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"I Wouldl't Go Onmping '4ithout RAT-SNAP," Nnys Itay White. "Wife aind I spent our vacation camping last summer, smell of cook ing brought rats. 'We went to town, got some IAT-dNAP, broke up cakes, plut it outside our tent. We got the rats alright-bi!g follows." Farmers, storekeepers, housewives, should use A ItAT-SNAP." Three sizes, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold and guaranteed by Lau rens Hardware Co., Putnam's Drug -Store and Kennedy Bros. TOOTIMCHE? FOR PROMPT RELIEF TAKE 2 YABLETS WITH WATER 0GENUINE ASPI RI I. 1RAO MNA, RtGISTEMO NON HABIT FORMING 'The next time you buy calomel ask for alotabs The r. c-md refined calkomrl tableits that are nauszae. cs, r, sac and sure. Medicinal virtues retain. eud and improved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35c. Helps Sick Women SI Cardui, the woman's tonic, helped Mrs. Wil iam Eversole, of Hazel Patch,, Ky. Reed what she wvrites: "I had a h get~nerZ'l btcal:ing-down yW of my healthu. Iwas in . be!~d for weeks, unable to get up. I had such a weakn1ess and dizziness, ...and the pains were very severe. A friend to J mc I ha~d tried every thaig else, why not Cardul?.. . I did, and 3001) saw it was helping m . .. Alter 12 bottles, I am strong and well." ""'"TAKE The Woman's Tonic SDo you feel weak, diz 3y, worn-out? Is your lachof good health caused fromn any of the comn. plits so common to R women? Then why not give Cardutl a trial? It should surety do for you what It has done for so many thousands of other women who suffered-It shottld help you back to hesith. Ask some lady friend who haa taken CarduL. She wlil tell you how it -hIlphr. Try Card. AUDugit MADE DEATH TRAP Fatal Path'vay Through Cave to Deep Pit. Visitor on 'Sightseeing Uxpedition Within a Moment of a Miserable End in Pcol From Which Thera Was No Escape. Astride the boundary separatings, two states of the middle West, a Corn panion cont rfhuor writes, there. lies one of those barren regions where na ture seenis to have forgotten her un completed task. On one side of the line are sand hills; on the other, dry mud cut by deep cracks and ravines. A little more than -I quarter of a century ngo, he coltilnues. Gusines called ine to a homesteader's clani onl an onsis in the sand-lill tract, an1d after a long drive from the (Iantit railway station I arrived Just at dusk Oil Saturday evening, to stay untIl' the following Monday. Sinauay mornIng I rose belor tI( failly and went out to -*Iew the senpe. After examining a number of petrified tree stulips and logs, whiceh tile fial clintle iIniluence had chang ed into black-anid-whiite onyx, I unas about to return when I chanced to spy a peculiar opening in the earth soile distance away. D esiring to explor." I Soon found iyself walking down the smooth, water-worn floor of a canyon that was so narrow that my elbows grazed the sides. I was soon a hundred feet or more below the surface of the mnesa, yet the chasn showed no indieation of widening. I walked on, casting my eyes upward occasionally to where a scrub Junilper hid for a moment the niarrow slit of blue far above, and thus I noticed that the opening termi nated shortly. Dropping my gaze, I discovered on the left the abrupt turn that I had expected, and, again look ing skyward, I became interested in the antics of a colony Qf bank swal lows. The footing was so good that I walked steadily forward, my eyes fastened on the swallows. Suddenly becoming awvare that the light ahout me, which heretofore had come only tliough the slit far above, was increasing, I stopped abruptly, with my body already thrown for ward and may right foot raised for the next step. Just ahead the canon did indeed ter mlinilate. Also, the floor ended a few incies in front of my left foot. Only by Instantly pressing my both fore aris with till imly sti-eng Iti against the sides of the chasi did I overcome the Mom1entl'in that in another momient Would have p'ecilhtated lime into a seii-circular elstern of ooze twenty feet below and at least sixty feet wide. Its sides were scooped out of thei river cliff in the forma of' an ar-ch, through which caine the light that had ar rested ily attention in the nick of time. My host told me at breakfast that many young cattle, colts and other farm stuff had (isalpeared there abouts and were supposed to have heen lost in the place, which was of unknown depth, an( was 11called local ly, "'le Jug"-Youth's Comipanion. Earnest Work Brings Success. No class of rnen have a mnonopoly of opportunity. I llstor-y is lilledi with i-ec ordis of the )oor lunin's progr-ess. As the race is umot always to the swIft, so is 51uccess not liwgys to the naturllally talented. It's thle man11 whlo trinls the talents he hias who rises abuove his fel lows. I low often havye we seeni the man whom the neighblors tall looked up)on as a ge:iius flash into ai temposralry proml inenice soon to give pIlnce to the ord'(i nalry- but tireless wvorker who suibst i tuted( ceaseless effort and conistant painsw for- Speia'l gifts. ,T'he fact is men01 of e'xceptionah talents ofteri lean upon)1 theml and1( conse 5 to mallke real ef for-ts to ilmpirove. You wtill fid tholn in mfiddle life where they were in youth. Often they3 are dlisappoklted1 ynd grouchy e-enteres critizing the of torts of othiers who attempilt onl mlenger talents to dto wtha t they ought to hnve.' done). They have made1 1n0 progr-ess in developinmg thleur owni personnlt!!ty. Joy in Winning Success. The trinihng of pe'rsolnality- is often a matter of c!omplslon. Men shunl loads and(1 lodge responmsibilities when ever they canl. They covet ease and wealth and try taking the shortest roaid to it. rTat miay land them there and1( it may not. Usually men have to risee thrloimth struggle. That has a wnly of makiing mnen turn to thleluselves for- what they get. Others are busy53 withb the sam job 1d)i and they cani't giv'e help1 to aniyone. As Inen learni to (10 they3 develop powver to doI andi~ event tunily the love of doing inikes posses5 8101n of thleml. It's not just1 I 11matter of poetry. but it's neOcordinlg to ftlet. There's 110 Joy lke that of conscious success aind it grows with whalit is done. Gave Him the Snub. I wais sore ait ai certinl hoy at schl~ a~nd wh'ien I w~alkced by hhnr in tile hall ailwaiys put miy hlead high. One (lay when I was going homne at noon I mert him in the hall with a big bunch of boys. I gave 1h1im the snub. andl puit mfy head1( UP hIgh. I dIidnl't see the steps. I fell all the wtay down, and to my m~ortifiCeation tis boy came and. picked me up.-10xchange. Big Suppiy of Yellow Pine. In the southern states there is a yellow pine aren of ouott 124,000.000 Rcres. F'.liy stociked and( car-efull.V 'fortded thin will produce nhbout 70 Culbic feet an aeo a year'. 'or miote -than 21,O0000.00 board feet a vour. LOVE AFFAIRS. OF ROYALTi Monarchs and PrIlnces of Britfnn Figure Conspicuously in the Annals of Gallantry. There is at great deal of talk to the effect that the prince of Wales will be allowed to follow the -dictates of his heart In the inatter of marriage,' ever, if the lady he should choose be not of royal 'blood, remarks the Montreal Family Ilerall. 'The rule requiring that royalty wed With royalty is not as old a, Is some tiles thought, for It was only in the time of George III. that the Royal Marriage otit was passed. George i himself made the daughter of a linen draper his wife, though she never was his queen. III oldell tiies, of course, the king married to ceuent till alliance with Some foreign country, but Illippily there Is nto need for that form of diploinacy iII these ilodern times. Henry VIII.-"bluff King lIal"-once declared, "Where my heart goeth, there shall my iand be bestowed," and fol lowed this Ip by woolng and eventual ly winning Anne Iloleyn, the daughter of i klnigit anl tile descendant of a L1ondon apprentlee. Very passionate wis his woollig Vills "own sweet ileart." The (Iy after poor Anne's head fell under the executioner's axe on Tower green, hIe was stainding at the altar with Jane Seymour, another knight's daughter, who became the mother of our sixth Edward. Whe:i Ie was prince of Wales, George IV. fell in love with Mrs. Fitz herbert, a beautiful widow. He was very irdeit in his wooing, and the lady led him a pretty dance before she finally ielVded lind allowed him to make her lis wife. There is a charming frankness in her letters to her royal lover, in one of which she writes, in answer to a re quest to meet the prince after leaving the ballroom " 'Meet you 1' What, you?-4he prince of Wales, whose character in the annals of gallantry is too well known for ine to suppose that after stii a ineeting I should have any character at all!"-1sordon Telegraph. Japanase Arts Being Forgotten. A Japanese contributor to the Japan Advertiser has tile following note on the forgotten arts of his country: "All the polite arts and accomplishments are in a had wvay. hlov many middle school bovs Of today know how to driik tea lin the forms of the ton cere inony? Flower arrangement is bleing fast forgotten. Versillcation, which onceCC was1 one of the commonest ac quimets of youths, is a hopleess my tery to the people of Taisho. The word politeness is not to be found in their l](xloin. \hen(111 at hoille they read (hlen1p story iagalzines, and whlen golmig out they put thieillselves at 'the tender inercies of jamm1i'lied trallca I's. So they wax ever more dwa1rfed 11w1l penguinill-footed, both physically and mentally. And tlie love of nature. of art and poetry, which was such a (Is tinguished characteristic of tile Yima. to race is being quicl:ly replaced by the love of moley and accumuilation." Object Lessons in Fuel Saving. The moving pictures are to be made ulse of as a Ilealls of educating people In the IIlmnner of making the most eillicent use of fuel. Several 50-min. ulte flins hlave been1 made~l, showing goodl and( had opmeration in steaml boll or lplants, mlethods(1 of testing bIollers, andI thle like. These pictures will be available to each state in connectloll with .iits edluentlonail propngandla tc conserve the fuei supply. A series of oillia I bulletIlns (on enlginieerinlg pha~ses5 of steanm andC fueol econoilcs also it hieing prepared. They wvill iniclude holler and1( furnnce testing, fuel gas an malysis. soavintg steaimi in hea tinig sys. hems, hol11ler-room u accountinug systemII sa1vinig siteamil andl fuel in industrial phlints, burniing 111ne slizes of anthira cite, holier waiter t realtinent, oIl burn. lng and stoker opeutrationl. Great Game Farm Planned. Whenl the legislature passes a bill1 of acceplance. Louisiana wIll hlave a verItable emipire of the wild, stretch-. ing along the gulf of Mexico sev'enty. lIve miilos and comprising 500 squ~are iles. TheO properly consists of Marsh is. Inand with 7M,000 acres of land, pur. chne~ed by Mrs. lRussell Sage and given to thle state as5 a gamiie refuge, and a tract of 85,000 aeres In Vermillion and Cameron piarishes, given by the Rlockefeller foundation. Adjoining Marsh island is tile pros ent state game farm on landl belongIng to tile McIlhennI~y inlterests of (10,000 acres. Lying between is what is known as the grandl Chlealer tract of 85,000O acres, which the state expects to acquire in tse near future. She Knew It. When a yoliu man11 in my late 'teans I pieked uIp a little telegraphy from a freind oif mine. One e'venling we at tendled a club dance and after having danedt with ai pairticullirly poor dlancer, I drumnmmed on tile arm of may chalir ftor my friend's bienefit, "poor (lancer, stepiped alhl over mle." To imy utter stiurrise tand hulmiliation tile girl sitting neCxt to mel turnled and( said qulietly, "Youl needn'it advertise the fnet."--Chicago Tribume. Reduolng the Surplus. "Equal suffrage is a serious matter in EngiandJ where tihe number of woma en enittled to vote far exceeds that of the men." "Oh, they have removed that dan ger." "Hlow so?" "N.. .wraman can vote who will not tacknowledge that ahe is not -under thirty." Church Notice. day, July 22nd at If d"oolI, " " v. .T. Kerr of Bradley, s. C., 'here will be no preachhig service Geo-'s Tasteless ciill rinlc wnthis coling Sabbath, July 18111. vettlrc? vitality and energy by purifying and o. Wl c u aI. N. KENNEDY, ichiog the blood. You can soon feel its Strength. -P. chutrch at Ora, beginning Thurs- p mm1, Invigorating Effect. PrIco 60c. Teated EiMhteen Months to Prove Perfection T WO yearn ago a puncture-proof cord tire Twas 'unheard of. Many experts believed the final develop- LE Cord ment in pneumatic tire-making had been Ax... reacied with the production of a Fabric puncture-proof-the only oue, the LJEE. Motorists nalirally looked to LEE for a punc. * ture-proof cord. LErlias succeeded in building such a tire. It has all the economy Ind resiliency of the best cord tires. It plracticaIly climinates blowouts, tread selaraLioz. broLn cdewalls and other comiloni tiro troullcs. And it is positively puic ture-proogj! For 18 monlhs this tire was cruelly tested before being offercd to the public. It rode as lightly and as smoothly as a cord without the puncture-i)roof feature. It was as economical on fuel and oil. It was easier on tubCs. And it outlasted cord tires that were not puncture proof! Let us demonstrate the economy of the new LEE CORD PUNCTURE-PROOF. W. P. HUDGENS Laurens, S. C. rCoid otrFabriic Puncture Proof Lmile TFrqd s Smile at Miles, ."S" 4 ~4 flH ROW away that old In- a stick. Rinse, blue and dry. A trument of torture. For- - get your aching back, red \Whatatransformation! Every 4 hands and wash day misery. garment is clean. purified and $There's a new way to clean sterilized. Every speck of dirt, clotheoseasily. It's the wonder- grease--even germs, is dis fulClen EsyWay that thou- solved. The fabric is not hurt sands of women are so en- at all, for there's no washboard 4 } thsiasic oer.to fray the cloth. thusistic ver.It's a nmarvelous wash soap,this Here's the easy Clean Easy Clean Easy. Every woman 4 Way: Soak the wash overnight. who uses it declares it the best 4 Ctup %/ bar of Clean Easy worker she ever saw. We 4 Nptholeine Wash Soap into would like you to try it. Ask 4%A gallons of water. Boil; let your grocer today. Notice the soap dissolve; put in clothes how different Clean Ea'sy looks 4 and punch for ten minutes with from other soaps.4 LouisILILE FOOD.PRODUC'rs Co., In 6rporated N4 Louisville, y. - NI Y4 I ~SAVES THE RUB4 Foll ow din-edicna on inside of wrapper 44 toI rI o