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TO THE-I1 FROM YOUTH TO you fortunate ones who are -'battle line where the armies facing the armies of the free, cong You go, not as reluctant victil but rqther as our chosen ones; tl whole of body, sound in mind and be. And we who are too old or unfitted to go in body, shall go wi ask much of you, and we expect i: - ing with our great traditions-th Hale; but we know that we shall : in imagination and in sympath tiring line, and at home we shall d fortable and content. We shall pt but even more fervently we shall : or the edge of your determination You are to fight in the noble. arms, and for a nation the most get sons. You go with her blessing, f whether you return or not she v grateful memory until the end of HiOGWAiL DUNK BC (of the most important vs items we have been com elled to chronicle in some time his the amouncenent thoaet Crick ft Hick has decided to roach his hair on the left side this sum mer. Hie des this to hide the place where a calf kicked him. e-soarm of bes got afer At las Peck the other da and chas ed hi nearly to the still-house. The bees showed very Poor judg. m ent in their selection of a place t o settle., lhog Dillard who has been lriving a young steer to his cart for sometime past, has succumb d to the rapid advances of civ. ilization and will hereafter drive a mule. M ioi linders thinks times arc ve about normal as the fish are biting good and the prospects are 20ot for ath bet olackberry crop. ian entered Poke E zlp :orn crih a few nights ago and carried awas preset fcond con lookt shmself aviei wll whe har forlhi tacksin the, tgui loth buty stevern hear the one racing patethediciettig. The threteneirer of Muske Ridgue wo buie to ce osr si h dn nonfec tihe last week may thaut to un itoye ir daytial o.n tgn.Tb Moseethoiss are probablyg - lnteek.i therybody nights, andcTob is execetrobe advoseo plearengi Batests. igts ad eneterns werorct ied inmeetg shoued theld of deckr othrd fo the ton h -sinntestream.h prche Anat-dyhnin woetrninih byn tner the hrond wasV give ato arown thrwasreformead.co 1 dute hisef ey el wt )RAFTED: . '8 COMPANION about to go forward to that long of autocracy and oppression are ratulations and Godspeed! ns of misfortune or a fatal chance, .e pick and flower of our manhood, spirit-what all of us should like to too weak, or in some other respect Lh you in spirit. We know that we 1uch, for we expect things in keep-. L ings born of the spirit of Nathan ot be disappointed. y we shall be there with you on the all that we can to make you corn 'ay that you may return in safety, ray that your courage may not flag lie dulled. t cause in which man ever took .upL ierous in all the world to her soldier ur she trusts you; and be sure that rill hold your names in honer and time. ~I OW NEWS TTS, Editor. The Dry Goods store at riick ville is putting on another grand I "Closing-Out. - to-Quit - Business Sale." These 'ales are quite popular. and tl' propridtor has them often. Ernest Chrisl . iher, who has be'en reading i'i a farm' maga zine about germs in drinking water, now alwa vs looks in the utcket before drinking out of it. Ebb Field has put up a Ima I en box for his E nglish sparrows. Ile says we should look after them, as we are now on mighty good terms with England. There is talk of having another streot in TiQkville. If this is done the sight-seers wont have to walk back down the same street. Yam Sims, while 'out ridinr on his mule a few evenings ago, ran into the ditch just this side of the postoffice. These ditches should all.be moved back from the road for the protection of The Mail Carr ier ran oyer Jefferson Potlock's foot when he camne in with the mail and drew uip at the postoflice porch Monday. No serious injury re stilted as the ma il was very light on that trip. Tobe Moseley has been sitting around andl saying nothing for so 'long it is thought by some that his wife is enforcing a strict censorship. .1. RtOWT. MA RTIN. .INO. C. Iln3RY MARITIN & hENRY General Practice of Law, GREENVILLE, S.C. oflices cor. Iiroadu anu MaIn sns. Phone aoI .RED ROS CHILL & FEVER uOR CIS AND EV~ER.a ANO LA GRIPPE. mnEUCTiONS UNTI ITACTS WELLt, THEN CHILDREN IN PROPORTION TO AGE PIUCE 25 CENT S MANUVA C TuRE R SJACKSONVILLE, FLA, Buy t at' cruc asinc generaI stir r ~ st''dk from the manufi 5, JANE'S REDISOOYERY By CATHARINE CRAIMER. If Jane Wilson's married sister had not come home for a visit just at the time' Leonard Mills was leaving Springfield to take up practice with a leading law firm in Chicago there is every probability that Jane would have become engaged to Leonard be fore he left. A proposal had been on the end of Leonard's tongue more than once, as Jane well knew, but until he had prospects more encour aging than his scattering civil cases in the circuit court gave him it wasn't -exactly prudent to become engaged. While prudence is not always the guiding influence in the timing of en gagements, it had to play its part in this case, for Jane had a snug little income of her own and Leonard's last penny had gone for his legal educa tion. The day before Leonard got the of fer from the Chicago law firm Jane's married sister came home, and, as she opened her traveling bag, she threw a new magazine over on the bed. The co r attracted Jane, and while her si., r took a nap Jane took the magazinc out in the yard by the lilac bushes and, turning idly through it, she noticed a story entitled, "Pro pinquity and Perspective." The title sounded almost as heavy to Jane as some of the legal terms Leonard sometimes let slip in his con versation. She frowned as she be gan to read, but gradually she be came fascinated as she found it to be the story of a girl who had thought herself in love with her boyhood sweetheart until she lived for a time away from him among men of the world. When she returned, with many new interests in life, she found that her boyhood sweetheart was still interested only in the local happen ings.. le listened with only moder ate patience and no interest to her enthusiastic accounts of the phases of life she had glimpsed while in the city, where her a tint's home was a center for people who were "doing things" in various professions. As tho title of the story suggested, per spective revealed so much about her sweetheart that propinquity had con cealed that the girl shrank from him and accepted with eagerness her aunt's invitation to return to the city to make lie permanent home. Jane discovered that the story was in two parts, and to be concluded in the next issue of the magazine, but part one had set her thinking in a direction that led to hier refusal to enter into an engagement with Leon ard Mills when lie called for that spe cific purpose the night before he left for Chicago. "But Jane," protested Leonard, "it's been tentatively understood all- diong that we'd marry some day." "And, Leonard, that is the very reason why neither of us has got far enough away from the idea to see whether it really appeals to us from choice or just from habit. We've been set aside for each other by our fami lies and our friends until it all seems a mattc' of course that we should marry." Jane looked straight ahead of hier at an old engraving of a pai of lover-s in its quaint gilt frame on the well. "Jane, 'is there somebody else?' asked Leonard. "No, Leonard; but neither you neor I know enough of others to know whetheri we really want to marr-y each other." "I don't have to knowv others to know that I want to marry you. Why, Jane, It wasn't like you to be talking like this. Don' t you love me the least little bit?" "I like you sincereoly, Leonard; but whether I love you as I ought to love the man I promise to marry, I frankly do not kniow. You are going init6 a life entir-ely differenit from what you've known," she continued. "Your ideas will change anid you yourself will unconsciously change. If I re main here I shall Riot change, and you might find me very uninteresting from your broadened viewpoint when you return in later years. Your sense of chivalry wouldn't let you tell me so, and it would mean misery for both of us eventually when we had time to see the mistake we had made." "Don't talk nonsense, dear; that could never happen," pleaded Leon ard. . "Oh, yes it could, but it won't, be cause I'm going away also, where I'll get a new outlook on life, and then when we meet on a plane where we can get .a perspective of each other we'll know whether we really look good to each other," The slangy ter mination of Jane's high-flown speech was accompanied by a nervous little laugh, "Where on earth are you going, Jane?" "I'm going to New York to study artistic designing and decorating." "Sounds vaguq to me," said Leon ard. "Why can't you learn that sort of thing in Chicago?" "Oh, l'm going to New York to be properly chaperoned by Aunt Amy; she has a charming studio there, and gets big contracts for furnishing and decorating suites and whole houses, and she has loads of interesting friends." "WVell, I've nothing to offer you to take the place of all that; b~ut ther-o seemis little left for me to wvork for nowv. I'd hoped you wvould spend the next year making. plans for your own home with me, but-" Leonard's voice broke. "Dear Len, please don't feel that I 'm trying to hurt you; iR. as much for your sake as my o.. -:s.. not having the imipnding burden of a Wnfo . wiU .maka 4te. easigr, for you to 'give 'your whole mind to your profes sional work the first years." "Years? How long is this notion of yours going to keep us apart, I'd like to know?" Leonard was not yet con vinced of the wisdom of the plan, but all his arguments failed to shake Jane's faith in it, and so they said good-by as friends only. * * * * * * * Jane 'was taking a final survey of (lie apartment she had decorated and furnished for Mrs. I)laleid, who had left the selection of materials and col ors so largely to her that the result was the 1iuost satisfactory of (ho many similar lpartnnts she had decorated diring her two years with her Aunt Amy. Outside it was a drizzly November day, iinut withii the apartinent there were color and( comfort and clieeri ness. .Jai' lropl'd down in a tapes tried armchair by (lie living room window which overlooetl the Iludson. As she looked bout( her cozy, home like room she sighed heavily as she thought she must leave it all now and see it 110 imore. the felt homesick for just such a home of her own. As the rain trickled down the wv'indow glass a tear trickled down Jaie's cheek. Then her mind w'cnt back to the old11 home in Springfield. where she had beei but twice since she took up her busy life in New York. The last time was to her brother's wedding, a year ago. She could imagino them all as they would be at this hour-her mother sitting by the wood fire, her brother's wife crooning a song to the wee baby, and watching (lie clock for the time when her1' husband would hurry home from his noisy flouring mill to the quiet Iiresiie. .Jane thought also of Leonard Mills, who was reported doing wonders profes sionally, but whose occasional letters to her gave scant personal history. Through the villagers she had heard when at home last that he had re ceived a considerable legacy from an aunt, who died in California. The sound of Mrs. Dolaticld's voice com ing out. of the elevaior broke Jane's reverie. "It's a regular dream, I tell you; and isn't it just the worst luck that we can't enjoy it, after all?" she was saying. 'But if you want to send that telegram you'd better go back lown to the office, for my telephone is not in, and it will be an hour before I'm ready to go. I've ordered tea sent ul from the cafe. ('ome on up when you're ready." She came on into the living room as she concluded the last remark over her shoulder, and Jane heard a faint response in a man's voice as she ros1 to greet her patron. "I could hardly resist making be Dove it was all mine," said Jane smil ingly as she waved her hands to in dicate the cozy apartment. "And I can hardly resist tears who I think It can't be mine after all. 'iTh doctors have oriered my husband t southern California, and we're goin to start next week." "Oh, I'm so sorry you must go, an so sorry your husband hasn't in p~roved." "It is because he refused to go wlie tie doctors advised it; now they or der it." After a walk through th< ap~artment Mrxs. Delafleld returniodl ti the living room. "I was just tellini my cousin, wvho Is locating in New York," she added, "that lie would have to find1 a wife andl take this ap~artmeni off myi> hands. H-er'e lie is now. Come( in, l.ein. Mliss. Wilson, let me present myi> ('ousin, Mr, Mills." Thel words wei'e thie only thingi (01ommo0npllace about (lie introduction. Mr's. Delafield stood astonished as Leoniard grabbed both of Jane's hands and~ Jane looked pleased to have himr do so. She read enough between the lines of their partIal explanation tc think It advisable to leave them alone. So she wvent for a final look at the tiled kitchen and bath, whose perfect equipment had been her especial pride. W~hen she returned, only fifteen min utes later, Leonard led Ji'ne to her, and, with a sweeping bow, presented her as (lhe future Mrs. Mills. A fiash of pleased surprise passed over Mrs. Delafild's face, "Oh, then you will take the apart ment, won't you?" she exclaimed, And they took It immediately. (Copyright, 191I5, by the McClure Newspa per Syndicate.) Lingua Americana. American slang was never more easily studied ini London than today, what with "crook" plays at the thea ters anid screen legends at the cinema, It wvas at a picture show the other evening that I sat up a fraction of an inch on seeing these words dazzle before nie: 'Keep (lie soft pedal on your nat ural instincts, or you will slip your mitt." 1. xseemis excellent advice, though should inot know quite how to para phrase, it. Other cinema legende seen just now arc: "I ami going (lie route." "It r'equires only about ten minutes for wvomen to learn to slather It," "Wh'len she wanted him to show her thle bright Iilit s lie began to act like a quiitter."-Tr. P.'s London Weekly. A Call Down. Mr. lIragg-l object to being called a "gay I ,thario.'" Of course, I am not engaged to any' par'ticular girl, but Miss Snappe--Ot course, you're not, If she woro par'ticular' you couldn't be. Saw the Sign, "I though you told me you were going arounai to that chitia decora tor's to look ioi' a job?'' "1 d11(1. But- there was a sign out sjde, 'Fii: Uiit. '-Judge. Doctor Says Nuxat increase Strei People SIn many inatancos--Porsons 1havo suf fered untold agony for years dootoring for nervous weakness, stomach, liver or kidnoy cisease or solno other ailment when their real trouble was lack of iron in the blo.--Iow to tell. New York. N.' Y.--In a recent d1is eourse 1 r. 14 tiuer, a 13ston plyilcian who has "i udiel widely butit in this Country and in great Auropean medieal institulioins, siiti: 'I f you were to make an actual boII 'oI tet on ill people who are Ill you woo I prhhalily le greatly astonished al the exeterlIngly large iitunber who la:ik iron and who are ill for Ii nth, r r':tin toai the lank ol' i ion. TIhe inlntenrt iron is supp1lied aill their mult itul. of 1 dange rous synlltptoin disatppenI . \\'itin'ut irt of he bloo(1 Hi on1ce IoSes4 the liuewr 1.4 (h:tei:Ce food into living tissu , :Intd the'e.ei.i' noth ing, you tot dlote' you :ay g;oud; y,)u doniit 14'thet .trength i o of it. Your food murely pts , throutgh your sys tem like corn tlrough a lla t with the rilers i n; w'l de apar:1i t Ilt (t thl' tuill nn't grind. A ; a resiIt ,f ItltlA 4,ont i u blood and lntrve St:Irv:t in, I '.p1 1. come generally w\'.nal;n. d. ne"rvou' anI.1 all run diow\n and frequent ly de'vel Ialt sorts het coudiitions. in( in n i t II i :I another is burdienedl with tunhealthiy 1:,1; 01110 are so wetak they e:n hrdly walk; some thin'i they hav \e dys pnsin(, kidney or I iv er titrulti: ",ile cani't sleep at nigh t. olhiirs at' su4py anil tired nil day: some fussy nod lltrialde; some skinny anid 1),lioodles, but nil larc 1phy5ical howl'r :nd etiduance. ini sucrh cases, it is wors,' than fIoolish '":. in take stimulating n1edicns or nariit drugs, which only whip up your i'ngicing vital powers for the moment, mnnybe at the exlens of your ifr leater on. No muttier wha1:t any on,' tells you, if you nre not St roung atnd well you owe it to yourself to mike the following test: See Fx want it 0 /I - tub I f/Ma ILion Sb ICol |We have just lot of that famn 1Collars. We of Shirts on iand let us st I better line ma RBrand. CRAIG BRO Quality Printing-'mr ; / ed Iron Will ,8th ofDliepte 100 % in Ten Days how long you can work or how far you cnn walk withott becoming tired. Next lake two five-graIn tablets of ordinary Nuxated iron thro times per day after neals for two weeks. Then test your stretngth again and see for yourself how iuch you have gained. I have soon - (oze ns of n erOtvs, run-down 0peoplo who were ailling nil the time double, and .c eve n triple, their strength and endur aien and ent irly get rid of their symtp toms of dysppsia, liver and other trou lels Itn froin I 4n to fourteen days' time{ :aimily hy taking iron in the propor forit, and tlbts, afte'r they had in somn 41axes leen t1444.toring f ,r mtolit hs wvitk out obthti nttltg 44ty le4t'lit. YOti can talk as you pleas! ahout all the wonders wrought by tow rnttldies, but when - yotu celli lown it( hard f11 e tts thero is notlitig like toed bl 1(1 irn to put color in your (heeks :toinl ; i :ou4ntdi, healthy flesh on you'r butles. it I als ai great nuterve an4l rlt'inneh 1 1.11 trn tht4ntr and I 1 ihe bast blod 1 buileIr in 41t4 wo4tl.h 'Thlo only l rotab1-" wNs4. thatt th: 4 ht r 1ms4111 4 t of Inor4ga4ni ir:.t. like 1int(1 r 41:t ." i, , t: n1- t. 011. ' tc., 414ten rinedl' pe'4!41'S t0 41h. ut r t tlheit slu1tn b" n1411 wero not : ;to iltt4 d, ant1 for til.se reaxcsor I her ir..Unti dtit i dil III t r( t har on ti to good. Oiut w'"th the,, disc"overy of the newter f14 rnis ,.; oraj;:tt' iron all this has .t be4.4n ove r,.,toIn-'. Nuxated Iron. for ex atui'l;". ; 11:1-1 tt take, doen not in iurt th1 4 441h a4nd is alnlost linmued( aty Iy b4n4ti4ic1. N '1-1 'I,4:e4 n4 :.-,' - . f N't'nae4 Iron have !n ull n44 e 1111101 . ),'- , In lil I I et1cy that tiy .0 ny hf-lin t the wil (ufu el .4 t a n. t r ..r.4: 444 t4(. si y w tie t 11414 41 nd Ier44a44! 441 thei srt'n444t~ l 0 chr ce(n44. or 4444 444 fo'ur l e4, 444.1t i ded they liae ne .41444 b ro rr4c 4g4:4444.e. Al4so lhny ta1l4 refund yo4ur 44444')> i44 unY (444)4. 44n wtto lei iron154 d 1(44 414' tint at 411.1 14 t41144 )44l1r Istretht o i ted in 111 110. it a 4hs4 eased in 44 tha c0t14 by all g00d dnugglgt. lii. Patch? ri1U get you home new Fisk Cementless Patch for ) tires has the strength where you h's thick in the center. Covers cut, but because all waste rub climtinated costs less. Most nd best value tire patch on et -- the best insurance you'll ne. This patch is one of the tandard value MSK 1.REI SUNDRIES i s no higher quality any :re. No motorist should be with herm. Among the best known Sundries are Fisk Emergency ches, Pure Fine Para Cement in s and cana and Fisk Repair erial. Fise Tires For Sale By JY McFALL, Pickens irts' and lars received a new .ous brand, Lion also have a lot the -way. Call ipply you. No ide than Lion S CO., Pickens 'he Pickens Sentinel