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HUSBAND AND WIFE BOTH SAVED FROM SUFFERING I wish to tell you the good results myself and husband received fro mDr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. About eleven years ago I had a severe attack of La Grippe and was confined to my bed about eight weeks under the doctor's care. He pronounced my case kidney trouble and rheumatism and not re ceiving the results from the doctor's treatment I should have reneived, I decided to try Swmp-Root. After tak ing several bottles of Swam;,-Root I was able to got up and attend to my work. About a year later my husband was pffecled with a severe attack of kidney trouble and doctored for some time with the doctors and received no benefit. Knowing of tha good I had received he decided to try Swamp Root, His condition was such that he was confined to his bed and words cannot tell how he suffered, but after taking Swamp-Root he was relieved so he could go on with his work with out pain. I wish ti heartily recom mend Swamp-Root to all persons af flicted with kidney and bladder trou bles and you may publish this letter If you wish. Yours truly, MRS. A. E. BRIGGS,. Eldred, Pa. Sworn and subscribed to before me, this 25th day of May. 1912. Ira McCarthy, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bin hamnton N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Yil o For You. ' Send ten cents to Dr. I ner & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Laurens Advertiser. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Call in and inspect our recent shipment of horses and mules. These are the best-grade Ten nessee mules and are ready for work. GRAY-EASTERBY MULE COMPANY Martin's Stable, back of Enterprise Bank (CHANGE IN SCHEDULE. I.ED Ilumbia, Newblerriy & Lauirens 11. RI. .innounc iies Sevecra1 lihanges. Columblia, Newberry 4 1Lau1rens Railra ann( lhiounfces~ the following chianiges ini schelesil4.ci lyecie .Jan. 17. 1916i, for' train.s Nosi. 13, 51, 51 and TralIn No. Ii willI leave LauIrens at 3:2.~ p. m1., arriving C'olumbhia, Gcrvais Strieet 7: :S p. mn. Tihe following sta t ions will be0 discontinued as flag stops5 lrand, Gary, JIalap~a, Sllghs, H1i1 toni, WVhite Rock, Ballentine, Leap harts. Train No. 541 will leave Columbia, Gervaia st., 5:03 p. mn., arriving Lau rens, at 8:18 p. mn. Train No. 55 will leave Laurens at 8:38 a. mi., arriving at Columbia. Ger vais St., 11:32 a, m. Train No. 51, operated Sunday only, wvill leave Laurens at 4:30 p. mi., ar riving Columbia, Gervais St., 7:38 p. m1. The following stations will be made flag stopsB for train No. 53 due to leave Laurens at 2 p. in.: Slighs, Hilton, Laph arts. Train No. '13 will stop at all sta tions to discharge, passengers from points beyond Laurens and Clinton, .a. mn.; Leaphart, Irmo, Ballentino, White Rock, Hilton,/ Chapin, Slighe, S. C. The following stations will be dis c'ontinuedl as flag stops for mixed train No. 12 dde to leave Columbia at 3 Jalapa. Gary, Brand. E. A. TARRER, Commercial Agent N. B. DIAL A. C. TQDD (jflAL & TODD' Attorney. at Law Enterprise Bank Buldings, L~aure, S. C. PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS Money to Loan on Real~ EstAte--Lour Time. B. R. TODD Engineering and Contracting Land Surveys a Sp~eeafy .,'erete Work .SkIllfmUll, don, or is speeted. *rswfngs and estimates of all Eind ,Telephone N.. 346 HOME MEMORIES MEAN MUCH Duty of Parents to Give Children Something Which They May Re. call With Pleasure. Happy home memories to look back upon is a gift which every mother should plan as definitely to give to her child as she plans definitely to give him an education, sound health and good judgment. First of all, then, it seems to me we owe our children memories of a beautiful home; a home of simple com mon sense; a well-ordered home. This would seem to me a child's very first right. And next, it seems to me, he has the right to memories of beauty in the home. Children are far more suscep tible to beauty than many of us real. ize, and certainly the effect of beauty on the child's life can hardly be over estimated. Further, home to be a delightful memory must have the beauty of so ciability. It must be a place where people come to share its benefits, and its ideals. That home can hardly be called a home 'which does not open, its doors often. Desides being a healthful place, a peautiful place, a sociable home, if /it is to afford us enriching memo ries, must be an intimate and sympa thetic place, possessing that finer in timate sociability which .grows up be tween the true home and its inmates. In all right living and thinking we are partakers of a kind of immortality, for death does not touch these things. -Laura Spencer Porter in Mother's Magazine. PLAN VACATION FOR HEALTH Period of Release From Toli Should Be Wisely Spent, or it is Worse Than Useless. Ostensibly you go on a vacation to and or to improve your health, re marks the Philadelphia Evening Ledg. er. But how many achieve it? To most of us a vacation is a respite from toil, witi a license to overeat, oversleep and overdo everything that we take in normal doses during the period-of hard labor. Who is there who hasn't returned from a vacation spoiled by indigestion, excessive play or a lazy indulgence in doing nothing, with the conviction that the pleasures and increased health he expected to find were a delusion? Tho best vacation is not so much freedom from the necessity of work ing as it is a change, new scenes, new people, new ideas, all taken in mod eration. As such they are a tonic. When you start forth, just to avoisi the necessity of calling in a physician to diagnose your ailment, take the advice of Jonathan Swift ante consun% "the three best doctors in the world -Doctor Diet, Doctor Quiet and Doc tor Merryman." They will tell you to eat moderately of digestible foods, to let alcoholic liquors alone and then to remember, as Solomon said, that "a merry heart doeth good like a medicine." While your sins must be atoned for .n the next world, you have to pay for your follies also in this one. EAT WITHOUT FEAR OF INDIGESTION OR SOUR, ACID STOMACHI Sustint relief! "Pape's Diaippia'' Wonder what. uet youri stomach which portion of the food di the dam age- - do you? Well, dlon't bo0th er. If your s tomtach is in a revnolt; itf sourt, jeasy and1( uplset, and what you just ate has fermnen ied into stubbitorin 1lumbsh; headi dIizzy and nches: ,. belch gase and01( aclds and1( crelinte u d igesi - md food; breaith foul, tongue .oatedc just. t ake a little Pa pe's D~ial .pain and in live maintue o ~i 01nd1 what he ename of thle lndi gcst io an dist ress. Mill ions of mleni at 1 omen0 today knowv that iit in needle n o have a bad stomach. A little Dila iin occasIon ally keeps this dlelicate or-gan regulat ed and they eat their favorite foods without rear. Tf y'orui stomach doesn't take carec or your- liberal limit wIthout rebellIon; if your foodl Is a udaae lnsteadl of a help, remember- the qluickest, sur-eat, most harmless relief is Pape's Ila pepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug storns. It's truly wonderul-lt digests food and sets thIngs straight, so gently and easily that it Is really astonIshing. Please. for your sake, don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so unnecessary. P'ASSENOEII IS KIII'D, ..MANY OTIIEllS IIlitT' Southern Itallway Ti'ain Sideswiped by Freight at Jamestown, N. C., Near Greensb~oro. Grecensboro, N. C., March 19.--One passenger was killed and 13 injured, several serious, when Southern rali way passenger train No. 43, bound from W',ashington for Charlotte, N. C., was sideswviped by a freight train at James town, N. C., ten miles south of Gr-eens bore, ear-ly tonight. The Injured were removed to High Point hospitails by that portion of the train which omerg ed from the wreck. Mrs. M. RL. Hlyatt of High PoInt, N. 'C., was killed. Numerous other passengers re ceivedl injuries of a iess serious na tur-e, besides tihe 13 seriously hurt. Train No. 483 had just left .Jamnes town and was running at redlucedl speed whpn a car of a freight train runnIng on a parallel track but in the opposite direction left the trackct nnA cwnahned into it. MARL FROM ASHLEY RIVElt, Stato Contraets With Virginia.Caro. lna Interests tp Supply Farmers' Needs. Columbia, March 7.--"Because of the imperative need for lime on South Carolina soils, for several years I have been working with all the energy at my command to at least get a start made iipoh the development of the large marl beds in the coastal plain of this state. At last it can be announc ed that this development, so full of hope and promise for the future, is under way; that one of the richest beds has been opened, and that a now 30,000 ton annual capacity plant is in full operation, turning put a ma terial of greatest value to agriculture at this particular time,. the fertilizer situation being so acute that under the new act of the general assembly the State department of agriculture has contracted with the owners of the plant for the entire output to be sold to the farmers of the state, at as near the cost of production as possible; that the railroad rates have been carefully adjusted by the State railroad com mission; that until June 1 at least material carrying over $1 of actual values above the lime content values will be delivered to fargiers, for cash, in 30 ton lots, for around an average delivered price of $2 to $2.25 per ton in three-fifths of the State; that the price of $1.25 per ton at the mine on Ashley river is to include all ex penses of handling and the State will have to bear no costs in this regard." The above was Commissioner Wat son's way of announcing yesterday the opening of the first marl plant in the State, and he added: "I believe a mdvemet has now been launched that means more to the future of farming in our State than anything we have ever under taken. And its real significance is largely in the fact that the beginning is being made with the aid and co operation of one of the largest fer tilizer manufacturing concerns." Important in its bearing on the future is the statement of S. T. Mor gan, president af the Virginia-Carolina Chemical company, and the Charleston (S. C.) Mining and Manufacturing company: "While the supply we can furnish this spring is of necessity very limit ed if it is demonstrated that the farm ers of your state need this material we are prepared to put out any amount that may be required. As yot know we have enormous deposits oi this marl, and the amount to he pro duced is only measured by, the con struction of additional plant capacity.' DON'T SCOLD, MOTH ER! THE CROSS CHILD IS BISOUS, FEVERISH Look at tongue! If coated, clea1 little stomach, liver, howe1s. )on't scold your fretful, peevish child. See if tongue is coated; this is a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels art' clogged withi sour' waste. When i1sftless, pale. fev'erish, full ol c'ol d, bre-a thi had(, thr oait sore, doe'snl'1 eat, sleepi or act, natunraliy, has slom achi-nehie, inditfgestin, dliairrhoga, glvc l'15," and11 ini a fe'w hours I'lil fte ioul wvasfe, I le sour bilet and 'lermletinlg food~U~5~ pass out of te bo els and~ you have a well an~d play-fi (child again. Chiiren love flits h' -miless "'fruiil l a ative." and11110 liter en n resi. easy aiIf ter giving it. been .C i itnever' f'ili andl Sweet. KeCep it hland., . iothier! A little given today saves a sj e' chld tomlorrow, but get the genin .. Ask your druggist for a 50-eent bottle of "'Chlifornia Syr'upI of F"igs," whlich has directions for babies, childre in of all ages and for' grown-iups lilalinly on fte bottle,. Ilememiber therec are counterfeits sold1 here, so surely look and see that yours is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." lIand1( back with contempt any othler fig syrup. Hicks Ia Candiidate. Rt. Burton liicks, member of the house from Sipartanbuirg, when in Co lumbia attending a meeting of tile State Teachers' association, announced yesterday that he will be a candidate for State superintendent of educatlon next summecr.,. Mr. lucks taught for several years in the schools of the state and lie Is now engaged in: thle practice of law at Woodruff.-The Statc. WILSON INVITlED) TO SPEAK IN C'OIUMIIIA Is Asked to Address Editors During May. Will Visit Charlotte. (Ciolumbia, Miardh 20.-IShould Presi diAnt Willson accept an invitation to come to Charlotte May 20 for thle .\eek lenburg celebration, it is probable that lie wvill continue his travels to Column bia to sp~eak before the South Carolina Press assoclallIon. Telegraphic coim munications have bieen directed by the Columbia Chlamber of Conmmerce to United States Senator 10. D). Smith and Congressman A. FI. Lever to pre vail upon the president to ihelude Co lumbia in the itinerary of his southern WVilliam Banks, nrnsident of the OREEN!VILLES.c. (INCORPORATED) DEPARTMENT STORE. Spring Stock Ready E are pleased to announce the final completion of all 1916 SPRING AND SUMMER STOCKS including all that is new and fashionable in Suits, Coats, Dresses for all occasions, Waists, Children's Wear Millinery, Silks, Dress Goods, White and Wash Goods, Gloves, Hosiery and Dress Accessories of all kinds. Those who wish to select stylish wardrobes at a moderate price and at a store where they will have the advantage of New York ideas and uniformly high qualities will have much to gain by a visit here. Suits from $16.50 to $85 Our suit assortments are wonderfully varied. You will find handsome Silk Suits beautifully trimmed and lined, smartly tailored Street Suits in Poiret twill, French serge, gabardine or shepherd checks; Sport Suits in bright tones of pink, green and skyblue, and many other varieties. All styles are absolutely authentic. Charming Spring Frocks Dresses will be much worn both fcr Qpring and summer. From those good-looking Silk Dresses at $16.50 to the higher-priced medels at $25, $30 and $37.50 the choosing is very liberal. Many dresses show the Spanish Ef fects in cut and trimming. All the new, olors, of course, including rockie, vapor grey, reseda, etc. Coats, Skfrts and Waists There are some very smart Sport Coats from $6.98 to $20.00 that you should by all means see. They come in white chinchilla with velvet cQllars, also smart shepherd checks and plaids. Our showing of skirts in golffine and all-wool fabrics discloses some very effective styles. Waists in taffeta, Georg ette crepe or marquisette'for suits or separate skirts at $1.19 up to $6.50. Chic New York Hats Stunning models from New York designers as well as modish creations 5from our own wvork rooms are now on view. Watteau and poke hats, Lisere sailors, high-trimmed hat*, tailored or demi-dress hats at $5.00 and up. STANDING GUARD Ir- OYER THE WHOLE FAMILY ~ / The laxative tablet - with the pleasant taste .Protects everymemberof the famil from Consti ation the nemy of go0 health e have the exclusive selling rights ~Vc 1 v' hexeh~ for thsrret aatative. TELAURENS DRUG CO. . THEREXALL STORE taeProe association, will call a The lpresidenlt has not visited Co- Democratic Party. The occasion of mengof the iissociation in Colum- lumbia since the bpring of 1912, a his visit at that time was to speakC bia May 19 to 21, should a favorablo few months prior to his nomination before the State Press association. resonsefl be had from Washington. in Baltimore as standard bearer of the The Sita