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Stomach., Out of Fix? 'Phone your grocer or druggist for a dozen bottles of this dolicious digestant,--a glass withi meals gives delightful relief, or no chargo for the first dozen used. Shivar Ale PURE DIGESTIVE AROMATICS WITH SHIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER Nothing like it for renovating old worn-out stomaclis, converting food into rich blood and sound flesi. Bottled and guaranteed by the cele brated Shivar Mineral Spring, Shel ton, S. C. If your regular dealer cannot supply you telephone IX 11 F.0U1l1 & (dLAIN CO. 'i:dfribniors for Liturens. A.or you eat-adways take riA TONIC Instantly rclioves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy Feelinr. Stone Indigestion. food souring re penting, and all the many misorie caused by Acid-Stomach EATONIO is the beat remedy. Tenn of thou sands wonderfully bonefited. Posutivly Icuar anteed to please or we wIti refund money. Call ai get a big box today. You will see' Laulrens Diug Co., IiLurens, S. C. AS STRONG AS AT SEVENTEEN ZIRON iron Tonic MakS lifr "01 Man" Feel Yo"Gig Again, Says Daudeor, To help repair the results of illness, old age, work and worry in your daily life; to help give stre.'i gill to your run down systein and to help renew fagged forces and tone up the nerves--you will find a valuable remedy in Ziron. llead what Ziron did for an old man, who had to stay in bed most of the time. His daughter, Myrtle Mills, of Pulaski, Tenn., says: "Ziron has helped my father wonderfully. Ile could not do anything before taking it. i was in bed most of the time, conplaining with bro kAn-down nerves and backache. He* has taken three bottles and, says he is as strong as wheni he was 17 years old." If your blood needs Iron, try Ziron Iron Tonic. What It has done for oth ers, It may do for you. 4iron Is mild, harmless; does not dis color the teeth. and may be taken safely by young and old, nien, women and chldren. Get Ziron at your druggist's, under a nioney-back guarantee. ZN 9 Your Blood Needs Rheumatsm ___e -25c. Nature's Ramody (F!-2 Tablots), Are NelpIng Yhour.:nd hTro Ex pensIvo Thing'j Without Rlesult, It's C~u--rr~nteed. 'nI'ero nro threo v'itat proessesq of humaiiin existene,.-th i.. lgest' Ion: of food, t ho extrnet' Ion of oIshmen1511I)4~t from it and thu ;IliminntLion of waste. Poor Elcdigst ion rtl assimilation mieans faIlure toI derive' full inouris'h - mient frona foosi 5.04' :Iet lri turn oftent menans Izsnove, il. ~e1 hio,1, we'ianss, aneifoa, -. i'tor elfiamiai~o mean on accumu n~!i 1'. (.-' wasto matter wvhich poli'.s:: .a .dy, ;Owers vItality, deocreaseics thu no r cf resistan 1ce to dioat r lea a t,o ( AvlopZInent of many w rlIews illa. R~Chemti.sm.-due~ to riomo inter tion, fatture to geot id~ ot' certaIn hodly poh'ons,-can no. heo expaootcq to yIeld to any minl'.io tha t fails to cort eet thu condfimmi: resonstibal[ for1 It. (Could any reiaonalho persaon expeat to id~ hilmself of* rheamitic paIn an long as' rlmceunatle poi.son isI al Iowed to remaIn Thinkc of this. It e::plains the site cess of Nature u Remedy (Nit Tablete) in ro jnny CaSe PSw hero other medleines lave faled. Thousands nro3 Using NIt '.Tablets overy dasy aml got tIng relief. 'Why pay fivo or ten tImes a I muoch icr uncerta in tilings? A 2no bo:< or Nature'a Remedy (NR TVablets), contaiing enough to last twenty-livo dLas---must~ help you, umst give yvo'm praom:'t mellet' and1 sat lrIma':oty bene'ltl. or coat yott nothIng. Nature's Flemedy i not only for the reli.'f of rheucamatism. It Im proves dilgestilon, tonesm th lalIver, reg imhmtes khiney andll h)owc a I( lon, Im proves the blood nnu 'hle, ses' the isystemn. Y'ou'v tried thef expenmilvo mledicino.4 anal doctora, noi makeh, the real test. Y'ou'll get. resol it 11h1. tIme. Juist try It. Nature's li medy (NR~ reconmmended by your dru':a, ItIIES IJ1W0 CO., L~aurenis, 8. C. !iabltua Constipati Cured in 14 to 2 1 Danyu ''LA X-vOS WITII PiF.PSIN" is a specially. p~rep~ared Syrup Tonic-La.x ativye for Hablitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regular action. It Stimulates and Regulates * Very Pleasant to Tfake. 60o per bottle. BUCKWHEAT FINE FOR POOR SOILS Profitable Yield May Be Secured Where Wheat, or Even Rye, Cannot Be Grown. EXCELLENT AS COVER CARP Can Bo Grown on Land Where Spring Sown Cropa, Such as Corn, Have Failed to Make a Stand ,Many Other Uses. (Prepared by the United Staten Depart ment of Agriculture.) Buckwheat is in general the best grain crop for poor, thin land. Its nat ural and favorite environInent is "back In the hills." On 1an1el where wheat or even ry1e cannot he grown with profit buckwheat Is often able to produce a profitable yield. The cli mntle condi lions, however, must be favorable. On aeid solls, Whiclh are quite coml imion II tle northern sta(s, blickwheat does well. It does not retjiilre large sipplies of linte iII (he .ol0, although 111110 Is taken 111) largely by the plant. Good Summer Cov' r Crop. Low-grade fertilizers i ly be Ised to advantage In the growing of buck whent, as it can make use of relatively insoluble materials to better adyan tage than the other graIn crops. It may be used to rendoer available in soluble phosphates, like rock phos phate, as these are taken up by the plant In larger quantities than hy other small grains. To obtain the greatest benefit from such applicntions to follow crops, the buckwheat should be grown as a 'sinnier cover crop to be plowed under as green imaure in preparatloll for fall seedlitg. Ihuckwheat serves to ainke even very hard land inellow and friable. Conse (l111tly It Is i good crop to ulse It) preparation for such crops as potatoes. As it has a short growlnc perloil, buclkwheat caln he grown on hand where spring-sown crops, suIch as corn, have falled to make a Stand. It can also be used where the land cannot be worked * until late, or where other crops have been drowned out by late sprifig floods. Enlarge Farm Activities. Buckwheat can he used to enlarge farm activities. After other cropi that must h) sown early are all in there 1. often time to prepare land and - :"' buckw heat. Oil accolnt of tile short growing season It may be sown later than any other grain crop. Where It is so used it often may be advisable to sow it even on rich land which other wise could be used more profitably for other crops. Buckwheat is a suitable crop for growing on new ground. Land Just Cleared of timber or drained marsh land containing much decaying vege table matter will produce good yields of this grain. Farmers' Bulletin No. 1062 contains full information on this crop. Copies may he had free on application to the department of agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. SCRAPER FOR LOADING SOIL Platform Arranged as Shown in liiu. tration Obviates Much Tire. some Labor. Where dirt Is to he taken out of an excavation andi hauled away some1 (dis tance, getting thIs dlirt into a wagon bed Is always a hark job. Where a carC.e BL.OCK Loading Soil Made Easy. scraper .s used it Is usually necessary to drag the dlirt out olf theO ho1e and then shofvel It into a farm wagon. By buildilng a platform like the one0 shown here it in easy to 10oad a wagon with a scrapler and1( save a lot of bard work. The laitform mu1)st 1)e stronlg enough to stand upl uinder the load oft dirt and the ex tra pull thbat comes10 whlen the i team dIrags the scraper up the in cdine. Tihe check block stops the scraper and hlelpls inl dluminlg it inlt) the wagon ibox. PURE AIR QUITE NECESSARY Drafts Should Be Carefully Avoided and Poultry House Kept at Even Temperature. Filthy air ia pracllenlly brenthing Ipoison. Pure air fur niishes the oxygenI which ke'eps the Ii fe processes going andl when the air bcomes~ stale or foul, the birds become wveak sand sickly. The11 prolem11 foi- thme poultrymlan, t here fore, is to let in lplenty3 of a ir with Iout drafts and wIthiout making the hen't a house no cold as t o be un Icon-lfort able1, c On alml~ost all sunn11y dlayn the windows c (Ian be opened when0I thle flock in exeri- l cmsinrg, scratchling inl liitter f'or ItIs food, ' and thant gives ai chantice to air thle i house5 thorou~ghly. IEren ini tte (Solest night the( wvindows knly be' ioweredi II little at the top (very little vihen it is very coIl) and( the bird~s w!ii obtfalal fresh air. If thle wind blows In, a piece a of burlap can be hlung over tile open I spaco through whIch the air can get in F and7 he whlh tho wind can bo kept *u. - ECONOMIC VALUE OF RAT EXTERMINATION Indiana Counties Wage inten sive War Against Pests. People Not Yet Easily Aroused to Fearful Menace of Rodents and Importance of Ridding Coun. try of Littlo Animalo. (Prepared by tie United States Depart mnc.11 t or Agriculture.) Twenty-eight Indhini counties have waged intensive war against rats, fin co-operation With the United States' deparllent of agricul iture, through the bureau of biologleal survey. A special day was set alir for is 1 purpose, at which tlime. Inevordh:im to the olllial casually list. r7,100 rats "went west." Coliplete figures are not available, but estiainites are to the cifeet that several hundred thoiusaind rats ended their eartliy encreers on "rat dilve (lay." The economi(e value of rat exterii nation Is consildrable, especially to the farmer, as a single rat will easily destroy one busiel of corn i year and at the same time ofliclate as a special S I1 Getting Rid of Rate. niessenger for the spreading of dis ease. Hats are very prolii, ptodne, Ing froni six to ten young in a litter and more than six litters a year, a fact which makes the rat a most for nidable enemny. Notwithstanding the enorious loss directly traceable to thetm, people are not yet easily awak cied to the fearful menace of these pests and- the importance of ridding the country of them. Itecommenda tion has been made by the agriculttir al authorities that the governor of In diana appoint a special "rat day" each year, in order that this campaign may be annually continued. During the recent campaign Knox county led in the total number of rats killed, the inhabitants of thisiterritory slaughter Ing 10.000 of the marauders. City Lighting Modern. ?Lgh.tIig lip ai whole city at nilght IS 11 lute a miltode'rn ivention, ailhoughi libdminlation was usedl In sonie of thie ancient ci'tles. ParIs and1( London dhis pute thle prlori ty in the mlatter of mod ern street. lighting. London claims to have lighted its streets with lanterns na early as 1414, hut thi.1 contentioni la (disputed. During the sixteenth cone tury lanterns for street lighting were providled at the public cost in Paris, (hs -l I" Makets 'Elim Loset Thelilr 4rip Th'le fIrst thinlg " 'ts- it." dloes when t lands onl a corni o1 callusn is to snuff iut thle pain. Th'len it shrivels the orln 01 enllu is and loosens it. "GetE-ItI" "Piniah" for Corna M Soon, it is almIost ready to fall off. onl help it just a little by lifti',g it ff 'twixt thumbni and finger. Yo'u don't ven feel it, heeauiise there is; nio hurit ft in It. .\illions have ilrr,-ed it the leanest, surest, safest and. most pleas ni method. "(Gets-It"' the never' ?lillng guar nitd mlloney-b~a(k corn remnovor (ost s utt a trifle at any dlrug store. .\'f'd by . Lairence & C'o., Chicago. SoIld in Lau rens and recommended a the world's best corn remedy by raurens 'l)rug Co., P'owe l)ritg Co., ureka tDr'ug Co., Putnam's Drug tirn ASSAULT BY CROWD AFTER ACQU'ITTAIL Son-in-Law of UniIted States Setntor Kiute N(-Ison Knocked Down. Alexanirla, Minn., March Il.--Gustaf Nelson, son-1in-law of United States Scnator Knute Nelson, was acquitted before a justlee of the p)eace here to iilght on a charge of assault wili a dangerous weapon, In connection with the death of JoseIh Middleton, a farmer, who was shot yetserday (I Ing a quarrel with Nelson. A crowd gathered outside the ju-s. Lice's olliev, and when Nelson was *' leased from custoly lie was attacked and knocked down. Nelson. guarded by two delputy sheriffs, was brought back into the oillee. Some one su 1 gesctIed that Nelson be locked tti, fo h !!Iht and ! tht !atter disicussed again tomorrow. This was don111( and the crowd went home. RHEUMATS Muatarine Subdues the inflamma. tion and Eases the Soreness Quicker Than Anything Elso on Earth. Pay, only :', cents and got a big hox of Hegy Mstii n'. wlhii c is the original If stard nlistur ani niao t f strong. real. yellow niustlird-no substituttes auI' u~sedl. It's known aq the zitilokest patin klI hew on earth, for In itnjirs of instances It mtops litadnce. a1 raigin, toothache, earache and backa II t ac. It's It soz, i~r' Cd' n~~...xo bet. ter for rochti , risy --n a and to draw th; ulluituation from r'onr r feet there is nothig q0 gnof Voi ,,t real I ction withi Mosta.rinv-li goe. after the pai and kcills it riglt oil tho reel. Ye4 it homrn. but it won't Wtis. ter-it oloesui't give agonizing iain a sint on the w~risr. it dones give It a good heaifu%*i punlin II ho jaw-It kills pain. Ask ftot and get INustarine always In the yelo%1 bog. L0 N GI Does Your Li foi $1O OA Month totally a IN ADDITION TO $10;000: $20;000 DC That your PREMIUlD permanent disabilit3 EACH YEAR jus IT DO It is a $10,000 Ordinm the new 'A diver of P nity Clause issued by The Guardiani Li Established in 1860 u as "The Company of of assets, a surplus ar of 60 years of unexce (Policies for ( DON'T TAKE CHIA Delay is dangerous self and those der x protection. The Guard No. 50 Union Squa J as. L. Brown, General W. R. 1 COLUMBIA'S BIG WEEK March 22nd to 27th EVERYBODY'S COMING $20,000 Worth of Free Feature Attractions FREE CONCERTS BY FAMOUS Arthur Pryor's Band AUTO SHOW AND STYLE S-OW More than 100 makes of Cars and Trucks. Live models in a fashion review in the big canvas auditorium. Assembly of American Legion Mammoth Daily Street Parades Trade Exhibits, Farmers' Day Secretary of Agriculture E. T. Meredith will talk on farm topics as will also U. S. Senator E. D. Smith. For particulars write Secretary Columbia Chamber of Commerce, or Secretary Colum bia Automotive Association. fig r I 1 OR 0 A MONTH -A S -- . -. ... AS YOU LIVE fe Insurance Policy Provide e the Payment of to YOU as long as you live should you become9 nd permanently disabled before age of 60 . THE ABOVE DOES IT PROVIDE THAT lill be paid to your beneficiary in case I YOUR death as a result of disease * OR In case of YOUR death before age of 60 as the direct result of an accident of ANY KIND * )ES IT ALSO/PROVIDE I PAYMENT shall CEASE in case of total and and that iu shall RECEIVE DIVIDENDS b as if your premiums were being paid ES SO PROVIDE--IF try or Limited Payment Life Policy containing remiums, Disability Annuity and Double Indem Fe Insurance Company of America nder the Laws of the State of New York, known Modern Insurance Service" with over $56,00,000 id guarantee fund of $5,000,000,00, and a history lled "Service to Policyholders." )ther Amounts Make Similar Provisions) NCES! Apply while you are in good health. it will also add to the cost. You owe it to your ,ent upon you to investigate this new form of ian Life Insurance Co. re OF AMERICA New York Manager. 214 Emaxcee Bldg., Greenville, S. C. IcCUEN, Agent. Laurens. S. C.