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The famous root and herbal remedy for sluggish liver, bil; 'ousness, indiges, tion, rheumatism, constipation and sick headaches. AT YOIR DMIAML Rheumamv NO A . fhe 4n CPn''. arV L.,.t .SV rut y. with Sul-Fc rr- t into th-.-m - e d!:-c t the blood di.or h are the mes<.Acn. tismi. wir: peOPlQ have tried said "good-bye" tco rhec ::tilc suffering. Write o-r r-:r ible' vh ch el O t .*. '!Vi(Itfce of .14I31 1~Crro-:;pr:1 inerict in o ih. t -i~it oI t hf at t bottl -o 1. (11 (t r ;,to I -t ' drug asteirc a 'r a.pai rn rcui;.t ,fpr Cxb. TIE SUL-F7IMRRO-soL1. Co. De''- A . on mome:-y, Ala Sold by 1.aurells Drug Co. Life Wasa Misery Mrs. F. M. Jones, of Palmer, Okla., writes: "From the time I en tered into womanhood . . I looked with dread fom one month to the next. I suffered with my lck and bearing-down piuntil life to me was amisery. I would think pain any longer, and I gradually got worse. ... Nothing~ seemed to help me until, one day, . .. I decided to TAKE The Woman's Tonic "I took four bottles," . Mrs. Jones goes on to say, "and was not only greatly relieved, but can truthfully say that I have not a pain... " I has now been two years since 1 took Cardui, and I am still in ,.good health. . . I would ad vise any woman or girl to use Cardul who if a sufferer from any female trouble." If you suf ier pain caused from womanly trouble, or If you feel the need of a good strengthening tonic to build up yourrun-down system, take the advice of Mrs. Jones. Try Car dul. it helped her. We believe It will help you. AU Druggists DADDT EVENING IRY TALC THE BUTTON BAG. "In a work bag," said Daddy, "there lived a button bag. ' The button bag was made of blue and white cambric, I be lleve you call it, andl(] it hla a blue silk ribbon arountl it at the top-I .1)sit4ppose a sort of neck-tie, one might say. "At fay rate, in tias hg were loads and londs of buttons. The but ton bag was a very large buttolA hag, nmid the work .A bag wts a very large work hng. "Whenever any Button Was Found. one wanted it but ton, or whenever anyone sail they had lost it button or that a button was oly, tihe work bNg wts taken out- and thlen a button was founil--always a button for everything that fleded a button. "Anti whlen any miembler of the hoisehol d wantel to do a little mend. Ing for everything that lacked a but ton there was always found to be one. "What did the buttons and the bit ton bag have to say to all this? Were they pleased they were so useful? We vlll lar. "'W'hein is the party going to ber asked the big, white button, with the%! shining face. "'Iretty soon,' said the little green button, 'pretty soon.' "'I've been to lets of parties,' said a button wIth a funny little face, n face of soni old, old knight or lord or something very noble! "lie inid two sisters ail a brother Rnd the four of then were all just alike. They had never been used, as nothing had ever come up that needed their time and their presence. They had heen in the button box for years. Mitt, of course, they were kept, for there might he a time, no one knows whein or how'soon, when the buttons with the faces might he Just the ones wanted. "'It's so nice,' said the one who had just spoken, 'that we are always xure of a home. It's so nice. Some folks would throw is away and] would ny they had no use for a lot of old buttons taking up room when they were about sure we'd never be used. "'Bit we don't have to worry, for the mistress of th house who owns the work bag find the button bag and all the buttons. lways says that we don't sfat or drink, meaning we lon't ecst her any money, and we might be useful soie itn'. "'SIe's a sensible lady, yes she is. And we're sure of a home, quite sure of onte. "'But as I said I had been to a great many parties beenuase I have livedi In the bution bag such a long tine, thbough once I lived on a handsomte dress, oh, sch a hanidsomie tgress, andt thlen I wen'it to great halls andt( parties anmd al.' " 'Alt,' said a big black button, 'I've had a nice' life, toil. I've lived on fur coa ts. I've been on severni , anrd I've la'sei ouit on gloriously brac'lng wi ier days wh-ien the no0w eanme In my face tatu body till itt onite! "''ve beeni for sleigh-rules whorjie hells jhingled andit whetre tmy but ton heart b-aped for joy !' 'AndI I,' said -:little ibrown bit toin, 'hiave on thle ot her hand been about In thle summner. I belonged to a iov-ely bathlinrg stilt whileh beslonlged to a little girl-, andm I used to see- the sand made into0 zisitles andt brtlge-s anud rivers, and ll1 sorts of marvelous thlingst, atnd the lovely oeann woutl go civer mei-ohi, it wasi so cootl and re freshintg! 'An a11tll about me were happy, mailing pieoplie. liveyone was shriek inig withI dllIght. If I liad known how to shriek I w-out havlii e cnlled at the top of my volece, if I had a voice: "''Oh, t he but toin is hiapp~y, too, ha ppy' !" ' " 'Well,' stidt the must get reindy for the palrty, as we imutst frolice till r:ight anrd thlen be back int ouir places biy morn ing, sto it won't "It's So Nice. counfuse or mtix one up If they sew in' thle morntiing.' '''Right,' sti all the buittons. "Soi they all biorrowed old( pieces of ribbhont froml then hng andit little lieicest of trend, and they dlresed t hemtselvyes in tine array, a ndl been t hey dltancet antd unnt g in thltir lit tie lbutton voles's, which, of courI5(. ltren't recal vo(ices. nndas or. ly hmake-helieva ones. And this wuas t heir song: "'h' luttons are wr'. hnyt'y. gleeful and wr. s of all kinds andi we're n.:ver Va(J. We tovo folks who uAse us un' i folks~ who do nct; Ah, yeu, indueed, we're a enerry, muerry trl" Many in Little, ri. II .tar 1uh of sow tere mnight ho 2E rnis n n, no two nt themn LIVES IN MEMORY New Yorker Recalls Delightful Evening With Tvain. Satisfied Th.at He Saw Great Humor. ist at His Best When He Sat by the Fireside and Ornoked With Him. It Is only about forty years since I Spent a most delightful evening with Mr. aind Mrs. Clemens at their newly built home in Ilartford, yet the Sun and New York Ierald refers to the house as "one of the oldest residences in New 1ngland from the point of construction," says the writer of at letter to that newspaiper. Undoubtedly your repnorter wrote that It was "one of th oddest," and lie was right. The types were guilty of a characteristic prank. We sat inl front of a goodly old fashioned fireplace and simoked such tobacco as Mark liked-that is. he and I did-in the long-stemilied clay pipes they call churchwardens, while Mrs. Clemens looked on with smiling toler ation, contributing the gracious charm of her presence to the- entertainmnent he was giving to i cnsual guest who had scant claim to the hospitality ho waits enjoying. I had enlled as a strnng er onl professional business and had been received socially. Clemens was at his best-and let me say that best was never bottered1 by aniyone else. Ills onoloogue of nar rative and epigrams wias drawled out through a long evening, as I laughed and Mrs. Clemens smiiled, and Mark busled himself clenning, hu ring out and filling pipe after pipe-there were a dozen of them standing in the cor ners of the firepice-and lihanding them to ine or I iliting one for himself a., fast or even faster than they were nieeded. There were two of them alight all time time. I wish I could remember what he snld, but I can recall only one remark, ain( that was too trivial to repeat, though I laughed at it as heartily as I (li at all the other nonsense. It was not what lie said so much as the wiy he said it. P,. T. IBirnum, the great showman, told ie that he, too. kept on laughing all the time Mark Twain talked to hin. "But my wife doesn't," lie said. "mrs. lYhrmiuni has not' a very keen sense of humor and she is a little afraid of laughing at the wrong tme, so she somiet imnes seems unappreci ative when Mark 1 really funny even for him. "She has found out for herself, though, a pretty good rule to go by," lie continued. "You see, she and I fre quently visit with Mr. and Mrs. Clen ens, and I noticed after a while that she was always watching Mrs. Clem edis, so I asked her wly she (lid it, and she told mie that it was because Mrs. Clemens did not always laugh ..; other people did when Mark spoke. 'But wh%-)en she laughs,' said 'Mrs. liar num, 'I know it must be really funny, so I laugh, too.' "I call that pretty shrewd," contin nod the old showman with one of his own hearty ha-hns, "and I took to doing th same thing myself. It work edl well, I must say, for'I noticed after a while that Mrs. Clenions never laugh edl excepting at the very best of Mark's jokes. I suppose she must have got tiredl laughing all the tune before that." I knew the great muan for a long tinie after that wonderfui evening, but I niever felt that I knew himi any het ter. Colossal German Theater. One of the world's most colossal theaters, aind by far the miost bizairae, is tie groat atuditorium recenitly openi edl in Iterlin. Th'le dremary exterior of the builing is nionstroums. buit gives little promise of the surprise within. Thae curviaig wamlls of the foyer, says an illutst rated article In Popular Me canaales Minigazine) for May, mieage in to a dIomued roof, supported by carved amahogiany columns. TJhe upjper por tion of each coalumn is formed by nimay disks thaimt raiaae oranige mad blue light from coaiceilald bauibs. Thm6 uadi torium itself suggests the GIreek open nalr aimpjhitheater. The 3,000) seats are iranged in horseshioe plan around an arena, or more pr'opieary, an or chiestra. Chess Expert Doomed. Senior Capalanen ham set uap as remaurkable a record as eveOr wvas made in any sport in his chess exiitdions in Great hiritakit and Irelmandl. Illis totail RcoreO in 1,352 gamaaes is 1,253 wlns, 71. dlraws, and 28 losses. Ills opponents have include'd till thme best 1English players, le takes thecm on thirty or moire at a tune. To each move on tho boiard the Cuban nmster dlevotes an averare of ninem seconds5, his victimis six minmutes. BecallIng tihe tragic his tory of the great chess experts, of Morphay and1( others, one asks fearfully, when will Capalanena go insane? New York Globe. Made Vacation Profitable. A uniluae vacation wais thant of Dr. WVilliam Goodwin, suaperintemient of the genieral hospital at Stiate island, who campedO~ for one moanth ia the maple orchard of Frnk Taylor of Hiarwinton, Conn. IHe comilned biusi ness with pleasure, wvorked nIghts as weoll as dlays andl made severity-six gallons of niaple siarup. Seif- Evident. Pn.ourich-"1 wvasn't horn with a ilive;- Soon ina may mouth." Wig wuag--"No, I notice you eat with your knife." Materials in Wren't. Nest. The wren carries it lot of material to the box or holo cavity in which the nes2 is constructed. If tho box in which wrens are building is a foot square they will fill it full of material .-straw and grass and hair and fiber of one kind or another. They do not use any mud, as the robins do. Like Many Another. Ills father had taken imn out to the golf course. Tl'hat evening he seeme to be il at ease. "Wilo," said hit mother, "wlt Is the initter with you, I wish you'd stop scratching yourself.' "I don't kntsv what's the matter, buf I guess I must have got some of thos4 golf lugs nn tno." was Wtlle'sI rcply. NEW1 11OOK hY Stock a11nd4 Poultry Experl. A new 0book entitled ",'are and Treatment of stock and Poultry " has .just. ben published by )r. 1'. 1). LAvcear, notable Veterinary Surgeon, 'ho graduatled from the Toronto, On tario, Veterinary College 27 years ago, and has since devoted his eltire life 1o Veterinary Science and Poultry Iliusbandry. This book contains 128 pages of IiI-to-the-Illinulilte data ol Ihe care. symptomis aind treatment of stock anid poltry. It hs dividedI into depart m1 enIs --bhorses, eattle, hogs, sheo,) and Iloultry heing taken ipi. It I; very collplete with charts and illust rations, and I. ia book thatI should be Ill tle home of every livestock and 1)01oulti raiser In the country. 'T'he price is oilly 10 ceIts. Get it from Your deali or( send i (itme to Dr. L. I). LeGear, 171)0 North Hi 1roadway, St. L)uis, .\o., stating that you are i subscriber to this paper, and he will send you a Copy direct. eMC That El Men Who Apprecia In every grcat tire chief question is: "Ho we give for the money produtct dependis on adopted. quainted with Brum knovs that Brunswic are again evident. Thi cern-noted as a lea line it entered since 18A more proved tlh-at it3 p: A perfect tire 5s sin of knowledge and ct skill. No secrets nor vent making aa ideal But standard3 co~ma tire making there is v skimping, for subtle Cc hidden shortcomning;s. out the highest star build high-grade tires I ~ The Brunswick or~ tire makers includes a of technical experts. THE B A Sold Cord Tires wit] Fabric Tires in" IRBR Vt. r P.5' 1) YAr1 introduce "REEN FLAG" to,Your Motr Ycur powter p!=, wi!! be -owef::* wel b v you introdirce "CR'LN FLAG M !: O and mnice them regulr "pr " c:j:r:ed ac- x-, pDO'T DELAY THIS IIN'TRODUCTI ON 1 Go to 1.i! "Greri. FM :.e e--4 h - ur rennk p r 1 . a t i cm:; * e . : : r .o a I !- . . . . . . . . . . u se. " G. e e pyo'. l, ~ :'~ .t s -IkUC 0 s o in the en:e Supplied by tMe iol:owz: ' .--rown d"P 4 Ask tor Creen ring Gear Compound ianad Cup (ircsea V. .P . I I 1EN . ilaurens, s . C.; W. \I. A II ERRI i0 11, ILuurens, S. C., 1R. F. ). : P ARSON's CA1i.\ ( 1,,. [mnord Si. lion, S. C.; MICA D)OR' Al'TO CO., Fiunain 1Inn1, S. C. C lAL'I PMTi'ON, inoree, S. C. S -. .s n.a . e rer Came to Market e Superative Vakacs Prefer The Brunswick factory, the among them has spent less than w much can 20 years in handling rubber. ?" And the Each is a master of his craft. the policy And the new ideas they bring to the attention of Brunswick direc become ac- tors receive sincere consideration. wick Tires Every proved b e t t e r me n t is k standards adopted unanimously. ern vey The Brunswick- Tra is a cornbi 5 --has onice nation of ack-nowledged features >1icy is right. luBrunswick standards of manu .acture. pIy a mTia-ter tndards and M':.i result is a super-tire, the like patents pr-- you have never known be tire T- he kid of a tire you will tire. . gladly joi in welcoming. first. .For inmc ;st room for Yet Brunsvicks cost no more on~omie-, for than like-type tires. er withi-. Try ONE Brunswick, We prom.. Ldards don't ise a surprise. And we feel certain that you will want A LL Bruns anizat::on of wicks. iat tf Then good tires will have a new Not a mani meaning to you. RUNSWiCK-B3ALK-COLLENDER CO. tlanta hHed uert'ers: 38. L.uckie St. On An~ Unlimited Mileage Guarv~antee Basis S||| --83 "Driving" and "Swastika" Skid-Not Treads Plain," "Ribbed" and "BBC" Skid-Not Trea Y MOTOR COMPANY Lamiers, S. C.