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'ONEIT BACt ' without questionif Hunt's Solve fails h, the treatment of Ecaema. Tettr. Ringworm, Itch, etc Don't become dicouraged bc cause other treatments failed. Hunt's Salve lis relieved hun-' dreds of suco cases. You can't lose on our Money Back Guarantee. Try it at our risk TODAY. Price 7Sc at Laurens Drug Co., Laurens, S. C. Dye Old, Faded Dress Material Dyes" Make Shabby Apparel 6*h and NOw-So Easy Too. 't worry about perfect results. 1)iamond Dyes," guaranteed to give , rich, fadelees color to any fabric, er wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed ,-dresses, blames, otockings, skirts, ren's coats, draperies,-everythingi A Direction Book Is in.package. match any material, have dealer ou "Diamond Dye" Color Card. A LEOPARD CANNOT CHANGE ITS SPOTS Mr. Dodson, the "Liver Tone" Man, Tells the Treachery of Calomel. Calomel loses you a day I You know what calomel is. It's mercury; quick silver. Calomel is dangerous. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones a 1 should never be put into your syste When you feel bil' us, sluggish, con stipated and all knoe ed out and believe you need a dose of dangerous calomel just remember that your druggist sells for a few cents a lar e bot l of Dodson's Liver Tone, which i irely vegetable and pleasant to take and is a perfect substitute for calomel. It is guaranteed to start your liver without stirring vou up inside, and can not salivate. Don't take calomell It can not be trusted any more than a leopard or a wild-cat. Take Dodson's Liver Tone which straightens you right up and makes you feel fine. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe. LIFT CORNS OR CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers / / Don't eufferi A tiny bottle of Freez one costs but'a few cents at any drug store. Apply a few drops on the * corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bot tom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezone removen corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the skin benoath is loft pink and health and nevei' sore, tender or Irritated. Quit Laxatives, Purges;__Try NR INR Tonight -Tomorrow Feel Right It is a mistake to continually dose yourself witti so-called laxative pill. calonmel, oil, pu:'ges nd cathartics and force bowel .etion. It weakens the bowels and liver and mnakes con Stra'L dosing n'ecessary. Why dlon't you begin rlg1 t today to Over~omo your consiplatlfni and get your asystemn In Ouch sha athat daily purging will be u~n eessary? You can do 5o if you oVah.-Jv-f Nrature's Rcmet'y (N a)eta) and talko one cach ntight for a week or so. NRIT T1ab)ots do0 mutch more than merely catuse pleasant easy bowel ac tion. Th'ils mcdicino acts uipons the digestlve cas well an clmlnatlvo organs --romlotes good dIgestion, causee the boidy: to get tho nourishment from all the food you eat, gilycs you a good, hearty appetite, ntrengthens the liver, overcomes billousneas, regulates kidney ad howvel actIon and gives the whole body a thorouh~ clenIng out. ThIs accomrplished1 yott will not have to tako medino every day. An occasional NR tablet will Ikeep your body In condI tion and you can always feel your best. Trry Nature's Reomedy (NRl Tablets) and prove thIs. It Is the best bowel m Icino that you can use and costs on 25e per box, contaIning enough to last twenty-fiye days. Nature's Rem edy. (NRl Tablets) Is sold, guaranteed and recommended by your druggist. LAUJRF~NS DRU(G 00., Laurettsy, 0 , Be tte thnLls GT orivet.sl25,o IRY TALE 0 M4ry Grit Doner 'AX TRUE OPOSSUM STORY. "I'm going to tell you the true opos um story," said bother Opossum to ier little ones. They had been keep ng so safe and had been growing so Ine and strong in Mother Opossum's warni poueh but now she thought It was time they should see the world. "It has been told so incorrectly so many times," said Mother Opossum. "What does 'incorrectly' mean?" isked the little opossums. There were ;even of them and bMother Opossum was very proud of them, for at first they had been little balls of almost iothingess without any fur and with ut any real shapes. But they had grown beautifully. They had learned vow to use their little toes as hands Ind to hang on to their mother as she .arried them about when she was mar keting or doing whatever she had to 10 about the countryside. Their home was really in the hollow rf a tree near some marshy ground. Por they love the water and like to live near it. They had fine vegetables growing aot far away and in the daytime they stayed very quiet and hiddeir in their homes while at night they went forth to get what they wanted and what they round. They lived in the south where it was warm for they did not like the cold weather. "Now our family," said Mlother Dpossum, "is known as the Virginia "See the World." 3possum family. We have long, thin toes and when we walk over the marshy ground or where It 1s muddy It Is very easy to know which trail Is ours. "We have coarse hair except ont our Wa1 and ears. Our snouts aren't very beautiful. They look too much like those 'of the pig family, but, of course, wve cannot be perfect in every way. "We aren't too fussy about our food for we eat meat as well as vegetables, find that Is a good way to be. Fussy enters are very difficult to get atlong with ; they are always complaining ,Ind wanting something they don't see. "But It Is not of our tastes in food ,)t which I want to tell you," Aiother psumcninud Iwn otl "asto el the Wrdn." oge "psIt am u ile aveo lotectin tosves and whsben wakoer byhal maprshym grorns ong aswhere havemudyI wisery thing to kow waito apa lie "s.We have orenai moedxcept ondu wei hanvertede Our noud arnt mve >thour own taccord.yhuofcure We ave beprect lite ever ay.pu "We haren't been fussyn aotoure fooks ko wena meata wel avegetae proterte areve dicltn tn o ge ln yd watning weoengtey o 'te e "But thi Is othtrh of atei whooe stor n whihiwa I want to tell yu"Mte Opoasu dontandIehop "Ie antlt ely 'you the sensuth abo te opossum fams ilymo winl other words, abu true opreat >possu trickiyo wach to ucha irteha ;wan to plthemafo wve wre o lger a mlieedn when ere camein ofrour~ "Irtectsiour litewyofpoetn "uttvs anot hasuee hate dy thll 3cauise for ae onasy ther haeed hee opossumrnotcwady.W r Wbe av ae aas wencan a the wisnt athinght too vero toperie :ehave petendsaety and cude not move ;foue fownhacrd. "e notalve been litted ad put noan of ceraing aferouslves ad we maye asays one hatrypcreatur. "ust haven' boee wylfngotkingtafolks retself ourselvts os long andr ell yetnn we wereha t wpossn We ut trave foihas o the truth. hl tory apssnd t is whtron tos thelt "Ittie truthatti i ht"ehv "Gworsdon" sad Ihi wether, always mong he ns to (10 t thinkhopoe. ures ill theve ogey, adbour te great heon b to e uto ie aeJsomy'o, .aet 'r" enionihn we'red-hinkiged ohur. rOhe ,ma"prtstdoodn,. "on't iat int ctruie Jmmy'w. (10hi 'avber fhardy.sm thrcoo, AIRPLANE TO DEVELOP CHINA American Commercial Attache Points Out How Problem Facing That Country May Be Met. The keynote of the great problem of develdpment whiclh is facing China is transportation. The American com mercial attache at Peking, Mr. ,ulian Arnold, has laid emphasis on this in an article in the Chinese Recorder "China's Economic Problems and Christian Missionary Effort." Mr. Arnold deals with tle necessity of pre paring the Chinese people for the great economic change which is upon them. Railways will mean much to China, but the necessity for the train ing and preparation of which Mr. Arnold speaks is shown to be dis tinctly urgent when Prof. Middleton Smith's views on the use of airplanes to China are known. China is a land of w aterways, and these waterways afford the necessary existing lines of transportation along which, to secure the success of commercial aviation, airdromes nmd supply depots should be established. Schools of technical training should supply the necessary Chinese skilled labor, and with these aerfal services established, Professor Smith foresees such nll incalculable Increase in the rapidity of colmmunica tions as completely to revolutionize tife countiry internally and attd to its4 deep imnportance as a world factor. HAD AN' OBJECT IN POSING Moose Didn't Stand for Her Photo graph Just to Accomodate the Camera Holder. A moose out in the wilds does not stop to ,pose for her picture. 'lhere is generally a reason for the peculiar actions of wild things. In the current issue of the lunter-Trader-Trapper, published in Columbus, 0., hun ters write of their experience. "We 1111( an early start Thursday and Sain soon proclaimed that his pipe foretold moose. The first benld was rounded and knee-deep in the water stoodi a fat sleek cow. Our canoe advanced toward her, the am'era set for an exposure. Sai calleid softly and she advanced a hun dred feet toward us, ears erect, with a curhous what are you' manner. "At 75 feet she stopped and posed for Ihe pictlre. and thet waited until we were 50 fet away before 'sh1e turned into the woods. At the top of the linh she walted for us to pass be or' ershinttg n)to the tmnher. " lir tt1on was explained when we tumrml I hend and at the water's edke stw her calf, a fine four or live moth<i old fellow, wilei climbed the ina anid was away after her at once." N',w Cloth for Hard Wear. A new textile fabric which, it is ealmae%. will tend to lower the present high east of meitn's clothing is being placed onI the market by a Pudsey (Yorkshire) manufacturer, writes Uited Stajtes Trade Commissioner Ileury I.'. Grady from London. The London agents of the manufacturer state thit the new cloth i. made en tirely 6f silk noll (or short fibers); and that, while sulperior in wearing properties to a pure worsted, it can be sold at the ptrice of shoddy cloth, or one-fourth the price of the best wvool fabrics. It is said to be strong and almost untearable, ver'y suitable for hard wvear, and cani b~e obtained in grays, browns and blacks. No Novelty. "As I came from the station just now," said a recently arrived guest, "I noticed a crowd in front of the Right Place store and heard consider able yelling. What wvas the excite ment?" "A farmer and the storekeeper were telling what they thought of each other's infernal hoggishness in want ing five prices for the stuff they had to sell," replied the landlord of the Petunia tavern. "But there wasn't any particular excitement-it happens ev ery day. The crowd therely gathered in the hope that they might accidlent ally say something, new and interest ing."-Kansas City Star. Weds During His Lunch Hour. Howv to be married though wvorklng was the title of a little sketch staged the othier day by E. W. Orieder, a printer employed on the St. Panul Dis patch. Orieder faced a problem. He was slated as a principal in a marriage ceremony. His only spare time was a half hour for lunch. So lhe called his fiancee, Miss Clara Lovitz, by telephione, arranged with her to meet him in the office of Henry Onlicek, court commissioner, and the ceremony was performed. Gieder thea took lunch and returned to work. Valuable Parasitic Fly. A recent agricultural department bulletin states that a parasitic fly, comnpsllura civinnata, has, been used with great success to dIestroy gypsy moth and brown-tail mnoth in New Eng landl; It will also aid in the control of other insect pests. A few yearls ago the white-marked tussock moth was a serious peg in New England, but has practically disappeared since compsi lura became establishedl. The cabbage worm, the celery worm andl the fall webwormn have aill been redluced by the activities of the new parailte. (Quick Action. "The war miade exceptional oppor tun itiles," 'Ycs; a fellow could begin at the bottom and at the same time go over the top.". .THE NEW BIG SIX SPECIAL SIX STUDEBAKER We have on hand one Big Six Studebaker and two Special Sixes. If you are thinking of getting a car this season it will be to your interest to look at these cars. As everybody knows cars are very hard to get and we can't tell just when we will be able to supply your needs again. There is no better car on the market for the money. Both sixes equipped with Cord Tires, which assures better riding, more mileage and less trouble. PENNSYLVANIA VACCUM CUP CASINGS AND TUBES With Every casing sold during the month of February we will give absolutely FREE one tube of the same size, which means a saving of $5.00 or $10.00. This offer only lasts during this month. USED CARS - We have on hand a few used cars which we can sell at right prices and easy terms. Chalmers, Ford, Oakland Six, Big 4 Over land Roadster, and Little 90 Touring Car, all in good shape. F. A. FULLER & CO. Phone 453 Dr. Posey's Building S. Harper St. LYNCHBURG CHILLED PLOWS Sturdy, Reliable Steel Beam Plows of Rigi/" but Easy-Going Construction made in the Right Way by Experts Who Know How. BE SURE IT'S A LYNCHBURG FOR YNCHBURG ASTS ONGEST Call at our Store and inspect these Implements. It will pay you to do so before buying Plows for Spring Work. Just received a Shipment of Plows and Parts. OWINGS & OWINGS LAURENS, S. C. Heavy and Fancy Groceries. Your Trade Solicited. WANTED--Will buy a carload of Peas at once. Name price.