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GALOMEL SIOKENSI DON'T STAY B I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver T and Bowel Cleansing You Evei Calomel makes you sick; you lose" a day's work. Calomel is quicksilver and it salivates; calomel injures your liver. It you are bilious, feel lazy, sluggish and all knocked out, if your bowels are constipated and your head aches or stomach is sour, just take a spoon ful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone instead of using sickening, salivating calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone Is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be work. ing, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. You will feel like working. You'll be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Your druggist or dealer sells you a 60-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone An Efficiency Study. "Il iii I. sluing even hess work thanl he usedl to 1141." "'4.s. it' 1as got eln intoi tlie w:y of wvasling time for himsewlf :rol i'therls slntliing aroiun' talhiig :iit 'lli Cilen('y.' MOTHER! TInvo you eve'r used MI(Ti'IlElt's .TOY SAIAJ'l- for Col's. ('ougls, Croup and Pneumnonin, Asthina, unt Iend Ca tarrh? If you liveu't get it at once. It will cure you.-Atlv. Women Drive War Automobiles. I let wieen l:5) awii 20n i\ o1n-n so1n will b't lriviii inili:ry nuultor ears ht 1h111it 'l t l'ren h 4 r0li oi' ' 'int. Woln1enI h:1v1 Iris tl .s0 i lt I' th e in nilg of II Iw r t nlislt in in 1 1u41 1ntibhilt, >servicte. ' lThe ( ' Iinh Fenilin ii Autllo uttoile Dotn 110. r 411' i gro1 . in.11101 it p:1 Srii'i li, signae ltItir of s rali pinth ulleel 0fte tih'Ilo liCl wolltie ill l'aris wio hi1411 iilises to (rive isiltr l, ars . 'l'ht, Issya re. -is itn' ii of lirteit-lli ll \\a1. lwir t iue u ltebi tin t buek until n41\w. The oNewF asre bligiel to nlir t for thiliore n4 t :hs ( l :to n;re 1 t s11w ulit sierul~i'nli -I to toili1tlrlcl uhs bil ils ei in n. Th i' r n ' ill in th i be::iiiin relpln e 0r11 ' ''1 in hailv di river inl ltw 1'11111).l x:11:1\' s ,l uls w ~ r Chrog snicr Indgetion. h r tran1sfe rrt'd t ofther .,'rvii0,'r. 1.1,at 1 on t 11 1 1n y rtpItn*:4l ota'n in il 'au t1ibile slelollls. Cutting Down Gossip. 'erIw yu s upp ~t'''gosiel eine dylep '' 111\\ i ll \111 -it tiuig .io ito or t 1111 s et.Iii ut ir spri tihn14 h14 fire' ulnnii pleires wereh e "Ia le bo peer geiII I thoust, pelrsons, but1 beforelt itey starteIi to spenting practinlily 1ll of thwni Ielure 1luolnet' s InI pho1topla0iy house, th vy onew ar.t tieni inrre r.hou 'he"ir' nteghburs' pr'ivato( fn irs tha ' why do nf." For Unruly Window Shades. "he a rer' itlow sh:n " refus 8tlLeytorll noj J iaep ta n p i t h-l an i o i s r sinul woden edge suc as 4 i) IT SALIVATESI ILIOUS,. CONSTIPATED one" Will Give You the Best Liver 'Had-Don't Lose a Day's Work! under my personal guarantee that it will clean your sluggish liver better than nasty calomel; it won't make you sick and you can eat anything you want without being salivated. Your druggist guarantees that each spoonful will start your liver, clean your bowels and straighten you up by morning or you can have your money back. Chil dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because it is pleasant tasting and doesn't gripe or cramp or make them sick. I am selling millions of bottles of Dod son's Liver Tone to people who have found that this pleasant, vegetable, liv er medicine takes the place of danger ous calomel. Buy one bottle on my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist or storekeeper about me. Adv. Help. 'T'hey tell Inc That Perks was ar rest tod t 1 y benuse he drowned his dlog in Ilhe river," said lBurns. "I ltv coul they arrest him for dIrowning at dog in the river?" demand ed 1links. "Why, They eiatul that a sunken mrk obstructed navigation." To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GIOVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it Is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 6o cents. Not Like Home. 'IiI bright boy in khaiki was dilating filn the woes of army life. "Yhs." he said to his old mother, "we don't get muc'h int the way of fancy 14<5 is, or anything like that. Our caUmp f ook's aill right on stews and soup, but he ('11iL't go beyond them. The other dlay you know, when I went back, I oak a neumb!1er with me that I was ning to share with one or two of the iiiys. I g:ve it to the cook a:ndi asked) hiin to0 get it really for us, ant win d'yom think he did wilh it? Put it in theo oven atnfl hl it." .c l4m'or boy:!" :subl the f'ondl moth ca. ".\ pit y I couldn't have been there to hmk af1ter you. 1'l have boiled it lov'ely for'l yon !" Lemon Juice For Freckles Girls! Make beauty lotion at home for a few cents. Try iti ,S'jllee he .ille* of two lemonts inito ablit t'le conit: iin In~ ihree ounces of orchard 1vliite, shake well, and you live at quarter pint of the best freckle n11i1t Iin lotilon, 21111 com11plexioni beau ti tier, a1t very, very small cost. Your groce'r 1has the lemons and any drug stor'e or toile't counter will supply three Ounces ofC orchard'( white for a ft'w cents. Massaigt this swveetly fra granlmt lotion into theii falce, neck, armIIs a 2nd hands each dlay and1( sec how freckles and( blemishes disappear' and how cleari, soft a1111 white the skin be comens. Yes! It is harmnless. Adv. An illuminating Postcard. A younI ig girl ofL ileb~hln unee'stry nehh11'vId 122n asC 1 21 a ( letress in Lon d1111. h"eelinhg It' necessitIy, however, (If a1 rest fr'om her lab~ors, she wrote to her unicle, a pollic. sergeant of a coun try village, aiskinug him if she mnight comeI and1 stamy with him11 tol rtcuiperalte. She ('nded0 her'1 not t' :'"'leatse sendic n I'. C. to fay f I maily comec." A (fwlays latecr her1'12 lnladly rulshedl uplstaiirIs wih an1 aiwest rlcken counI girl dlescendted withI an1 Oioios feel lng at her hleart, salys London Tit-hits. "IIyullealse, Iiiss," Said~ the stolid being w~ho cnfr1'1onIled heri, cycintg her wIth stern dhisapprovali, "'I'ml the P'. (. whait y'ou ask1edl your uncle to Send, but I maly as well tell you straight awiay as l'm a respi~ectabl ni'112Prie inanll. Your unclt's iprepalred to take you ini If you1're wIillhlag to Inuake your~i self ulseful-feed Ithe ipig, clean his~ of fIce, and1( the two cells." Anything to Comfort. "I w'ouldnl't gieve-. 51) abou1t your1 boly goIn g io wa r'." "'It Is dreadful ; I can't hear' lhe thought.'' "I know, but you rememcnber that If he~ stalyed homie het mlight Inake it Iintoc his head to marri'1y someiU girml you~ ha no( useO for'." Conversation in the Smart Set. -MIss Binkley-And so you irefe mlotorinig to r'idinmg! Mtrs. Blnnkley-Oh, ev'er so 11UL We 1ran over'l ai silly (11d w~omanit yCil fordah~y, and1( do you know, I wasn't bIt ner'Ivouls. Force of Practice. "Th'lat sin1gert knows how to manilage her' i'anmge." "She' oulght to know. She used to hi a cook." The Point. "I am afrinnd our bulldog has a twise in his ped~gree." "Don't worry, It is only his soee tail." HEALTH OFFICERS TO FORM RESERVE PENDING BILL WOULD CO-ORDI NATE EFFORTS OF PEOPLE SKILLED IN SCIENCE. DISPATCHES FROM COLUMBIA Doings and Happenings That Mark the Progress of South Carolina People, Gathered Around the State Capital. Columbia. 1)r. James A. Hayne, secretary of the state board of health, has receiv td a letter from the surgeon general of the United States, inclosing a copy of a bill recently referred to the com mittee on interstate and foreign com merce to establish a reserve corps of the public health service of the Uni ted States and to co-ordinate there with and utilize the state, county and municipal organizations ai.d other persons skilled in science. Dr. Hayne heartily commends the bill and says he will write to representatvies from South Carolina in congress, urging sup port of the bill. The health olTicer ain( funds for safeguarding civilian health as well as health of the soldiers in South Carolina during the war." The explanation of the proposed leg islation as given in the argument with the bill is as follows: 1. Purpose of proposed legislation. -(a) Create machinery whereby gov ernment can instantly attack civilian epidemics which threaten to spread to military forces. (b) Augments of existing agencies for the collection of morbidity reports. (e) Permits sanitation under fed oral direction or areas in contighity to military camps. (d) Maintains the fabric of civil ian health institutions and correlates them with those of general govern ment. 2. Necessity for proposed legisla tion--(n) Public health service too ::mall to cover the entire field. (b) State's health agencies have no authority outside of their own states. e- This fight must be won by the nation, not by the individual states; 1 erefore, the state health bodies must work as a harmonious pa rt of the na ion's machine. (d) Maintenance of civilian health of vital importailce In order that the i government may call healthy men to the color:,, and in order that the pro ductive resoure:s of the nation may i contie tuninterrupted by disease. (e) This legislation meet; with the entire approval of the exec-utives of the state boards of health. 3. What the proposed legislation does.--(a) Provides an elastic organ ization which may be immediately ex panded to meet a given need. (bI An economical plan, as size of organization ,may be i.mimed iteIly re duced when the needs for it has passed. (- ) hBrings into the service of the United States as an a1(1 to military oper-at ions a body of highly tr-ained sanitaiains whlo would other-wise be unavailable1 for militaryv dumty. (d) iDoes not ini any way interfere wvithI trollmient foi- the stictly miili tary arms of the government. (c) Permuits the utilization of high ly t rained non-medical sanitarians, such as sanitai-y engineers, etc. (f) Precedent for the plan in the - reset-ve corps of the army and~ navy. Labor Solicitors Law Abidlng. An oplinion was given~ by Claude N. Sapp. assistant attot-ney general, ad vising I". H-. Weston, district attorney, that agents of the J. 0. WVhite Engi neering Company wete within theli rights to solicit labor in this state. The company is now engaged in the executioni of a contract for the- fed eratl government of much magnitude alt H-ampton Roads, this being the erectiotn of a big dock. Citation of authority by which the state's power to regulate or prescribe the condi tionis under- which corporations may be permnitted to condultct their business is limited .,readls: "The only limitation upotn tils pow. or of the state to excludle a foreign corporationi fronm doing business with in its limits, or, hir-ing officers for that put'pose, or to enact conditions for allowing the corporation to (1o business or lir- offices ther-e, arises w'here the corporation i-, in the enm ploy of the feder-al govet-rnent, or whet-e its business is strictly comn mecrce, interstate or foreIgn. The con truol of stuch commerce being in the federal government Is not to be re str--ted by state authlor'ity." Two representatives of the company were recentdly arreated 'for' the solici tation of labior for the Hampton Road4 contract in Orangebur-g and Sumter. Some South Carolina Crops. Tt is estImated that. South Carolina wvill produce this year 56,400,000 Pounds of tobacco as against 20,280. 00 pounds last year. South Carolina .le expectedl to pro du1ce fr-om ten to fifteen million more bushels of corn this year- than she did In 1916. Irish Potatoes have gained in popu larity this year In South Carolina. Way over a million bushels of this crop are expected. The state didn't produce amlyways near a million bush els last year. i Brown Visits Mill Schooit. George I). Brown, Jr.. mill school supervisor, is at work to got addi tional mnill schools to operate under the compulsory school law. About one-third of the mill children are now being btnelited by this law. The fact that the age limit of the child labor law and the compulsory school law are the same will make it easier than ever to operate mill schools un der the comjopulsory school law, says the mill school supervisor. Mr. Drown goes this week to mal ufacturing centers in the upper part of the state vith the view of organiz ing part tile and continuation schools under the Smith-Hughes act, which act makes available $5,000 for such schools. Part time and continuation schools may be organized in textile centers by allowing pupils between 14 and 18 years of age to undertake some school work. Mr. Brown nlits written all mill presidents and superintendents as . A lows: "lRemembering your former courte sies and helpful co-operation. I am venturing to write you concerning ad ditional forward steps. "At this critical time, as you. well know, more efficient and fewer labor ers must do your work. Better schools will be and should be your recruiting ground. There is more lost motion in your schools on account of irregular and non-attendance than for any other cause. These two great evils para lyze the school. The operation of the compulsory school law in many mill villages in the state solved the prob lem of irregular and non-attendance. "If you are interested in this move ment among mill villages of the state we will be pleased to mail you a copy of compulsory school law, petitions for adoption of same, and render in per m or otherwise an yassistance you may deem desirable. "The mill operatives themselves are heartily in favor of compulsory school attendance where they impose it upon themselves and where there are ade quate school facilities. You mill men have gone on record, time and again, as favoring such a law. On account of the operation of the compulsory school attendance law in mill sectins of South Carolina. ,so far as we are able to learn. not a single family has moved from the villages, not a single prosecution has been brought, and Iii not a single place has the operation of the law been discontinued. In view >f these facts, together with the fact that the age limit of the compulsory school law is the same as the age limit of the state and federal labor law, 14 years. we request that you give this matter your careful consideration. "In my opinion the time is at hand when the part time school and tho continuation school should have a place in the educational system of the state. If you are interested. .the of. fire will be glad to co-operate with you." McMaster Quits State Office. P . ii. MeMaster. state insuranco omnmiss!oner, said he will not stand for re-election at the expiration of the persent term. He did not indicate hat position will engage his atten In. Concerning his proposed retire ent, he said: "Circumstances somewhat compel e to announce to the people of South arolina that I will not offer for re lection to the office of Insurance ommissioner at the expirat ion of, my resent term. My successor wvill be eected b~y tile general assembly when t next meets. Within th'e past 48 ours I htave dlecided to accept an of fer to engage in an entirely different ine of work-not connected wvith in mriiance--whichi gives much greater romise of making old age comfort ible than my pr-esent position. And hile it is a high privilege to serve he pteople in official station yet just s valuable service may be done in private life. So I have dlecided to re tire." New Enterprises Authorized. The Dovenville Gin Company of Dovesville, Dar-lingtoni counlty, was chatered, the capital stock b~eing $5,.000. The Buffalo Millinig Company of Be thune, Kershaw county, was also char tered. The capital stock is $6,000. A c-ommissionl was issuedl for the Commercial Barber Shop of Colum lant. The proposed capital stock is $3,000 and the petitionlers prop~ose tc onoduct a cigar and newvs stand i conelc(tionl with the shop1. The Fort Prince Spinning Company of Wellford was charteredl, the capi tal stock of this new enterprise being~ $50,000. A charter was also issued for the Williamsburg Publishinlg Company o1 Kingstr-ee. A newspaper is to be pubn lished and a general printing businest conducted. The capital stock is $2, 500. Application was made by the Sati Timber Corporation of Virginia foi domestication. A commission was issuedl to tho Jones-Poole Mule Company of Gaff ney. The proposedl capital stock Ii $10,000 The Canmpe Amusement Company with Augusta, Ga., as its prineipal place of business, was commissioned The proposed capital stock is $2,000 A charter was issued for the WVil lams-Hut Ron Lumber Company o0 Hardeeville, Beaufort county, the cap Ital stock t~f which is $2,000. 'A charter was also issued for th< Elloree Live Stock O6hnpany of El oree. The capital stock of this nes eminepri is $10,00. - ~To ork Many Women in this Condition Re gain Health by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Convincing Proof of This Fact. Ridgway, Penn. - "I suffered from female trouble with backache and pain in my side for over seven months so I could not do any of my work. I was treated by three different doctors and was getting discouraged -when my sister-in-law told me how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had helped her. I decided to try it, and it restored my health, so I now do all of my housework which is not light as I have a little boy three years old." -Mrs. 0. M. RIIINES, Ridgway, Penn. Mrs. Lindsey Now Keeps House For Seven. Tennille, Ga.-"I want to tell you how much I have been benefited by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. About eight years ago I got in such a low state of health I was unable to keep house for three in the family. I had dull, tired, dizzy feelings, cold feet and hands nearly all the time and could scarcely sleep at all. The doctor said I had a severe case of ulceration and without an operation I would always be an invalid, but I told him I wanted to wait awhile. Our druggist advised my husband to get Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it has entirely cured me. Now I keep house for seven and work in the garden some, too. I am so thankful I got this medicine. I feel as though it saved my life and have recommended it to others and they have been benefited".-Mrs. W. E. LINDSEY, R. R.3, Tennille, Ga. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinklam Medi cine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. SAXON $395 WFith full electric equipme.t $395 Buys Saxon Roadster' Greatest Automobile Value Ever Offered Never has there been an automobile value that can compare with this. Just stop and figure up all that you get for $395. First and foremost, full electric equipment (Wagner 2-unit type starting and lighting system); high-speed Con. tinental motor; demountable rims; 30 inch by 3 inch tires; 3-speed transmission; Hyatt quiet bearings; Fedders honeycomb radi- 4 ator; smart stream-line body; Atwater-Kent ignition system; cantilever type vanadium steel springs of extra length and strength; Schebler carburetor; dry plate clutch and twenty further features of costly car quality. Price, now, $395, f. o. b. Detroit. Saxon "Six" $935, f. o. b. Saxon Motor Car Corp., Detroit See your local dealer NOW or write to us direct. Responsible representatives wanted in all open territory. On Writing Letters. Lf hmOtie "I was told by Capt. Harry Light the "hee re ou manrsr other day," writes a Canadian majorakdte rsybsnesmno "that there Is a new style ini trenchstagrwouceonulyuhe letters. The censor's dluties haveInohspiae0c. been reduced by mnany per cent. Thue IlftemotIthnui oic" soldier now has the sense of the situ1-aswrdteItealdwhe ation engrained in his thlnklng. lie WSI~~t ytoo he fyu sees through the need of keepi~ng quietimuntcek" even on matters that call for some-________ criticism. There Is more humor and Teacetprywo(u'e on matter-of-factness about his letters,.nte"etesx vdnl ee One of my men wiho canm't write v'ery ~'tW8~ agi~one uh well, was telling me the other day that one letter a week is all that he can Acrigt rts iue h summon up his courage to write, and wr~' osnpino e ssedl lhe gave this as a reasod: 'The PeopleInrai. at home don't, can't understand life - here. We have got to go thr'cg I oughit Why tease them with anxIeties-they noptte dgaioFtuncSc have opmoughi to put up with In pac- eadcl-alru on rlsigfeho fists and political grumblers.' And Iwilfd thInk he is right. Don't you?"ft , The production of nitrogen from theri s air in Germany, wvhich was only 30,000stacanbid ptefgigeere. tons In 1013, has bceen so successfuil-___ that 800,000 tons were so produced In 1010, nnd it Is expected that 320,000 K Z E A wvill be produced this year. According to the Frankfurter Zeitung, the cost is Mnybmcwtotqeto only six cents a kilogram. tcteto Th CEA Sure. 6ca rgito ietfo Hu~sbang1-The agent saidl that thkRis hrsMlieCe SeuuTa cnr was easy. WIfe-Ue must have got you and the cr mixed. wrm An apparatus operatedl by com-IL TO C pressed air, recently Invented, literally blows ice cream from m1olds.Sodor4yer.orMlraCtI When Your Eyes Need Care ~Es3t TyM rnEeR eedy. . HALTB, O 8-07