederick Tompkins of New York, and Amy Graves, and thre$ sons, John Temple, Jr., James De Graffenreid*. of Palm Beach, Fla., !oth 666 and Cotnran Calhoun, of Greenville, S. C. is a prescription for Malaria, Chills and ’ Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever. It kills the germ. Rates for advertising in this column sre one cent per word for each inser tion, with a minimum charge of 25c, payable invariably in advance. NOTICE—We sell bagging and ties. Buy cotton seed and gin cotton. J. Blalock’s Ginnery, Clinton, S. C WHAT DO P. S. JEANS > DO? Unde John FOR SALE—Elberta peach trees, Pinson apple trees, budded paper shall pecan trees; also flowers of all kinds. Write or see me fir prices. H. E. Madden, Clinton, S. C. 8-13-2tp Electric Range Demon- T ;istration Thursday and L_ Friday, August 13th and 14th. Parrott-Electric. WHAT DOES C. A. OWENS DOT- MOVES HOUSES. 8-27-4tp FOR RENT—One 7-room house on Centennial street. Apply to Huglj B. Workman at Workman Co., x Clin- ton, S. C. — *—tt -V i LOST—On Aug. 5, brown leather suit case near Newberry on Colum- feift-Laturens highway. Reward if re- ^gntod to Chronicle office. 8-13-2tp PARENTS- % | ais WAVIl* JkliajUXll BI Before tne child enters into pert swimmin’ she’s a While the bathin’ suits this season) ia creatin’ quite a atir, bein' narrower and thinner—like, an’ shorter than they were; the fashion-makers tell us they’re rumtin’ true to fofrn, tho there’s nothin’ mtfti about ’em that would keep a person warm, j < My little niece is freckled some— but Lordy she’s a peach,—she’s the finest gal I reckon, on our local bath- br* beach! Though she does no ex- r iwerful hand rush the un- they are not working under eye strain. To learn the condition of your children's eyes consult us. DRS. SMITH & SMITH \ Optometrists Office: Smiths Pharmacy Clinton, S. C. der-tow an' bust it all to smalh. I priced a suit the other day^t Blazer’s Racket Store—where they have bathin’ suits galore! But my fig- ger’s short and pudgy, though my curves is fairly cute, I reckon I’d be blushin’ if I wore a bathin’ suit An’ they may be mighty cfltssy %s the fashion-folks declare—I never liked a coverin’ that I didn’t know was there. \ J;' - / /• . JU lvl I. »■ I. IU. 1.4.11- W4.». ♦. Wb W «.». b M. W-t