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Mix Van M. IMl, with at < VvlugUA), Ky.. Ik Hit' only womivji f?l t'ral oourt ivtiumUwiomT in AUwrloa. tfhu Jim* h?*hl that uffiw more than j?in?> year-, ?h'1u# uWw Iii licr third < 4?iiM'0?jtlv<- form. S?>*? has n-hsl in ihat tine d?*f*udtnU in ? v. i> stirt erf crime uffubint federal ?t*t ut?'K except murderer*. Tbiuk of it ! The Canadian pro \Iii.vh ?re to have tor <Ue first time hi hlntory t'heir own divorce court*, if h t>ill iK-fon- the dominion parliament in pmwj, Products oftke The Secret of Bread Making lit's in the quality of the flour you use. Un less you are certain of the excellence of the 1 flour, you can never b$ sure of the success of your bakings. PIEDMONT PURITAN ARGUS SELF-RISING FLOURS are the products of fifty years experience in making flours of exceptional excellence and unvarying quality. Only the best, Red Winter Wheat is used in their manu fauture. That's why these famous brands are being used year after year by careful housewives. ? Aak Your Grocer For The?e Famous Brandt Today THE PIEDMONT MILLS INC. HiKh-Cirade Ke<I Winter Wheat Flour Lynchburg, Va. JUST RECEIVED CAR LOAD OF CHEVROLET Touring Cars George T. Little Introduce "GREEN FLAG" to Your Motor Your power plant will be powerfully well pleased to have yon introduce "GREEN FLAG" Motor Oil to its ciiing system and make them regular "pals" by continued acquaintanceship. DON'T DF.LAY THIS INTRODUCTION ! Go to the "Green Flag" dealer tcd&y and have your cranlc c*?e drainer! and re-filled v .th the m oper cjrade of "CREEN F LAG" f>.r OUR cr", pnd r-??uk? \<r. i positively nriaTe vo\ You'll discover NEW I'OWSR, SMOOTHER PERFORM ANCE. QU. C Kr'.R RESPONSE, a--,d immrnielr inprovc operation in Ev'IiRV i*A R i ? ?~UL Ail. N> t a tcr.rporrry i:r provement, but one that'll ?tick a* long a* you u*e "Gree. Flag." Co-" n i n ? *. hrrin w.th C o % t -i ! A ? i ? k ? r n 6 Supplied by Hit following well-*ncw& deaierii \,W (or Green fit IT (>nr Compound ?"? Cup CfMM Rembert Garage, Rembert, S. C. Kershaw Motor Company, Camden, S. C. Mays' Garage, Bethune, S. C. Walters and McGuirt, Cassatt, S. C. THAT SOUND IN THE NIGHT % . "* * " 11 'T ? ' Nothing 80 Very Terrible, but at Uaal Henry Fsund Out Just What CauHd It It certainly waa ? strange sound? oven though at midnight all sounds are strange. Mrs. Meektou nudged her husband haul. "llenry," nhe whispered, loudly, "wake up at once, and go downstairs! It sound* like burglars I" "Yrs, my dear," replied Henry, nervously. "But 1 don't-?1 " "If you don't go at i>nce," stated bit better half, "1 will go myself I" MI sball certainly go, Maria," Henry said with dignity ; then bo added, "If I hear it again." "No, go now," ordered Maria, "or~I shall shriek for the police, aud tell thero that you made uo attempt to capture the thieves I" "Very well," replied Henry, through trembling lips; "but let me kiss you and the baby before 1 go, and when he grows up tell him that his brave daddy Jumped out of bed one bitter night and boldly attacked several armed burglars and fought with them till he was overpowered and ? " "Q-o-o-oh, Henry, there It Is again I Go at once 1" yelled Maria, giving him a mighty push. And Henry went downstairs, trem bling violently. Cautiously opening the kitchen door he turned on the elec tric light? and found the kltien play ing' with baby's India-rubber ball. TO TEACH BLIND TO DRAW English Idea Is That Art May tielp the 8l0htless to Communicate With Outs!de World. One of the many experiments of the Royal Drawing society has been to teach people to draw by louch. The pupil Is blindfolded and feels a simple shape, like a hammer of a spade, and draws It with his eyes open. An ad vanced pupil has drawn the head of a classical bust and the mask of Bee thoven. These experiments fired Mr. O. B. Ablett, the director of tho society, with the idea of He has devised p medium which lo&ks like the frosted stuff on a matchbox made liquid, by which the draughtsman can follow by touch what he has drawn and correct or add to his work. 80 far there have been no experiments with a blind pupil. L_ Mr. Ablett does not claim for It more than that a blind man can draw the plan or a design of something he wishes to record and explain. A blind gardener has been known to go Into ecstasies over the unfolding shapes of a plant, and, the <IVaWlng\ of these shnpes, known to him by touch would undoubtedly give him a form, of es thetic pleasure. In any cuse^ Jt would increase his means of communicating with the outside world. ? A great boon, If the method Is prac ticable, would be that it would enable the blind to write and to. read writ Ing. ? Manchester (iuardlan. Airplanes Will Aid Mining. It is predicted that the airplane and the dirigible will prove a great stim ulus to the mining Industry In pre senting a means of getting material and men to and from locations which are known to he rich with ore and which are at the present time inacces sible. There are many such places known to exist, but the cost or build ing n roadway to them would be. so great an to be prohibitive. Att enfiort to this phase of the subject has been recently attracted by a report made by Doctor Lyon, supervisor of the mining stations for the United States bureau of mines. By this means a regular communication could be main tained with sections which are not to be reached by any ordinary means. It Is also suggested that the same means might be of great value for getting rescue apparatus to the scene of mining disasters. Where Big Industry Began. The dilapidated old s shack, still standing at Eastport, Me., is of inter est by reason of Its being the starting place of the great American snrdlne industry. The experiment of converting the small herring into the canned sardine was tried out in this factory, built for that purpose by Julius Wolff, a Rus sian, aryl other New York promoters nearly forty years ago. At that time the picturesque weirs, In which the fish are seined, usually Joined the fac tory property. JYom its btrth, In this small factory, sardine canning has developed to al most the chief industry on The Maine coast, employing thousands of skilled workers each season, and has placed Eastport on the map as one of the most Important fishing ports In the country. Locomotive Rolled Over. After a storm that burled the New ( England coast In snow last March, passengers on a railroad line through Ilhode Island were amazed to observe a locomotive standing upright in a stfimpy brook that runs under th.e rl^ht of wa^ at one point. The en gine started out with a snowplow to clear the track, bu^ Jumped, the rails at th? brook trestle, the plow going one way and its motive power the Oth^r. Confronted, then, by the prob lem of removing the new obstruction, and n^t caring to devote three engines ; to getting one back on the track, the | rail men cut the Gordlan knot by roll- j Ing th?' big locomotive down the env bankrv*r.r. Despite t^e slide and plnr4re. It finished ri^_, side upw? Popular Mechanics Magazine. Plvoi^w ttfe few l? tbv l*hlll|>p]ne?, <1u<? uulluly to the fact ft??t pvt-ry girl In taught to I H' w good cook, Ihmim maker u ml mother. T*dy TowutirUlge rteclaraj mvntlj ill Ia?h1o<i tlmt MuokWjg bekpa (lie orv atlv?? faculty ami belpe women their tempera. Odr*. A' one Coxuki, kuy*a , ?4OrU*?t*d of Ooaaurv^ i ?u, to probably llit? rlcbt^i %g, thv worlds GAN you imagine a wash day, with practically noth ing to do? Washday seems al most like a holiday, instead of a day of drudgery, when you do your washing with Clean Easy Naptholeine Wash Soap. i ? ' -v . ? Just soak your clothes over night; shave Vi bar of Clean Easy into AVi gallons of water ; let it dissolve; boil for ten min utes; rinse thi;u two clean waters; blue and dry in open air and the washing's done. No tired, aching back, no red hands or skinned knuckles. You feel just as fresh as when you first began your day's work. Clean Easy may be pur chased at any grocery store. One bar will do two ordinary weeks' washing? Just think, an average week's wash done for only a few cents and in ten minutes time. Clean Easy does not hurt the fabric. Try it today, and your house will have no room for the old fashioned scrubbing board. Notice how different Clean Easy looks from other soaps. Ask for Clean Easy by name at your grocer's. Clean Easy is the only soap made that will do this work. Follow direction ? on in afda of ? wrapper SAVES THE RUB The Zig-Zag Tread Mechanically and sclent Iflcally correct for greatest eccurity under all road condition*. The ?nd ahaped cups alternate t>n both tides of the extra wide, heavy tread. Skidding Is minimized. Parallel Bar Bases of the 'Tine Trees" and straight Center Line of tread are thick rubber studs that auist in keeping tbe wheels "head on." Three Types of Tires for Three- Kinds <of Use YOU don't want a truck motor in a touring par; you use a different oil in the cylinders than in the transmission. Different conditions must be met differently* Thatis why Lee builds three types of tires for three kinds of uses. The right type for your purpose is the one built especially for that use. Consult us on tires. We'll survey the conditions your tires must meet and prescribe the Lee Tire that will serve you best ? the Lee Tire that will give you maxi mum mileage and comfort. ^ c&e. KERSHAW MOTOR CO., Camden, S. C. ^vrr-r^ ? The.Lte Cord Puncture-Proof ITor the hardest possible service oa q all kinds of roads. A real cord tire ' n - ? easy riding1 ? economical? and absolutely puncture-proof. The only puncture-proof cord tire. Dependable . under all cpndltlons. The Lee Cord 2" Tor gruelling serrlce In town n< _ In the country. Loo Cord construc tion makes these light riding tins practically free from tho usual tlf* troubles ? blowouts, tread s< pa ratios,, sfdewalls breaking, Internal friction, ti&l Hand mad ? ' ^The" LetT Fabric 3-f A husky tire that fights mean rosd conditions | and | la riarlabl/ wlafc ? - _ Quallty-bulll from lining to treed* good- looking >nd as"*good - * .?> *-?% '