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Women's Ailments The ailments from which women suffer are many and varied so far as the symptoms indicate, yet they are all de pendent upon a disorder In the female generative system, and a remedy that acts on the cause of the trouble puts an end to all the distressing symp toms as soon as the unnatural conditions are removed. DR. SIMMONS Squaw Vine Compound Is a Medicine for Women It acts directly on the female org anism. Quiets inflammation, eases pain, strengthens the nerves, helps digestion, tones up the stomach and puts the body in fine vigorous ?condition. It transforms a weak, nervous, ailing woman into one of sparkling cheerfulness and vigor. It brightens the eye. re vives the spirits and restores the rosy bloom of health to the.cheek. Sold by Druggiat* and Dealer? Price $1.00 Per Bottle C.F.Simmons Medicine Co. ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI OLD AUTO TIRES! I buy worn out automobile tires at fair prices. Always In the market for Hides, Tallow, Beeswax, Scrap Iron, Scrap Rubber, Metal and Burlap, and Bur lap Bags. Write for Further Information. E. BOGGERO, Greenwood, S.C. JNDERTAKING KENNEDY BROS., Undertakers and Embalmers Call* ancwcred any hours, day or night. LAURENS, S. C. DR. CLIFTON JONES Dentist. Office la Simmons Dntldtcg Phono: Office No. 86: Residence. 219 NOTICE. Notice l.s hereby given that appli cation has been made to the secretary of state for the issuance of a coin mission to The Julia Irby ounitarium to be located in Laurens, S. ('.. and to do general hospital work, train nurses and perform all other services implied in the name. JULIA lltBY. Pres. and Treas. .1. L. M. I buy, See. FINAL SETTLEMENT. Take notice that on the 19th day of December, I will render a final ac count of my acts and doings as Ad ministrator of the estate of W. V. Lawson, deceased, in the office of the Judge of Probate of Laurens county at 11 o'clock, a. in., and on the sann day will apply for a final discharge from r.iy trusts as Admin.. trator. Any persons indebted to said estate are notified and required to make pay tment on that date; and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, duly proven, or be forever bai led. J. M. DeSHIELDS, / Administrate* . November lit, 1913.?1 mo. LAND SALE, State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. In Court of Common Pleas .1. W. LEAK 13, Plaintiff agn'nst J. .1. DBNDY, et al.. Defendants. Pursuant to a decree of the c art in the above state,| case. I will sell at public outcry to tin? highest bid der, at Laurens ('. II.. S. <'., on Sales day in December next, being .Monday, the 1st day of the month, during the legal hours for such stiles, the follow ing desclrbed property, to wit: All that tract of land, situated in the county and state aforesaid, containing lt>0 acres, more or less, and known as a part of the land lying near Dr. J. A. Barksdale's old residence, and being the land conveyed to .1. .1. Dendy by .1. II. Davis and bounded as follows: on the north by pjubllc road lead ing from Laurens to Greenville and lands of the estate of Dr. J. A. Barks dale; on the east by said public road: on the south by lands of the Oakland Heights Realty Company; on w< t by lands of Col. H. y. Simpson, Teems of sale: one-half cash, bal ance to be paid twelve months from date of sale; the credit portion to be secured by bond and, mortgage of the purchaser over the said premises, bearing legal interest from date, with leave to purchaser to pay his entire bid In cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. If the terms of sale are not complied with, the laud to be re-sold on same or some subsequent Salesday on same terms, at risk of former pur chaser. , C. A. POWER, C. C. C. P. and (}. S., Laurens, S. C. !>ated, this Nov. 8, 15)13. 16-3t HUMUS IN THE SOIL. Thia Valuable Substance.Is Duo to th? Presence of Bacteria. We flu? a vusl difference iu the fer tility of differeut soils, writes C. L. McArthur, assistant bacteriologist, Ida bo experiment station. For instance, sand, although it may contain all the elements necessary for plant food, Is still found barren and without vegeta tion. Garden soils, however, may con tain less plant food than the sand and still be considered very fertile. This difference is usually due to the sub stance known as humus. Where the Immus is present the different ele ments are present in a form that plants can use. This humus is the remains of previous plants and animals. When plants die that part which is not used for commercial purposes usually goes back to the soil. In much the same way a great deal of the animal body reaches the soil. As soon as this material reaches the soil it is attacked by millions of bacte ria, whieh are known as the decompo sition bacteria. These bacteria soon cause a great many changes in the ma terial, each change tending to break down the complex into the more sim ple compounds. A part of this matt-rial is set free iu the form of gases and is lost In the atmosphere, but the greatest part remains in the soil its a partly de composed mass and is known as hu mus. Different classes of bacteria continue their work on this material after it has reached the form of humus, decompos ing it still further ami building plant food ami other substances from it. Thus we see that humus is continually changing. It is never the same in two different fields, and it also differs from year to year in the same lield. The addition of manure to a held docs a great deal toward the formation of humus. It not only adds decompos ing matter to the soil, but it also adds large numbers of bacteria which form humus out of the material already In the soil. Thus we Und that if it were not for the work Of bacteria there would not be any humus, as the various plant and animal matter would not de cay. CHOCOLATE AS A FOOD. It Should Be Eaten After and Never Before Meals. Chocolate is one of the most whole some of foods. But it should 1)0 re served for eating after meals. Nothing can bo worse than chocolate eaten just before a meal, for then it ruins the appetite. Chocolate should consist of equal parts of sugar and cocoa. When it contains, as most of that sold in the cheap candy stores does, more sugar than cocoa it loses much of its real food value. Koenig. the great German chemist, who has done so much to enlighten the world on the value of foods by publish ing his analysis of them, says that chocolate contains i>.'2~ per cent of pro tein. .<')'_' per cent of tbeobromine, 21.20 per cent of fat. 1.30 per cent of tar taric acid ,">:?.To per cent of sugar. 4.07 per cent of starch. 1.07 per cent of cel lulose and 5.59 per cent of other car bohydrates. Therefore it is highly nu tritive. Athletes, polar explorers and moun tain climbers know this well. In the Swiss Alps it is usual to carry choco late in the pocket and to eat a little of it whenever the climbers pause for a rest. But chocolate is fattening and should therefore be eschewed by those who have a tendency to tOo great cor pulency. It is an ideal addition to the diet of a vegetarian. Chocolate and cocoa are almost as stimulating as coffee and ten, but have none of the injurious effects upon the nervous system which are for many people tho great drawbacks of these drinks. Chocolate is best when made over night and allowed to stand.?New York World. A Knight In Topcoats. The late .Sir Tat ton Sykes, says the Manchester Guardian, had a way of his own of taking his walks comfort ably. A visitor in the neighborhood of SlCdmere would see the baronet set out for his morning round wearing two or three overcoats. When he felt warm enough he would take off lirst one and then another and lay it oq the nearest hedgerow. The person who found an overcoat and returned it to the house always received the reward of a shil ling, and no doubt, tho Sledmere boys were willing searchers. Unappreciated. "See, John," said Mrs. Slathers, with a happy smile, "I have taught the ca nary every time I come near him to stick out his little bill to be kissed." "Humph!" said Slathers, eying the bird critically. ?'Seems to me you spend your time teaching creatures how to present their bills for my atten tion. I got one from your milliner this morning, not to mention a dozen or two others in the same mail."?Har per's. Hopeless. A woman went to the police station to Inquire about ber missing husband. "What is his distinguishing feature?" asked the superintendent. "A large Roman nose." she answered. "Then he won't be found," emphatic ally exclaimed a policeman, "for a nose of that kind never turns up."?Pear son's Weekly. Hard to Find. "Don't get down In the mouth, old man." said the optimist. "Look on the bright side of things." "That's all very well," mournfully replied the sufferer, "but what, tell me. is the bright side of n gumboil?"? Philadelphia Ledger. CoTfinless Funeral. The Bacchanalian funeral in Italy, I which took half a day to reach ttio Durlal place, is very like what Dean Ramsay tells of bygone Scotland. There was the old maiden lauy ot Strathspey who bade her grandnephew toe that as much whisky was used at her funeral as had been used at her baptism. The churchyard was ten miles from her home; it was a short November daj: und night was closing In when the funeral procession ar rived. "But w haur's Miss Ketty?" ask ed the grave digger, uud being an swered, "In her coffin, to bo sure." bo 6till missed (he roflln. The party, dur ing a halt at a wayside inn, had rested It on a dyke, and forgotten It when they resumed their waj ; and the In? termont had to be postponed until the next day. We Will Please Von. If you have a certain pose or picture in mind, we will execute it for you or?just leave I: to us. We produce the latest and best styles in photo graphic portraiture. Our line of sample photographs will convince you of nhe ?quality wo put into our work, ivfne in and look them over. We oirn only turn out a limited number of good photographs between tnis notice and Christmas so don't wait come early. NICHOLS STUDIO Couldn't See His Third. During the cotton-picking season in Texas a colored brother who had gono into the country to work returned vorj much disgusted. "Don't yo' git no offahs tor pick no cotton'.'" asked a friend. "Sech ez doy was White I man done offered mo one third o" wat Ah could pick. Ah done tuk a look at ; de field an' saw dat when it wall nil picked It wouldn't amount t<?r one third. So Ah done lit out fer home!" BID CHILD WAUL IT ( BBSS OB . LYKRISII .' Look Mother! If tongue is coated give "California Syrup of Pigs" to clean (he bonds. Mother! Your child isn't naturally cross and peevish, See If tongue Is coated; this is a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels need n cleansing at once. When listless, pale, feverish, full of Cold, breath bad. throat sore, doesn't eat. sleep or act naturally, has stoni ach-achc, diarrhoea, remember, a gen tle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the first treatment given. Nothing etptals California Syrup of Figs" for children's Ills: give a tea spoonful, and in a few hours all the foul waste, sour b^ile and fermenting food which is clogged lu Iho bowels passes out of the system, am' you have a well and playful child again. All children love this harmless, deli cious "frull laxative," and it never falls to effcel a good "inside" cleans ing. Directions tor babies, children of all ages and grown-ups are plainly on the bottle. Keep ii handy in your home. A lit tle given today saves a .sick chili] to morrow, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a iiO-cenl bottle of "California Syrup of figs," then look and see that it is made by the "Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company." Counter feits are biing sold here. Don't be fooled! End of a Noted Folly. The monocle has long since boon out of fashion in England, and is soon to disappear from Paris, which has been its last stronghold it was in vented by a Dutch dandy, and its evil eftocts upon the eye were at once noted by oculists. The monocle first appeared at the congress of Vienna In 1S14, when it was worn by Its In ventor. One folly, at bast, has had only about a century of lifo. Bow's This.' We offer One Hundred Dollars Be tt, "d for any case of Catarrh that can not he cured by Hall's Catarrh Care. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O, We, the undersigned, have know n I-. J, Cheney for the last l.~. years, and believe him perfectly honorabl \ i i all business transactions and financialD able to carry out any obligatio!, made by his firm. NaltonaS Bank of Cammer? e, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Intern ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, ' Testimonials sent free. Price 7 ? Collis I per bottle. Sohl by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. I ?fw * , in._ Office Hours. Living in a very friendly neighbor hood, I found that often during the week 1 wns delayed in my work by a "back-door" visit or a lengthy tele phone call. Accordingly 1 proposed to several that we adopt "office hours" for our work and permit no interrup tion during those hours, writes a con tributor to Harper's Bazar The neighbors saw the wisdom of this plan and we have followed it with very gratifying economy of strength and time. vorn ii \ib ni.lbs Parisian Sa'_'c. Unsightly, matted, colorless, s< raggy hair made Huffy, soft, abundant and ! radiant with life at once, l'fio Pari? : fllan Sage. It i omes in "ate bottles, The first application removes dan druff, stops itching scalp, cleanses tin hair, takes away the dryness and brit tleness. Increases the beauty of the hair, making it wavy and lustrous, Everyone needs Parisian Sage, ?rkv h n Pffg iffflk nrcournble. Ailklndi ? all ii.i an idViintf ami gyp ? I k ?-".>:?' ? B J^T ra^Bi ii ' internal. WLmx BLn, WwHf 11 ? Leonhard Ci " b??whem-roid tabletn produce amazing res?ltfl by altai-Mm? ttie , INTERNAL CAUSE. 1 ho 'Ilka arc .Iri.-I up and 1 pcrinam-ntly cured. 'i\ dayV treatment, $1.00. I DR. LEONIIAKOT CO., Builalo. N. Y. (free bouk) j Sold by Laurons Di m,. Oo. and all druggists. -ROPER COMPANY SPECIAL Thanksgiving Offerings! SPECIAL OFFERINGS Men's Suits Worsted and Cassimers Clean, New, Snappy Styles Well Tailored, all Sizes. Thanksgiving Special $10.00 Special Offering Men's High-grade Style Plus Clothes, all highclass Worsted. The all-wool guaranteed line $17.00 $17.00-Stylcplus?$17.00 SPECIAL OFFERINGS Men's Suits Fancy Worsteds, Cassi SPECIAL OFFERINGS Men's Suits Serges, Worsteds, Fancy mers, fhibets. All the Cassimeres, absolutely all new nobby cuts. All sizes, wool,high grade tailoring, Thanksgiving special new styles, all sizes. $12.50 Thanksgiving special $15.00 Special Offering Special Offering Special Offering Men's Cravenette Over coats. Extra lone; half silk lined. Black and col ors. All sizes. Thanks giving Special $10.00 Special Offering Hand Tailored Over coats, belted backs, new snappy styles. All sizes. Thanksgiving Special Strictly high class gar ments, all the new woolen, full box back coats. Snap py garments for the tasty dresser. Thanksgiving special $22.50 The very best in the house and we handle the best made suits that would be low at $30.00 to $35.00 Hand tailored throughout, jThanksgiving special $25.00 $17.50 Special Offering Men's Overcoats, Gruv-I enetts, Thibets, Cassi meres. Extra good values | and all sizes. Thanksgiv ing special $12.50 Special Value Special Offering Handsome black Crave nette Overcoats. Extra length, Silk lined, conver tible collar. Fxtra special Special Offering High grade Overcoats, extra long cuts, Cravi nettes, Thibets and unfin ished Worsteds. A special coat at a special price $15.00 Rain Coats The kind that keep out the rain. Special $5.00 up All sizes $20.00 Laurens' Biggest Best Stock of Shoes Thousands of pairs of the best shoes made to select from. Dependable shoes at satisfactory prices. Special Offering Furnishing Goods, new Shirts, new Neckwear, new Underwear. Lots of new snappy things to show the tasty- dresser. Special Offering BOY'S SUITS $2.50 to $12.50 They are the snappy, styles the Boys' like. Why not buy the Boy what he wants? They cost no more than the old styles, DAVIS-ROPER LAURENS' BEST STORE