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SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY BRINGS SURE RELIEF For 200 yeas - GOTD MTDAL TTnariem sules are the remedy you need. Take Oit htne attaclid ouffkring humanit to three or four *'P vtry day. The hrenling witbartanii attfalck-q of kidney, 1 var, oil soase intoL th cells and linig of bladder and stomach troublos andll tho kidneya anp driven out the poi.90n". disetun"~ connected with the urinary Now life and hoaith wvill surely follow. organs and to build up and restore to When your normual vigor has been re health organs weakened by distcase. otored continue treatment for a whil1 These most Important organs flf be to keep yourself In condition and pro watched, because they filtera purify v t a return of tho disease. the bilood; unless the~y do t --on't wait until you are inrapable of you are doorned, fighting. Start taktinrg GOLD MIEDAL Wcartneis,. sleeplessness, ervousness, iramrlien Oil Cap ,ules today. Your drug despoidenoy. backCache, a mach trot- gist will cheerfully refund your money ble. pains In the loins and lower ab- If you are not satisfied with results. 4omen. gravel, diffleulty when urinat- lBut be sure to got the original Import ing, rheumatism, Pcltatica and lumbago ed GOLD. MIDDAL and accept no sub all warn you of troublo with Your kid- RtitUteS. li three sizes. Sealed Pa9k. noys. GOLD MEDAL fluarlem Oil Cap- ages. At all drug stores S TOM'A CHv_ TROUABLE Mr. Marion Holcomb, of Nancy, Ky., says: "For quite a long while I suffered with stomach troub!c. I would have pains and a heavy feeling after my meals, a most disagreeable taste in my mouth. If I ate anything with butter, oil or grease, I would spit it up. I beran to have regular sick headache. I had used pills and tablets, but after a course of these, I would be constipated. It just seemed to tear my stomach all up. I found they were no good at all for my trouble. I heard THEFORD'S BLAC -DRUGHT recommended ry highly, so n to use it. It cured me. I keep i n the h a the time. It is the best liver medici m . I do not have sick headache or stomach tr any more." Black-Draught acts on the jaded li er and helps it to do its important work of throwing out waste materials and poisons from the sys tem. This medicine should be in every household for use in time of need. Get a package today. If you feel sluggish, take a dose tonight. You will feel fresh to morrow. Price 25c a package. All druggists. ONE CENT A DOSE DON'T TAKE BOLT'S A. L. S. If you want to dose on Medicine every day. A. L. S. Will Strengthen the Bowels, tone up the Liver to normal healthful condition with out forever dosing on it. Buyja bottle. If you are not one of the thous dto praise it your money will b refund . -Mr. 11. .\1. Grarrison says: Or-little 1irl .whio had a severe at lack of stonach trouble Was for m1ionth 1ud11(er the Care of different phyulcia1s, who seened to give her 11 relief. She Wal linrVouIs, woulid not slieepi ;ind hadl~ no) appeCitie anel was~ gradually losing flesh. We were adivisedi by our dru'tggist to try a botte Icof liolt's A. La. S. Wvhich wve did(. llefore thie ii st bot tie wais gone her appetit e wvas good, her1tI sleep htter and1( Sl she, was aining inl we&ight. we will~v ne verI be viithoti it in1 our houis. igne,.1kdi IP.X M.AtRRiSON, For Sale and Guaranteed in Laurens by LAURENS DRUG COMPANY The Keenest Palate Cannot Detect "THE DIFFER ENCE'! MINNE-HAHA PALE AND SPECIAL Is not a "near beer," that ferments after drinking, but a thoroly ferm nted LAGERED B EW aged in the vats four mont e from bar ley and hops ONLY, just like the old brews of forty years ago, then by our Patent Vacuum Process Instead of BOILING, the toxins ONLY are removed, and not one atom of flavor, snap or aroma,---hence it is delightfully, EXHIL ARATING Supply Yourself With Minnehaha Without Delay A. B. H AT TA WAY, Wholesale Distributor Main Offices P. & N. Building, Spartanburg, S. C. PhIONE NO. 2807 Whie (Continued from Last Week.) CHAPTER VL-On another expedkion the donkey on which Andrea 18 inounted runs away with her and she is for a moinent madto riticulous. White Man ex plains the African method of wife pur. chase, "obolo,"' She is horrilled. After ward she listens to the report of native runners that a herd of elephantn is in the district aid is invited to the hunt by White Man. They start down a. croco dule-infested stream for the scene of the hunt. The tracker itood lnbetl '-ievabll erecteel. itts off the ground. It was at thcoucth by an iefTort of will he hat suM pIded hiilteif in air, so still was he so wholl~y was his body coli erated U the -.l' of listening. Suiddnly hh1 widle nnoR10'rils (ivered with n vi:1 bI duttering and distendC till their oUt er rims showed white. A laoc of sensual and ineffable coltentl spread over his face as he Irew (town into his lungs that breath of tainted breeze. Ie smelled the prey; the wind was right. Presently Andrea caught the odor and her whole holy tremled as from an overiastering physical contact. This smell was unlike all others; the inind gave it color and substance. It crept through the forest like a dark cloud, an oinnous warning to all fraIl creatures to get out of the way. She felt suddenly cold andl(] glanel over her shoulder with a half-forined notion ot retreat; then her eyes fell on M'sungo and she for'got all else in an absorption that wit above fear. He had become filled with an es sence of youth, ais though years of life had rushed from past and future to fill to overflowing tihe clil of this one transcendent molnent. Ills ftce was tense bit alight and his Ordinarily gray eyes had attained to an unfathon nble )1lue that seeied to deny iens uire to the depth of his enotion. Ilis thin lips were drawn In the crooked line of a fired smnili-ai smile that struggled on the verge of an Infinite solemnity. When he moved he gave an indeflnite impression of diseim bodied actIon as if spirit alone passed oil, leaving flesh behind. Like a black monitor the tracker went before him. Andrea was suiddenly aware that M'sungo carried the big gun. Its dead weight of eleven pounds liy in his hands lightly as though It itiso were Sustained by it Spiritual force. She had not seen hin take it and there was soietlhing ghostly in tile muere fact of his possession of it. 11er mind was in at turmooll; she kinew, th:t upTon the taking over of the big gun hald hun111" someo vital 1n111struc0ionl to herself but in that prilinal Inlomtent of Sus~pense, mem111 ory was anl agonizin g hlk anfi1l nou hi ing more. Site followed blindly inl (te ('ia uti ously pauising footsteps of the siIligle gunimbearer that. (0.rept b Iefor her, close oni thle heels of his nmter. Tnihinty sFeted to (.1me ma 1l . he fore they han1 ad4 valneid twenty p:c('es. She c ae to II h bare tr . u.nk o# a" big tree whose top hadti been felled hy Ilihtning and at tha~ut imonient IM'siuigo looked baek, at terrible frown on hi)s face. W ithout)1 ta kinig her eyes from his she leaned against (lie stuiimp of' the trio amtI put her :arine arounnd It. Memory'3 camen to her. She reimemibered what1 he had told her to (10. She hiuggedl the tree In a gr'ea t relief while her eyes still followed the whliiten man and th tuIwo bilack shado(1ws that lie seeo'mied to throw, one befoire, one bte Suddenly the tiracker' pausetd with an uminist akable final ity3. lis hamnts went lip In iii even, swift gesture of wnarn lng. Ills bodty sank gradually lower andi lower till It st retched tlat alnd stIll as a log at tihe side of the narrow iraIlI. With lonbg-stulllied, (cautio us mnovenments the whbite, mani passedi over himu and stod erect, alt on1ce steady amii i iuveing, as iieat wvaves quliverti stea dlly ini the aIr arising fr'om pa rchied soil. Not forty paces fromi where Andrea hugged her protectinug trun ik anid scarcely .wenity In advanice of M'sungo, the domnes of two trees toppedl the even mass of the saipiings about them. Into the shaudowvs beneath these trees ho was peering with toi intensity tihat communleated itself to Andrea. She too stared (desperately as though by an effort she might send light Into dlarkness wIth her gaze. Presently she was rewar led ; three shadows wIthin the shiatw slowly took formi. Once seen, theh adlvancedl In distinction uintil they stood out to vision as does the Coal Pit on a starry, mooniess night. They were three chlus, ominous, dusky, thundorous. Suddenly from one of them caime a rumble that rolled ponderously away through the sIlent world. Andrea, ignorant of the majesty of the Intes tinal comoititons of the miighitlest of beasts, snatched a fleeting impressIon that somiewher'e beyond the brazen sky, a storm wvas blrewinig. The white man still stood, tenise bt Iinmmovable. Giraduially Andrmen's senses gathered( to the fact that thti' uns~ m, Dauso, Hie WaLs wailting--wait.m'g de lbherately or w~as it as one whot Mandh fatally fascinated and prmalyzed en tile threshoid of' disaster'? lIer healrt was beatng with a deafening thbrob. She was sure tile itatives about her could hear tile equal tumult In theIr nwnl brnest. Then her eyes, gluiiled to the three black clouds, saw one of the lesser of them iove, raise vast blankets of ears and t1p them, starting an audible gust of wind. A great trunk wound and unwound, rose lazily to incredible heights, reached a limb and tore it with a scream of reading flhers frot the p:rent tree. The betist turned slightly to avoid the avalanche of boughs. Instantly the white man's arms swept into motion. lie leveled the big gun at an upward slant upon the still immovable central cloud and fired. All the silence in the world wits rent asunder by that shot. With a rending crash as of a thousand galling gis, one, two, twenty elephanuts swept through the seat of saplings and away. It was as though an angry god had StilIched up1) the forest like. a sheet an1)d rilppen(d it apart. In the terrifle whirl. wirld of soind gonme mad, the sTconid bark of the rifle was quite lost to the ear. M'sungo turned and automatically seizeit his stipIorting gun. Ilis eyes swepit fihe back trall, looking for An dren. She was gone. "Bathittib!" he roaredl. Tite boy ran to him, his face work. lng with every emotion known to the black breast-Joy, triumph, greed, cupidity amid fear. The last was pre dw'nunant and with reason, for M'sungo dropiwed his gaun, shiot olit both hiInls to the black's throat antd lifted him strangling into the air. "Damn you," he growled, "where's your missis? Where is she?" The boy's eyeballs protruded farther and fartiher front lils contorted face. "Here I am," panted Andrea. M'sungo relaxed his grip; Bathtub dropped to the ground like a nerveless sack but bounced up again, all his emotions except fear once more in full cry across his grinning face. Andrea laid both hands on M'sungo's arm. "It wasn't his fault," she gasped. "I started to do just what you told me, White Man. You know you saw me hugging the trbe. But when I heard the Day of Judgment right on top of me I-f just had to give it a run for its money !" She ilropled her head against him and sobbed. He put his arm around her and patted her awkwardly on the back. "There! There!" he said. "Don't. Please don't." Seemingly with out hils volition his arms drew closer and closer until he suddenly awoke to the fact that he wits just plainly hug ging Andrea Pellor. He pushed her roughly from him. "Here," lie sild in quite a different voice, "this isn't iy funeral. Comte and cry on the elephant." "All right," said Andrea, docilely. "How inany were there? I heard a troupe-an army of them." "You heard just one," said M'sungo. Dabbing at her eyes with soiled fists, she followed him to the side of lie fallen monarch ttroind which were gathered the natives, a sort of aized awe onl the-ir faces, for the dead bull was a mighty Itusker, carrying ivory to the value of eighty women. At M'sun go's approach their arms went up in a single gesture anl fron one throat they yelled, "Ba i-ye-te !" Scarcely had tihle cry of homage died away when a sound cane it) them t hro ugh the bush that. froze them iInto listening silence. Their faces exlressed uilielief but their knowledge was in sistent. It toldt hem that they were heitring a dealth struggle, the wihisper Ing gush of blood front miighity lungs, mightily piercedl. WVith a .yeli t hey brtoke, towatat clmiIiiusic andm suddenly sloppedh, renmembering that it is al ways wise with i('elphatili to let Ithe gunu go first. Andrea, frightened, stopped snivel ing. "WVhat is it?" she asked, "I got two," said M'sun~go apolo get icially. "Thatl's the one that kept tme wa'itinug between heaven and hell." "I remieimber. It was awful. But why did you wait? What did lhe have to do( wIth it, poor deatr?" M'sungo smtiled int spi te of limsel f. "lIe had a gr-emil deal to do withb it." hto ansiwe-red. "Until hte startle'l tenaring the tree to pieces and1( took a haltf tarn to (lodge the damange, hte was headed right downt our trail, wasnt't lie?" Andreit ntomhled. "Well,"' comi ntied M'sungo, kicking the mioutint of flesh at his side, "Just ais long as lie was facing us, I couldn't take the fatir tmark otf this old1 boy. That's one or thei hits ofti kntowledge t hat has been pidh fot wilth the li ves of umaniy itmn. A start led elephani t doesn't charge ; I e bolts whichever way lie's hteiaded." ie lotokedl up 11md adde(ld with par donable prlde: "Anmd that, too, is bow I kntew wthei'e to g''t htim running-thet other way. I madteh uip my3 intind whero to shoot before lie was there." They went to survey the second beast. IHe was qutite dleadl; onie long tusk gleatming white, ant ivory Island in a lake of brIght blo00d. "Comec away," saidh M'sungo quickly, ie led hier to the shade of onue of thle big trees whiere MarguerIte, newly arrived, was already dlrowsing andiu dlreaminitg happily oif all the evil ini the world. Around the ne'arbty elephant, lthe nam t ives awnarmed like matmggots. "ln iatiiub I" shouted M,'stngo. "Cite culai !"' (Tio bet Contintued.) ret.e .Rin',,worrn, itch, c D tn' ecomer diacur-ed be erICe Utter trtnnts foled I ' I luni ', s~ive has rehtevedl 1 dre is, ofr such cr. Y ~'t tose on, our Mapd Boek Guarantlee. Tryt ct our rik TODAY Price 75c at l,auenns hleng C(M i ain, S. C. OWN YOUR OWN HOME BUILD IT THE QUICK-B~ J5"UILT WAY!"' e .I Ii uish you Q (ick-Itliil Ittill w m uflla t )N III(.y h A. ('. ''x ry ..m e o., of1 (,It lue-'Stoll. 'lho e f~in.ralovs 1are 1uent, attracteive .1m1 sbsn ialb ilt ont d o No. I tiaihciiul. Placei your orhler 11V tid w':e C'It .11ip iln ;tli()!l t \VIwI W eks. k You caII liat this hIuilse ('eeted iit aLou) t d.[ 1h1y 1 be Iiv i n I you (W ? hfm i.n les- h one Ask Ir 111 f (u1 ('t alogues a ! ried and1 .deh t the holme You at heewool.S. '-Phone 2S." I~~ 1(1MV44 41 ~ J. F. E10NTZMINGER PHONE, WIRE OR WRITE Greenwood, S. C. Phone 283 In purchasing jewelry it is necessary that you know the exact facts about it. We encourage investigation on he part of our patrons and friends; we delight in telling t em the plain truth about all our goods. That and courteous treatment we promise to each visi tor to our store. Come in Investigate WILLIAM5LM WEST SIDE COURT SQUARE \,-I t C SP IIL ~stt $35.00 Overcoats in Stock at reduced pric/ $30.00 Young Men's Suits in stock at REDUCED PRICES. Remember me for your Tailor ,made Suits. J. W. HENDERSON, Jr. Always on the Job IHere to Stay LOOSE L EA F L EDGERS..... ....FOR SALF. BY.... ADVERTISER PRINTING Co