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of smoke~with his frowning eyes. "She's ray girl," he said at length, i A "and I'm goin' to have 'er." W "I thought you said she wasn't," put ' " in Reggie, suspiciously, i "Well, she don't know that, does | she?" Devon retorted. "Nobody knows : but you and Ede, besides me." "She's a beauty," sighed Reggie, i his voice lowered to a growl. "I'd j marry her if she didn't have a cent." ; "You don't need to make any such ; sacrifice, old horse," said Devon. "Your eyes will bung out of your head when you hear her name." Reginald argued he should know who the girl was before he married her, but Uriah wouldn't give up his I secret. Indeed, he unfolded to the prospective husband how he planned to capture Tonnibel, and sent Reggie away convinced, red hot to perform his part in the scheme. At last, he ^ was to have the girl he wanted and L money too. T The next morning Reggie apr proached his mother with an air of 1 secrecy. f "A minute, mater," he said softly. "Just a minute! I've seen Tony Dei \ von's father. 4 .ere! Now sit down, I old lady, while I tell you something. "Ry Says the Only Way Is to Kidnap f Her Bodily." r Ry says the only way is to kidnap her bodily and force her to marry the man he promised her to," the boy explained. "What do you think of that?" "Paul would kill him," gasped Mrs. Curtis, her eyes taking on an expression of fear. "He won't have a chance if Devon works out his present scheme," re- j plied Reggie, "but you and Kathie have to help us." In the terror that overtook her, Mrs. C'*:ds shook her head. "I don't want anything to do wicb it," she objected, wobbling in tears. "We'd lose our home. Paul and John would* turn us out. They've threatened to many a time!" ''Well, when I assure you our beloved cousins won't know anything about it, not even after it's over, won't you try to help us?" queried the young man. "Now, if it goes through all right, you catch Cousin John on the rebound, and Kathie'd be sure to rope in Phil." "What joy that would be!" ejaculated Mrs. Curtis. "What about it?" Then Reggie told her, in very low tones, the plan they had concocted. "You talk'it over with Kathie," he advised, lighting a. cigarette, "and you'll have to see Devon about the money!" "I'll get it for him if I have to sell my jewels and Kathie's too," promised the woman, her eyes sparkling in anticipation. "I'll go and tell ner right away." Meanwhile, all unconscious that Uriah Devon had been released from prison and was conspiring against her, Tonnibel Devon was entering heart and soul into the Salvation Army work with Philip. Each evening she went with him to headquarters where her fresh, young voice and her kindliness drew many a poor soul for comfort and courage. One week after Reginald Curtis had confided his secret to his mother, and she had told it over again in whispers to Katherine, at an hour when the Pendleharen brothers were absent, Uriah Devon came quietly to the house. Reggie met him and took him immediately to Mrs. Curtis' room. Uriah paused embarrassedly before hej, made a curt bow and twisted his ; cap between his fingers. v "Sit down, Ry," invited Reggie. "Now tell my mother how you are going tC carry this thing out" Uriah sat on the edge of a chair. "I ain't goin' to do anything, or tell what I'm goin' to do, till I get the money," he said crisply. "I've got to have five thousand dollars first." "Five thousand dollars, old lady," grinned Reggie, turning to his mother. "You'll have to cough up. i^rv T Fieri" xui. vjto :> ?ai\c, . ~.0. "I'll need the whole five thousand to get 'er away, and to keep 'er after I get 'er. She'd come streakin' back If I don't rope 'er up.' Til get the money for you tomorrow7," sighed Mrs. Curtis, wiping her eyes, "and you mustn't come here when my cousins are home." She relapsed into silence and then added: | "I warn you against?against Philip j MacCauley too." *# *** Mrs. Curtis had been all eyes and i ears for even the slightest happening In the Pendlehaven home, since she | had almost stripped her jewel-box ! and Katherine's to get the money Tony's father demanded. Now she had it tucked away, ready to deliver It, but as the time went b? spdshe had 17o "chance to send for Uriah to come for his daughter, she began to give up hope that the house would ever be rid of the presence which was a constant thorn in her flesh. But it does seem that sooner or later Fate plays the lucky cards into the hands of the undeserving, and so it happened in the case of the conspirators against Tonnibel Devon. Like all things waited for. the opportunity came one day while the family was at dinrfer. Philip MaeCauley entered in great excitement. "You look as if you had swallowed the srm mv dear lad." smiled Doctor Paul. "I've got to go away," flushed the boy, laughing, "and I won't go alone." He gazed meaningly at Tonnibel. "Pardon my rushing in this way, but ?but I want Tony to go with me." Mrs. Curtis flashed him a dark look. He rarely paid her, or her frowning daughter, any attention nowadays, so he did not notice that a pallor settled on Katherine's face, or that her fork fell from her limp fingers to the plate The mother saw her daughter's mental distress, however, and studied the young man's face, groaning to herself. He had grown so manly and handsome in the past/ two years, and he was the one person she desired for her sonin-law. He was rich, too, which only added to his attractiveness. "You might explain a little more, my boy," Doctor John spo'-e "n. in a deep voice. An embarrassed lam-' # '-om Philip's lips. "There isn't any serv- - it.' he answered. "I'm going d for the Salvation Army for a year, longer perhaps, and it would he^too much to ask me to go all by myself." Lines appeared between Doctor Paul's brows. At last the day had come when he must give up the girl who had taken a rare place among those he held dearest. He noticed with a quick sigh that Tony's eyes deepened softly, and her red lips were parted in a smile. "It'll hurry up our marriage a lit le." Philip continued, "but?but?" The sound of a chair scraping back from the table broke off his sratement. "Then we'll adjourn and talk it over," remarked Doctor John. "You ask a mighty big thing, Phil, when yon demand our little girl without niore warning." "Little girl." sneered Mrs. Curtis, after the four had left the dining room. It happened, much to her surprise. that Doctor John sought her out within the hour. "Those children have won Paul and me over. Sarah," he said a little grimly. "They're going to be married a week fr un today. It won't be much trouble 'o prepare the house, will iv You needn't make a fuss. It'll be ver> qM.et. Tony can buy everything she needs -n New York on her honeymoon." In the rage that overtook her, Mrs. Curtis wished the speaker dead at her feet "The house isn't mine, Cousin John," she said maliciously, "but, of course, I'll do what I can, although Katherine isn't at all well. I fear the child is going to be ill." Doctor John found Katherine with I her eyes dull and heav?\ prescribed for'her. and, before leaving the room, announced: "Paul and I are going over to Syracuse tomorrow afternoon to make a few Durchases. but we'll be back on the night train. Stay in bed, Kathie, until morning, and you'll be all right." The moment he had disappeared, Katherine sprang up. "Tomorrow they're going away! You heard, you heard, mother?" she cried. "Now then, where's Reggie?" "Darling," advised Mrs. Curtis, moved to tears by her daughter's distress, "I have a premonition! We'd better not interfere at all. Oh, child, if you could only get your mind off that boy! He isn't worthy of a love like yours. We've got a nice home?" "Nice home!" hurled back Katherine, wildly. "Nice home! Look what she's got! Just think of her ,gnd then of me! Oh, God, that such misery could be in the world! I'll never forgive you, mamma, if you don't keep your promise to me." "Don't say that, darling, don't," groaned Mrs. Curtis. 'Til see your brother, and who knows," she brightened and smiled through her tears; "who knows but what that horrid girl will be gone by tomorrow night?" (.To be continued next week.) CITATION FOIt LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. The State of South Carolina?County of Bamberg. By J. J. Brabham,%Jr., Probate Judge. Whereas, E. C. Hays has made suit to me to grant him Letters of Ad * - * - J - - ? -C ? J A r, r? f A O /I XP f ministration ut tut? ii.sia.Lc auu juifects of .Mrs. Hibernia J. Hays. Those are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Mrs. Hibernia J. Hays, deceased, that they be and appear before me. in the court of probate, to be held at Bamberg, on the 23rd day of May, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 11th dav of Mav. Anno Domini 1021. J. J. BRABHAM. JR.. ."-10. Jud-e of Probate. S. G. MAYFIELD ATTORNEY AT LAW Practice in all courts. State and Federal. Office Opposite Southern Depot. BAMBERG, S. C. USE PUREBRED BOARS Inferior Sires a Great Handicap. Clem son College, May 2.?With the increased interest in swine in the state, there will be a large demand for breeding animals. On account of this demand, a number of persons will be tempted to use inferior boars and sows. While it cannot be hoped to have all of the sows purebred at this time, yet there is no excuse for the n?p nf trade or scrub boars. There are sufficient purebred boars, if properly distributed and properly managed, to make every market bog in the state at least fifty percent purebred. Why the Purebred Sire? There are six goods reasons for using a purebred boar. 1. Larger and stronger pigs are produced. 2. The pigs grow faster and make cheaper gains. 3. The pigs reach market weight sooner. 4. The pigs are more uniform. 5. The pigs meet the market demand, thereby bringing a higher price. 6. Pork production is made more profitable. . j On account of the increased value of the litters produced, any farmer with eight or ten sows could well afford to keep a purebred boar. At least, several farmers in a neighborhood can co-operate in the purchase and use of a purebred boar. Through judicious management, a purebred boar for every twenty-five or thirty sows is sufficient. At this time when every advantage must be taken to realize a profit from farming operations, let no one handicap himself by using inferior stock. Let your animals march with the purebreds." "SETTER S4 RES?BETTER STOCK" To Control Chicken Lice. -Sodium Fluorid Most Satisfactory.Clemson College, May.?Poultry lice do not suck blood. They feed on portions of the feathers or on the scales of the skin. The greatest loss from lice is possibly that of young chickens, which may become infested from the mother hen, even before they become dry after leaving the egg shell. Though there are several kinds oi poultry lice, they can all be controlled by the same method. Control. Sodium fluorid appears to be the most satisfactory chemical to use for the control of all kinds of poultry lice. The treatment must be thorough, and every fowl in the poultry yard must be treated, because if one infested chicken escapes, it may then be bu? a sort time until the entire flock is again infested. The commercial form of sodium fluorid may be obtained at most drug stores. Small amounts or "pinches" of this chemical should be placed on different parts of the body of the chicken as follows: Place the fowl on a table in an open vessel, hold the legs and wings in one hand, and with the other hand place a small pinch of the chemical next to the s?in among the feathers on the head, neck each thigh, underside of spread wings, and distribute by pushing the fingers among the feathers. One pound will | treat about 100 hens. For young chicks the head, back and body are the onlyparts that are necessary to treat. Precautions. Wacb fhe hands thoroughly after using chemical. It will not injure the hands, hut it is frequently irritable to sores. Tt should of course never be taken internally. The reading farmer is the leading farmer.' Do you take a good farm paper and (To you get the bulletins from your agricultural college? To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. MHHi' (Best material and workman- B ship, light running, requires || little power; simple, easy to M handle. Are made in several ? sizes and are good, substantial 1 money-making machines down K to the smallest size. Write for j| catolog showing Engines, Boil- B ers and all Saw Mill supplies. ^ g lOMBARJ) IRON WORKS & jg SUPPLY CO. | B A ugusta, Ga. B 1 tr A Al r* CTATIOMACV | f-un I ? O k- E- ?nu ? I, n I AND BOILI XS Saw, Lai.h ai?(l Shingle >jills, Jjectors, Pumps and Fittings .'/o<k3 Saws. Splitters, Shaft?, Parleys. I Pelting, Gasolin# Engi; s j LA RESTOCK LOMBARD ! Foundry, Machine, Boi-it i ! Supply Store. AUGUSTA, G .. I i ????????????????? Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove | the cause. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." I E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. J. F. Carter 13. D. Carter J. Carl Kearse Carter, Carter & Kearse A TTOKN K YS-A'I -1 AW Special attention given to set! tlement of Estates and Investigation of Land Titles. Loans negotiated on Real Estates. RILEY & C0PELAND Successors to \V. P. Riley. Fire, Life Accident INSURANCE Office in J. D. Copeland's Store BAMBERG, 8. C. BUY WAR SAVING STAMPS illlW'Wl<IMlwlllililBlllliyiil ill ilWRiilril 'Ml'iitil R Dry Split Pine Wood g iP Stove or Fire Place. & The largest load you |$j ip have had in a long ^ ||| time for $3.00. M PHONE 116 ||j I J H. DIXON 1 ? BAMBERG, S. C. p To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat | of children suffering from a Cold or Croup, j The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey in-1 side the throat combined with the healing effect of i Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of j the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are'packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES' HEALING HONEY. J. WESLEY CRUM, JR., A TTORXE V-AT- LA W Bamberg, S. C. Offices in Herald Building Practice in State and Federal Courts. Loans negotiated. The Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor r'uging in head. Remember the full name and lock for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. R. P. BELLINGER ATTORNEY-AT-LA W General Practice in All Courts. Office Work and Civil Business a i Specialty. Money to Lend. Offices in rear over Hoffman's Store. BAMBERG, S. C. i Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails Ko cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles, nstantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get restful sleep after the first application. Price 60c. A. B. UTSEY 1 | INSURANCE Bamberg, S. C. A TOIVIC Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply * 1 W _ J ] i_ C/-V iron ana ijpmine suspenueu m syrup, ov pleasant even children like it. The blood needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect 60c. SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTION Thedford's Black-Draught Highly Recommended by a Tennessee Grocer for Troubles Re* suiting from Torpid Liver. I East Nashville, Tenn.?1 The efficiency of Thedford's Black-Draught, the genuine, herb, liver medicine, Is vouched for by Mr. W. N. Parsons, a grocer of this city. "It is without doubt the best liver medicine, and I don't believe I could get along without it I take it for sour stomach, headache, bad liver, indigestion, and all other troubles that are the result of a torpid liver. "I have known and used It for years, and can and do highly recommend It to every one. I won't go to bed with- j out it in the house. It will do all it claims to do. I can't say enough for it." Many other men and women throughout the country have found BlackDraught just as Mr Parsons describes ?valuable in regulating the liver to its normal functions, and in cleansing the bowels of impurities. Thedford's Black-Draught liver medicine Is the original and only genuine. I Accept no imitations or substitutes. Always ask for Thedford's. e.88 DR. THOMAS BLACK Habitual Constipation Cured DENTAL SURGEON. -LAX-FOS PEKlH,'. .prfRl,Graduate Dental Department Lni- prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual versity o? Maryland. Member 3. l Constipation. It relieves promptly but State Dental Association. should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days Office opposite postofflce. Office to induce regular action It Stimulates and hourse. 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c ? turtle Read The Herald, $2.00 per year. ! ^ ||?gl OWEN BROS. MARBLE n AND GRANITE CO. I oM DESIGNERS MA NUF ACTURERS M r ,m^K ERECTORS S*<J%g The largest and beet equipped vf- ; ~T -vvSiyv monumental mills in the Carolinas. < GREENWOOD, 8. 0. M Few tons Hie-h (trarlfi Cotton anrl Com Fertilizer. IS 15 tons Nitrate of Soda. H Ten tons strictly No. 1 Timothy Hay flf 1100 CORDS I 1 FOOT STOVE WOOD. I Will sell wood on farm or delivered in your yard pt H. J. BELLINGER 9 BAMBERG, S. C. ?j . I Fresh Peanut Butter I B Loose in tub. Made in I South Carolina out of I South Carolina Peanuts. itl ? s8i I DIIV IT DV TUr DAIIUn DU1 II D1 111L IUU11U t Measure the Cost by Quality and Service \ . PHONE 15 ; . ?r>4 Tom Ducker BAMBERG, S. C. 4 | Th. House o. W una | _^^_???_______?I________' DANGER SIGNALS | Headache, colds, nausea, blues, mental de- I j pression?these are not only painful and annoying, but they are danger'signals. ; A great majority of these passing illnesses I ' are due to self-poisoning resulting from con ! stipation. Unless you keep your system free ; from decaying food waste, you start contin- \ j uous poisoning inside. Ultimately Bright's disease, rheumatism, gout, diabetes, pernicious anemia, and the like, may result. Pills, castor oil, laxative waters and salts only force and irritate the bowels, and make constipation a habit. ; Nujol works on an entirely new principle. I Instead of forcing or irritating the system, it simply softens the food waste. This enables the many tiny ; muscles in the walls of the intestines, contracting and expanding in their " rmal way, to squeeze the food waste along so that it passes naturally out of the system. Nujol thus prevents constipation because it helps I Nature maintar.i easy, thorough bowel evacuation at :: regular intervals?the healthiest habit in the world. " Nujol is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. Tryit. 1 ........ ' ' I INujol is sold by aii druggists in scaled bottles only, bearing Nujo! Trade M:;r\\ rite Nujol Laboratories, Standard Oil Go. (New Jersey), 50 Broadway, New York, for booklet "Thirty iTetot Danger". r7?CLjular-as ) _ The Modern Method of | ,Treating an Old Complaint | cw.jiv-j 67F" "" j II For ConstipationI i d