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* *e e * e a . e e o ..eo 9e *. HOME DEMONSThATION * * DE~PAINiElNT. .. * * By Miss Daisy E, Harris. * e eo ee e e o** e o * S 9 Oear Club Mentbors: I have received a supply of the Stone Tomato and Perfection Pepper seeds for distribution among the Gar den Club members. Those of you who Intend to join 'the Vlarden Club this year and havo not already received your sced, .should write ic at once for your supply. Tomato and pepper seeds should be )laced in the iot bed at once. Direc tions will be sent you for makinig the hot bed. To be sure to obtain healthy young. plants for transplanting, the aced bed soil should be treated wilth Ibolling water. :Before treating the soll it should be placed in a box ready for their hospitality. Mrs. W. Hi. Culhertson, of Waterloo, visited her daughter, .Mrs. S. M. for sedinI. Make a few holes in the bottom of the box for drainage. After a few days -r whenever the soil is dried out enough the seed may be planted. If your garden plot has not already been broken, you should have it don at, oon as the soil is dry enouglih. It is very essential that you have a prop erly prepared seed bed, as no amount of cultivation after planting can make up for the lack of proper preparation. * * * f. *' * * * * * *' * 4 * 4' ' 4' * * * S LANFORI) NE WS. * * * 4' * f. * * * * * * * 4 ' *. *' * * * 1Lanford, Feb. 23.-The continuous rainfall Sunday meorning prevented the congregations assembling for tile regular services at church and Sun day School. The Rural improvement Association met at the schoolhouse Friday after noon and enjoyed a very interesting program, a goodl number of patrons lbeing present. After the discussions iMrs; J. M. Fleming and Miss Carrie Fowler served delighttful refreshments consisting of a choice variety of cake and boiled custard. Those present voiced hearty appreciation and praise .r. T. A. Drmmnimond has bought file storehouse from 'Mr. J. R. Patterson -and will soon o!)en up with general ' rincl'ca ni. Tihe school at Central is quaran tined, .Miss Wallace, one of the teachers is at her home now with the infiluenza. Mrs. 'II. W. Fowler will spend the rweelc-n(l in Troy with relativea. MisA Carrie Lot HiggJU. and Miss Nora Cantion LaVe returned to their v.t'uols since the quariintine has been lifted. - lr., an(] Mrs. Clarence Garrnett spent Satilrday with Mr. Jim 'Williams and faitly w1ho are all li bed witli Influ ena. Mi. ArthuP l'arson has been very sick for a fewv days. ir . E'dd Taylor atnd family are .bet ter; also Miss (Gena Comapton. They all had had( eases of influenza. Messrs. Yates andh Charles Waildrop of 'Wofford Col lege, spient the wteek end( ith tiIheir pairenits, *Mr. and1( Mrs. Mr. andl .\I is. Pauli Meadhows of IWoodrtuftf visited .\r. Mark 'Strlbblin's family last week. 'Mr. and( Mrs. TI. C. Stribling vIsited their dlauighter, Mrs. Gleo. Jiohnson at. their home near Spartanburg. The folloi ng qutotation fromi the. Troy0~ corresQ5poieint to thle Gieenwvood hindex,i wIll he of Iiterest to the frIends of our new pastor and wife, who are to iliove amiong us neCxt wveek: We uniderstai that thle R1ev. George Sexton who has. been lastor of the filapti st churiebc Jiere for a short time, has acc($;tedl a call from the Baptist chit rch at haanford, Lautrenls County. tmfr. 'Sexton is very piopular here as a roan and1( a in iIster, and there is munch regret at.hba leavIng the 'Hlold, lie was a leader of It ha 1y Shcouts, andl will -he 'much ilsed by the lads of that or ganization. I10thi Mr. antd Mrs. Sex-. -Ion have a large number of friends 'here, at~d they will be very sorry to see them go. May every blessIng go with our brother and sister in their ne0w home. -Miss Daisy 'Harris writes us that she andh Miss Lorney, thme 1dairy demon stration agent will meet with the la dies and all interested in this in dustry, at the home of Mrs. 'C. L. Wal drop next 'Friday afternoon to demon K tr'ate best methods to use in making ibetter .butter and dairy prioducts. All ltadies arme reqiuested to bring oneC pound of butter and a prize will bie offered to the one bringing the best Itound1. Come as many as can and 'biing sonme one with you. Jttis a good opp~tortuniity. .M Wornis in a Hlthy Cilid All -children troubled wiuth worms have anm ur, flealthy color, which indles~ poor blood, and as a uii there is mere or loss itpoch disturbance. * RVE'S TASTrELESS .jhiiT10 alvdo regularly tor two er three weeka will enrlch the blood, i Ton' i t h h systein, Nata!. wit ten Uoffel or dispol the worms, and1 the Child will be feethefh. Pannatko. Ckaao pc bsttl. TIGER OF FRANCE IS ON VACATION Sidelights on Voyage to Egy)t of Former Premier Clemencean fire 'Pictured. .Paris, .Feb. 21.-Viitually nothing has -been heard of former Premier Clomnenceau since his departure from 'Cairo for a vacation and it Is only nowI that accounts of his voyage are begin ning to reach Paris from his fellow passengers 'aboard the Lotus. The correspondent of Le dournal says that M. 'Cleienceau was seen but little except at ineal time. He went to bed early and on waking in the morn ig performed his customary g.ynt nasties with the aid of appartus 'which had been attached to his cabin cell Ing. iWhen the ship's wireless picked up 'Promier Millerand's declaration that he Intended to continue the Clemen ceau policy with regard to 'Russia, M. Clemenceau murmured: "That will be funny." As the steamer passed the Tromboli volcano, -M. Clemenccau declared whimsically that "a villa around here ought not to be very expensive as the heating Is supplied gratis." Observing a small house on the iotintain side he wondered who could live in tlhe smoke which came from tihe volcano, comintiellng "it miust be the volcano's Janitor--what a beauti ful job ror a retired man to ho the guardian of a volcano." , The former premier attended a the atrical entertainment on board for the -heinelt of the widows and orphans of sailors, and signeI a dozen programs which were auctioned for 1.650 francs. T'he highest price paid was 500 francs and the lowest sixty. M. Clemenceau declared that "at that rate I would be willing to sign all way." The former piremiier declared that he had not miade any plan.-; nor had he yet form ulated any impression except that the ship's vermicelli which had been ex cellent on the first day, had become very poor. "I eat vermicelli every day," he said. "I am taking the vermicelli cure. I have to have all sorts of cures as I havu fourteen maladies-the same number ias President Wilson has points -one malady, one point, everybody has what he can." M. 'Clemenceau shrugged his shoul ders when the danger ot an attack up on hin at 'Cairo was suggested, say tng: "Yes, ycs, I was warned but per haps it was only buncombe. They may amiss anyway. One must (lie sometime, what does the pline' mat ter?" te sea proved kindly throughout the voyage and al-though lie was greet ed by rain, fog and wind upon his ar, rival in ,Kgypt lie declared lie had never felt fo young. "If only there was a little sun shine I would become a child again," 11- said. A Gripping Story. A grilipng stor3y of a countr'y girl who longed for' tile gay life and wh'lite lights of the city, and a man who was tlired of thenm all and~ ei'avod the peace ful life of the countryside, is to1(1 In "Fom'bidden," thle latest Universal Jeowel pr'oductionm, 1mn which Mr's. Chlar lie Chalinm (Midred lIIai's) has the leading r'ole. Thme story itself was written by la> V. Durlinug, imut In scenario by Lois W~ieer, e' of tiie for'enmost womnto prouccei's in the countrmy, and was dl rectedl by Lois5 'W'ebmer ando her hus band, Phillips Smalley. Mliss WVeber is a sort of au fairy god mother to many of the screen's most '1)01)ul am' fabor'ltcesj anmon'g wvhom -Is MI11ldred ,hlac'ris. Miss Weber' was at tr'actedl by Itie girl's beauty. She saw the immnense possibilities of hier talent for acting during some of the smailler pictur mes ini wI. ch the girli had taken iparts. The reOsuilt was that Mildried iiarri's was chosen to star in ai Univer sal product Ion. -She was never on the stage and1( thmo sneaking maedlum had nothinig to do wIth moldling Miss IHar' rIs for upictures. Th le story of "Forbidden" smacks of the 01(d myth of Pandora wvho op~ieed the forbidden box and let loope all the troubles of the .world. In the phloto play Mildred Harris has the role of Maddle Irwin, a slimle cou'ntry girl. She meets a young city man, surfeited' with the empiltinless of mectr'opolitan life and maries him. They live in the coumnti'y, much to the girl's dlIsappmoint ment. 'Finally her longing becomes so str'ong that in oi'deir to satisfy time gir'l her husband takes her to the city in an -attempt to sicken her of thme lIfe there. rThe "result almost enids in dils astet', but thme telling of the , story makes one of the most interesting phlotoplays of Miss IIari'' career. Hlenriy tWoodward plays opposite the stat', and Im'red Goodwin is ini tihe su'p porting cast. "Fodbidden" will be shiown at the Oper'a House 'Friday. Above the Earth. The earth's sensible atmosphere ex tendo some 40 milles above the earthm's surface but1 becomes, at only a few hmiles heIght, of too great a tenuity to sIi rt life. BODY BROUGHT I10ME 4.ND.ER DIFFICULTIES Otrs. -Dovera of Chicago Finds it Hard to iteaci.Son's Uiae in France. Now York, -ob. 21.-DifflicuIties she icountered in irdaching hor Ason's geave in F AYe - and in getting the body aboard the steamer Britannia for Lransportation to America were relat ad today by Mrs. A. Devera of Chicago. Mrs. Devera, who left today for Ci tago wit lithe body, declared she would have failed in her mission had it not been for the assistance of the Amer Dan Red Cross and the 'Knights of 'Co iumbus. She 'declared her success in getting past the French regulations was due to an "unstinted use of Amer ican dollars" amonig the employees of rench bureaus. "There are no arrangements where by an American parent can get a cas ket out of France except by the tip ping process," Mrs. U)vera said. "There are scores of relatives of (lead Americans now in France attempting ./ ~Thu AN EXTRA HEART . GRE Adcmissic to do as I did. The Knights 'of Co lum'bus and the American Red Cross are doing everything possible for rela tives. They have located scores of graves, but are powerless to do any thing except- with 'the consent of the F rench authorities." Drivers of privately owned automo biles, she said, charge an avergge 01 160 francs to take an American visitor to an American cemetery.,The Knights of Columbus, in an effort to proent this profiteering, Mrs. Devera added have turned over their machines for such purposes and forbade the chauf fours to accept tips. Her son was James Devera and Mrs.,Devera is the first American mother to bring back the body of a son who died from wounds received in the world war. Colda Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove tho cause. There Is only one "Bromo Qjuinie.' . W. GROVE'S signature on box. 80. rs da ,9 SPECIAL SUPER INTEREST AND are Lovw ALTEST GYPSY P It's The lF -O(ncluding OWEN BROS. MARBLE & GRANITE CO. DFNIG'NFR MANUPACTURERS . ERECTORS Dealers in everything for the come - tery. '-hA largest and best equipped mon iumontal mills in the Carolinas. GREENWOOD, S. C. LOOSE LEAF LEDGERS ....For Sale By.... ADVERTISER PRINTING CO. Feb. 26th -FEATURE CRAMMED WITH THRILLING SITUATIONS! iAA Jriutd byict-Pcue ANY gRuns Wild" ICTURE EVER MADE eal Thing - 15cts and 25ts War Tax)