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FRAIL, SICKLY CHILD Restored to Health by Vinol? Letter to Mothers. Anxious mothers often wonder -why their children are bo pale, thin and nervous and have so little appetite. For the benefit of such mothers in this vicinity we publish the following letter. J. Edmund Miller, New Haven. Conn., says: "My little daughter, over since her birth, had been frail and Blckly, and was a constant source of worriment. Several months ago wo commenced to glvo her Vinol. I Im mediately noted an Improvement In her health and appearance. I gave her three bottles of Vinol, and from the good it has dono her I can truly say it will do all you claim." This child's recovery was due to the combined action of the medicinal elements extractod from cods' livers. ?combined with tho blood-making and strength-creating properties of tonic iron, which are contained in Vinol. Vinol will build up and strengthen delicate children, old peoplo and tho weak, run-down and debilitated. We Teturn the money In every case where it falls. LAURENS DRUG CO. Lauren?, 8. C. Rings That Look Like Twice Our Price Men, women and children love Q C Rings at light, because they're to beautiful. No other Una affords auch wonderful values. So strong that tho maker* guarantee to replace lost stones (except diamonds). Guaranteed Rings Look for Q. C. stamp inside each WILLIAM SOLOMON. 1.aureus, S. C. Your Poor Stomach n*?&u ? fMit, A??tat digestion. l>y u#?tr* tbo GROVER GRAHAM DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. Try n 25-cont bottle and instantly oor ivet .ill 'Ii under i of tho diftostive system. Do not hesitate, but act st ouco I " Throo doctor.i said thn.t 1 had cancer of tho stomach, and I bohevod it. On? bottlo of Orovor Oraham Dyspepsia, fiprnedy convinced mo that they were wrwimj, Thanks to its I am now por ?-ftetly well." fi??R?? MOTT, ?inethnftti, ?hid. Throo 8t*os, 25c:. 50c. and fl.OO, 8. QhOVfcft ORAHAM CO.,' INC. I NF.WBUROH, H.Y. lAtRKNH imro to. Lanrchs. S. ('? _._ Asthma! Asthma! POPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY gives instant relief and an absolute cure in all cases of Asthma, Hronchitis, and Hay Fever. Sold by druggists ; mail on receipt of price $i.oo. Trlnl Par kapre by mail 10 cents. WILLIAMS MFG. CO.. Props.. CUv.t.ud, Ohio LAURENS DRUG CO. ^ Lauren*, 8, U <* mm 11 im? I Dr. T. L? Timmerman Dentist People's Bank Building Phone 882. Laurens, S. C. FURS WANTED! The highest prices for all kinds of furs will be paid by S. Pollakoff, Lau rent, 8.' C. All prices will be governed accord ing to fur market. S. POM A KOPF, AGENT. | Nert to Post Office Laurens, S. C. EAGLE-THISTLE SODA feilte, rfte&Ji I CROSS HILL NEWS | Cross Hill, Nov. 21.?Mrs. Oolie Brown of Greenwood, visited her mother, Mrs. Walker last Friday.' Miss Miles, a popular teacher In the school here visited friends in Clinton Friday and Saturday. Mrs. J. T. Medlock and children of Greenwood, visited her sister, Mrs. 8. H. Goggans last week, at their pretty home a few miles from town. Mrs. T. J. Beak, and children, re turned Saturday from a visit to rela tives in Clinton. Miss Mary DUlard, a leather In the Mountvllle school, spent Saturday and Sunday with friends In Cross Hill. Rev. W. 1). Ratchford was Installed pastor of the Presbyterian Ohwrch here Sunday. Dr. Bean of Clinton preached from Rom. 1:16, propound ed the constitutional questions and charged the pastor. Elder B. R. Ful ler of Mountvllle In n very appropri ate talk charged the people. All the exercises were Interesting. Mr. A. M. Hill was called to Rich mond Saturday on nccount of tho se rious Illness of his wife. He brought her home Sunday night. She Is seri ously 111. The family have the sym pathy of our people. Mr. Edd Ratchford. uncle of Rev. W. D. Ratchford. was here Sunday for the Installation service. Francis, the little son of Mrs. I^envell, had the misfortune to get his leg broken while playing at school last week. The relatives and friends of Mrs. Lafayette Walker were notified last Thursday of his sudaen death. lie died at Goldvllle, where he had been In business only a short while. A number of relatives and friends at tended the funeral at the family bury ing ground near Mountvllle on Friday. Mr. Lyl Leaman came over from Clinton Saturday to be with home folks Sunday. Mrs. Walter T. Jones of Greenwood spent a few days the past week with Mrs. A. B. French. Mr. Hassell Miller hs been at home sick the past week. Mr. Henry Mil ler, his brother was over to see him yesterday and today his pastor, Rev. Mr. Rosebro, came over from Whlt mlre to see him. He Is much better today. Miss Maud Wells came home from Atlanta Saturday. She; has been quite siek au,d came home to recuperate. Mr, Lurry McGowan came over from Clinton Saturday. His friends and fellow student, Mr. C&ffjgnn, came with him. Rev. Mr. Jones of Clinton was In 'Pttll i\ short while today. MOUNTVILLE NEWS, Mountvllle, Nov. is Mr. M. Lafa yette Walker died in Goldvllle, Nov. II. Mr. Walker was a Confederate vet(>ran and a man of honesty and re liability, lie was bout 67 yers old. He ws brought to Mountvllle and his remains were laid to rest in the old Motes burying ground. He Is sur vived by Mrs. Lurle McNeal of Clin ton, VV'1C> 's a a'8ter. and other rela,-> tlves. Mr. William Fellers of the Univer sity of South Carolina, spent the week-end with home folks. Rev. Mr. Ratchford of Cross Hill was installed pastor of the Presby terian church last Sunday evening, the installation sermon being preach ed by the Rev. Mr. .folios of Clinton. Hq was assisted in the service by Dr. J. H. Miller of Cross Hill. A crowd of young people WtVt nutting SniurdAy afternoon. 'Hie. party was merry and qultU a. good many nut'* were gathered. ?;>????????>*???? ? * * PEA RIDGE. * Pea Ridge. Nov. 18.?Mrs. S. K. Foxworth and Miss Ethel Cunning ham, spout Tuesday night with Mrs. O. P. Goodwin. Misses Bessie and Grace Blakely of Laurens, were the guests of Miss Dessie Shockloy Sunday. Mr. J, S.: Cunningham . of. Clinton, spent the. week-end with his :bro!U-] or, Mr. E. ,Y. Cunningham., Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Cunningham spent Sunday with Mrs. Mattle Row land. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Weathers' vis ited Miss Mary Johnson In Clinton; Sunday. . , } \1; We were sorry to g?ve up My. Jim] Hipp and fathily wffo moved to Clin-' toh last Wtefea*. V ?'" "? '? " ?' 1?,-l-^-i ? ( Confused Narrative. "Bligglns'lB the most careless fisher man I *ver saw." "Doesn't he bave any luck?" "Certainly not. Why. In fixing up Btorlof to tell bis friends he doesn't even take the trouble to find out what kind of fish swim In the waters he visits." Yonntt man, read (lardy k Wilson's ad In this paper and act accordingly. Fine Elms in New York Endan gered by Caterpillars. Mora 8pr?ylng Is Needed but There Is Not Enough City Money' to do This Thoroughly, 8ays Com missioner 8torer. Now York.?Visitors to Central park within the last few days, and those who walk along the Fifth ave nue side of the park, have been ap palled at the destruction dono to the fine elm trees by thousands of cater pillars, remarks a writer in the New York Tribune. They are the tussock moths, long known among landscape gardeners as ono of the most persis tent and destructive insects with which they have to denl. Within the limits of Centrnl park they seem to have Bprung into life in unusually largo numbers this year. Charles. Downing Lay, the landscape architect of the park, said recently that In a recent trip through the parks ot Brooklyn and the Bronx ho saw com paratively few of them. E. S. Avery, who lives at the Metro politan club, and several other lovers of New York's flno trees, have called attention to this unfortunate state of affairs, and have not hesitated to say that unless the deadly moth situation Is taken in hand quickly and forcibly Central par!' and other sections of Manhattan island which possess hand somo trees will see many of the best specimens degenerated to decaying stumps before the approach of anoth er spring. Landscape architects and authori ties on trees who were asked yester day if it were too late in the season to do anything to counteract tho de structive effects of these pests said on the contrary that this was the time to get to work. As soon as tho cater pillars emerge from their cocoons, which they are now doing by the thousands, they start upward for tho green leaves, upon which they foed, and then return to the trunk to lay their eggs within tho bark. If tho trees are well sprayed with arsenate of lead mixture they will die before denuding the tree partially of the leaves. 'This spraying Is the second means of eradicating the moths," said Wil liam J. Zartmann yesterday. For ten years he was superintendent of parks in Brooklyn. "My method of fighting the tussock moth has been to havo workmen clean ofT the trunk and branches thoroughly In the winter with wire brushes. The fmall co coons are swept out of their hiding Tydd ?f Tf?ei That 8uffer. 'places, and, being caught On pieces of canvas under tho tree, are then burned. This Is a laborious Job, for with large trees the men must get up to tho top and scrape all the branches and one man cannot do much more than three trees a day. "Tho spraying comes when tho moths first appear?anywhere from tho end of June to tho mlddlo of July. If thoroughly applied by power spray ing machines to every part of the tree ono good spraying ought to be sufficient." Mr. Zartmann figured out the ap proximate cost of this work at about $1.30 a tree. The spraying Is the most costly. A crew of five men and a modern power spraying machine, he said, ought to clean about sixty I trees a day. 1 "One or two years' work Is not enough," added Mr. Zartmann. "It must be faithfully followed out year after year, and then, while we can not prevent the nppearanec of these Insects entirely, they will be less in number and less destructive to the future beauty of tho trees/' Park Commissioner Stover, when asked what Was being done to kill off the moths and prevent their future propagation, said that he bolleved ev erything that could be done with the msans at hand was being accom plished, and ha added that spraying machines wers at work In several parts of U.o park. Besides the caterpillars the remain ing elms show Indications ot otheY diseases noticeable by the deata branches protruding In a most un pic turesque way -from 'the -sides ? and tops. OCTOBER REMINDERS Arrange sheds and mows to feed shredded fodder to the stock?lr you have never done so you will be pleased with results, especially with the fine lot of manure you have to spread. Hay stacks In meadows adjoining corn fields should be fenced now In order to give free range to our stock Just as soon as the corn Is husked. To dig post holes In frozen ground Is not what we call a "snap." To furnish food for the world !s an accomplishment worthy of great praise, but It is not our whole duty? remember that Tuesday, November 5, Is election day. See that the seed corn which you have carefully selected and hung up or put on racks to dry Is not subjected to freezing weather. Sudden weather changes may happen any time?we should guard against these. Pasturing alfalfa or clover too late Is bud practice, to say the least. These crops, when cut or pastured close, are apt to be winter killed. Are you making a record and order ing the needed repairs for the various machines as they are stored for the winter? Handsome Trophy for Best Corn. The American Land and Irrigation Exposition company, whoso general ofiiceB are in the Singer building, New York city, is offering a handsome trophy, vnlued at $500, to the farmer growing the best 30 ears of Indian corn of any variety with the '.arrest yield per acre. The corn must te grown in the 1'nlted States. Ru'es and shipping Instructions and partic ulars for making entry for the prlvi l^ge of competing in this cont< st can bo secured by writing Mr. Gilbert McClurg, General Manager of the Bx position, Singer building, New York Hoard In School. "Why did Atlas have to support the earth?" "He didn't have to; he was just practicing his physical culture lea son " Doctors Use This for Eczema Dr. Evans, Ex-Commlsslontr of Health, says: "There Is almoBt no relation be tween skin diseases and the blood." Tho skin must be cured through tho skin. The germs must be washed out, and so salves have long ago been found worth less. Tho most advanced physicians of this country are now agreed on this, and are prescribing a wash of wintergreon, thymol and other ingredients for eczema and all other skin diseases. This com pound Is known as D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema. Dr. Holmes, the well known skin spe cialist writes: "I am convinced that the D.D.D. Prescription Is as much a specific for eczema as quinine for malaria. 1 have been prescribing the D.D.D. remedy for years." It will take away the itch tho instant you apply It. In fact, we are so sure of what D.D.D. will do for you that wo will be glad to let you have r $1 bottle on our guar antee that It will cost you nothing un less you tind that It does the work. Laurens Drug Co., Laurens, S. C. Look And Be Quick! A handsome piece of Protei tyfaeeing street 130 feet by 90 feet deep, within 100 feet of Public Square. This property is cut in lots 27 x 90 feet making nice store lots. If not sold at private sale, will be auctioned off Salesday in December. This property is next to E. W. Martin's sales stable. For information see? BISHOP & WOLFF COLUMBIA, NE WHERRY & LAURENS RAILWAY. N. B. The following schedule figures are published only as information and not guaranteed. Station 62 *6D Lv Laurens Ar 2:52 p m 7:55 p m Clinton 2:30 7:35 Newberry 1:29 0:44 Prosperity 1:12 6-36 Ar Columbia Lv 11:35 5:0l> Ar Sumter Lv 9:40 Ar Charleston Lv 0:00 a m * ?Trains 54 and 55 run solid between Greenville and Columbia daily ex cept Sunday. These trains stop at Gervais St. Station, While trains 52 and 53 go to Union Station. Solid through trains between Greenville and Charleston via Laurens and Columbia. \ T. C. WHITE, General Passenger Agent. '1 ?54 8:20 a m 8:44 9:32 9:50 11:15 p m 53 2:0E 2:30 3:20 3:34 4:55 6:40 10:30 p m LEGAL BLANKS We keep in stock a com plete line of Legal Blanks I that are in general use. I % These blanks all conform to ? $ recent laws and are printed ? 5 on the very best quality of ? paper. Special forms with name I of firm printed therein can be had from us at reasonable prices. ADVERTISER PRINTING COMPANY job Printers Laurens, S. C.