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NONEY BSCN without Cluemtlouif Hunt 's Salvo failss ihe tre' a*mcnt of 1r zenia. Trtter. RinfAworm, Itch, etc. Derrt becuna diwotraged be. vnue'e other treTattrits failed. Hunt's SnAlve bri relieved bun. d- II of such cols You can't lob on our Money Buck Guaranter. Try it at our risk 'lODAY Price 75c at Laurens Drug Co.. Laurens, S. C. Notice, of lond Sale. The trustees of School District Latl 1'.ns No. 3, of lurels County, the State of 'Outlh Carolina. will sell at A ettleei oi Dial & Todd, latrons. S. C.,. vn 1he tlh day 'if \lgut.i l:, at tit, hour of1 o'c lo 'tK il th jo' roon Coupon hontis or .maid school district in the sum of Seven( Thousand1 tiVeV II und red IPlal ars I7500.100 matllring twenty 120) yais after date t hereof, bearing interest at six :per cent per annmin. ayIble semi0-annally, to ilt' highest bidder, for cash Sealed 'ilds willb rwceived up to the timC of the sale. All btr.v wil he requir"d to (fAllos it wit: thie hairman of the Board cash or certifid che-:'. of somC solvent. hank in th su o 'Two I tIn dretd Dolla rs $2110.00) to guaraotoe performanice' on his p1art with tihe tertus of his hid inl tie CVeeit samile hnuld bie at De.ted D''oit.; of nll. su esiihiddlT.. Will 9 'r o1itn ii ately aftettei close of thc sale. The tru .jstees rerve the riiht to reject aly and all hii Sealed hids .;-soi Oe addrissd Io the 'hairman n of tle Board of Tlru '-. Da Dial & Tothl, Akttorneqy. 1an. South ('arolinla, and(( plaiily markA ''llid for School i. It. T1. TODD. \\V. II1. .\1Y l-l 4. I.t1. lIWI'RTON. 2-2t-A ~ TruIstees. C'OPY Si~DOSFORl HELIEF. St.ate of snuth I'llrolI ina. Count ly, of 1.n11nren1S. 'O1R'l1T OF ( CO.MON '1l1'AS 1 It. Cook :Inti .1. G Cook, in their otAln righlit andt as lxutor tO's of the last will an' testament of .\tbralhai ' eookhd. d. DIora .\aritin alid Sallie .\l. Stewart, Plaintits. .1. 1. Cook, .. '. Co-.. '0o0le.4 Loall & P'xch'an.ge l'ank. Rfatl( of (Iray Court*. and \'ir.uinia Car-olinla Chem ival Comlpanly. De-fendants". To the'tefndnt AboVe1 Named: You are herlibv smtimiltoled anld r'e quiired to answ''i tite coiplalhit in tins action aof whicih a coil is here With seivel uion you. anid to serve a copy of yourt answer to said eomplaint on the subsihei's at their otie at Laurens. Sotith Calohilna. Wiliin tweni t v days after' tlie service heret'of. excl ive of tilie day or stch service: and if you fail to aniswer' the complaint withinl tho 1:mo aforesa;,id, thle Plainl tiffs in llis action will apply to tht Cotii for the relief demanded in tIhI CoIn;a:daiit. To the Ablset Iefendant. .J. 1. Cook: You 'will dlease take notice that thi Comnplaint herin40 Was (luly filed inl the offlce of the Clerk of the Courl of Common Pl as for- Laireis count SY. South Caroliia. at Iautrenis ('oui-l Iloiuse, South ('arolina, Ot the 1. ti day of .illy. 1920. and is now on tilt thetrein. SI.\utll"N. COOPER & IAlilt. Plaintiffs Attorneys. Dated .uly I-, 1920. 1-3t-A For Sale Near Princeton, S. C. For Sah'e--ti25 acres for sale at $101 per' ac r'. ft is ini :t sepate t trlacts. cari ier' goes 0on'e a day I throutIghl cadl I ract . 'Tht're are 10 dwelling houses good tarins. Matres, run inIig wa te' anda well at eachi hotuse Th'le fallms cam ruins .thr lough It'e cnter' of each tract PlIenty3 of good ti tierI, hoth ioak ant pine with ''achi ract. Italitist anic MetthiodistI'ii hrchies anrd 2 goodl schoob near' the farmus. goodl pasturie witht el farmn. On' of' the tarmlis is niow~ road.l a stock farm'i. M ilton 1I.c.\ letuen. lb,. IN.Wilialmiston, 8'. C'. Milton B. McCuen Box 125 Willsamisen, S. C, AIIBEVILI.OREEN WOOD MUTUAJ INSURANCE ASSOUIATION. Orgranlad 1892. PHOPER'lT'Y I NURtED *M85WA0 WVRITI0 OR CALL on tho uindersign ed for any information you may desuir about our plan of insurance. We insure your piroperty against de( struction by IRE, WINDSTrORM Ol LIGTIt'NG. and dio so chieaper' tha: any company In existanee. Remembter, we are prepared to prov to you that ours Is tho safesut an cheapest plan of insurance knowvn. Our AssocIation is now licensed t write Insuranco In then countIes 4 Abbeville, GIreen wood', McCormic1 E'dgefield, Larurens, Saluida, Lexingtol ichland, Calhoun, andI Spartanburi The oflicers are: Gen. J. Frasa Lyon, Pres(ient, ColumbIa, S. C.; J. 1 Blake, Gen. Agt., Secty, and Treat Greenwood, S. C. DIRECTORS: A. 0. Grant.. .. ...Mt. Carmol, S. J. M. Gaumbrelh . . . . Abbeville. S. J. R. flake.... .. ..OGroenwood, S. A. W. Young blood . . . . Hodges, S. J-. Fraser Lyon . . . . Coluinbia, 8. R. H. NIcholson .. .. Edgefield,S. W. H. Wharton . . .. ..Waterloo, S. W. C. Bates .. .......Batenburg, S. J. IR. BL AK E, Gen. At Oreaenwood, S. C. Jani. 1, 1920. Piesr Cured in 6 to 14 Days - agbt refomd monley If PAZO OIN7MENT f1 ncum'erthin~tnd. Blmoedli or ProtrudIng Pil DONNER MR. MOUFLON'S QUESTIONS. "Mrs. Moullon, do you love me?" asked Mr. Moution. The Moulton family are wild sheep, you know, and they con from Sar dinIa. "I do," said Mrs. Mouflon. Yes, I do. Yes, I do." "That's good." said Mr. Motion. "Well, do you care for rne as much on the rainy days as you do on the sunny ones?" "Of course, I do; of course," said Mrs. Moulton. "And you always like to see me eat tine meals and grow more hand some?" iasked Mr. Moullon. "Oh. yes, I love to see you mat fine mnealis and grow more handsome," re peated Mrs. Moullon. "D o you think I am growing more 0 handsoime all #he tome?" he asked. "Now really, now really, Mr. Mou st lon.' at "Oh, Mrs. Mouflon, pray answer my g que0stion. If you give the right an of swer it will make mie so happy. So -y. h1py." ly "Then, if you know the right an th swer, why do you atsk it?" asked Mrs. as NIoIIIloni, smilling. as "1 know what I hope you'll answer." it "Oii, tien you aren't sure?" at -"Not quite," said Mr. Mouflon, "but he I've great anld 11igh* hope. Yes, my er hopes are very high." he "Well, what W1as the question aga in?" a1sked Mrs. Moution. as "11 nsilzed ynul, my dear, Lf youi aA nt 'Se on er. , of ng to e er- V1, "He Was Much Pleased." thought I was growing more handsome ill the time." "I do, indeed," said Mrs. Mouflon. "You're a very handsome animal." "Anrid you don't think I'm looking any less well than I (d at home?" "You're stilll your handsome self," said Mrs. Mouflon. "Oh, those words from your dear noutlon molith make mie so joyous," stid Mr. Mouilon. "And you think the keeper of the zoo and the different keepers of all the different anlimals-do you think they adlinire me?" "Oh, yes." "rspecially our own keeper?" "Most assuredly, most certainly I do." "That's nice," said Mr. Monflon. "And I like to hear you use lots of tic words on this subject. I"Do you think, (tear Mrs. Mouflon, that you caro for mae as much now as ayyou dtidl when we were free andi in 05e "Yes, inldeedI, I do," said Mrs. Mou re- fion. "I like you just as welt." t "Don't you think, maybe, you like ub1( ine a littie bhtter all the time?" asknd "I think, maybe, I do," repled Mrs. ItlMoulnon. the "Aren't you sure of it?" asked Mr. ing Mouilton. vas "I'nm sure of it," sait Mrs. Mouflon. ab Then, please, say so," begged Mr. the Maoufoi '"It sound(1 so much hetter." om "But I an~sweredl your question as8 you as'ked it," said( Mrs. Moution, ilch "TIruie," said Mr. Moutiin. "But I ttle wanted to have you say mtore nice srk- thng aboiut me than I coutld in mod hi."Oht, dear," said Mrs. Moufion, try had ing to hie a sme of "lio you think I hwave handsomei cot orlngs?'" asked Mr. Moullon. tes- "I moost certainly dto," said Mrs that Monii''i heir "Arid dto you think I am a nice ects~ friendly, sociable, lileasant old1 rou-i visit a , Ouis- "Yes, I do," said Mrs. Motilon 515"Andt t he ke'epe'r says yo'r as fr'~indI an- as friendly can be. with Mr. Mounn sidie& was mc nt"An 111you don't think I'm conc'eited do11 (y ~otI ?" he( asked. lens- "Oh, no." said( Mrs. Mouflon, smitlini and to herself, and~ thinking: ('ay "P'erhaps you're not conceited, but ln.oh, how you love to be admired an rack, pit" ndter oit' their When Way to Success. Whnyou wondler whether you ar anti going to succeed or not, you hav rpplaced a barrier in the way of yoi been success. Sweep the If's out of th Fo way. If you are readly to do your par was you have a perfect right to take su n'cess for granted, Every "If" weal At ens the faith in yourself wvhich make car. achievement pos-sible.--Oirls' Comipar o the in.' from Human Cipher. Clay ?Arof fr like a dude; it amounts e fe? nothing, but makes a man shiver who he sees it.-Boston Transcrint. Ove Remarkable C ' 272 Per From New Y Thinkol it ! Ani Overland StoeI, driven by 25 dill'erent drivers w t11 ita0l econlomly records il n a 3,412 miles of' ilncessant. drivimlJ d riving- -rCkless I or consei'va t iv< Co(omy11 'N' is so certainl that this I WiS ti stIindard val.' with 11asolille rec.1rd that. Ias iever before bee expert drivers. experienc(ed by oI this New Overland 4 nnder This von derul [i trip of tihe OvelI inarkable way the wonderlll star eCon1oily of t h is great var. If get a LIew selnsatior olf easy ridi Sumere] Ea Touring $985 Roadste F. 0. B. Toledo M I W A Good Will be at W. P I Frida Augusi To Buy 3 Bring them in a and save six m t J. G .riand ross-Continent Record JAMiles Gallon ork to San Francisco S("aIr. mt i m gs at :32 diffl-vr~ui i * I t .1i ho Iever saw the ar leore. simIashed all trails- n day and night rin from New York toSa l+'ransieo in 179 hours; the ear punisheI by innframiliar a ecording to t he (river*-yet the l ar's inihorenit DJverland averaged 27.2 miles 1o the gailon. The ear ly n1o reinii forcee ntiiIs thirouighouit, bit estaiblished a n1 equ an led inlder similiar eon ditions. Therme were no 1.ross-countr u*y drivinlg whiceh shAows the perfo1irmani e the mIosI adverse coiditions. 11d again iIIhasizies in a triuly dramat ie andi re nina antd ridii (utalities, aind the ext rai rdilairy yon don't know ilis ear and its reiarkalble alchieve Take a ride- in the emr with the Triple Spriii and g inl this lightweight ear. Motor Co. st Main Street r $985 Coupe $1525 Sedan $1575 -Subject to Change Without Notice. JILE Prices Paid . Childress & Sons' Stable .y and Saturday 6th and 7th ound Young Mules nd sell them for the cash onths of high-priced feed. .DAVIS Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN (Copyright, 1920. by James Morgan.) THE FIRST DARK HORSE 1795-Nov. 2, James Knox Polk born in Mecklenburg County, N. C. 1823-5-Member Tennessee leg islature. 1825-39-Member of congress. 1839-41-Governor of Tennessee. 1844-Nominated for president by the Democrats and elected. 1845-March 4, Inaugurated elev. enth president, aged forty. nine. 1846-July 17, Oregon question settled. 1846-7-The Mexican war. 1848-Greatest territorial con -or 'Iqiiest in American history. 1849-June 15, death of Polk, aged fifty-three. AMES KNOX POLK was the fir dark horse to win the president. race, and his figure remains amo ifie pale shadows in the procession presidents across the pages of histo When he was yet a boy the faim of James K. Polk moved from Nor 0arolina to Tennessee, where he w too frail for frontler fpirming and N P .ut to work beIn[ the counIer of crossroads store. After a time in ti excellent preparatory school of life returned to his native state t> en, college, and he graduated from i University of North Carolina. Becoming a country lawyer, lie sent to the Tennessee legislature; m i-led Sarah Childress, daughter of well-to-do man of business, and wi to congress for 11 years, in the cout of which lie became first the Jacks leader of the house and finally speak Next he took his seat as governior Tennessee for a term. After hav been twice defeated in his effort obtain a second election to the gov norship, those defeats were imme C4 Jame. K.. Jkaes th. Pomk Whig convention at Baltimore th wiseacres of WVashington who still garded Morse as an impostor saidt the trick was easy, since anyone cc have guessed1 who the Whig nomi would h~e. Three weeks afterwi when the inventor at the cap spelled out the name of Polk as Democratic nominee the doubi 'Thomases were corsvlnced flint lie a fraud. They scoffed at suchi an surdiey aind were not persuiaded of truthi inUtilehliririval of a train fi Baltimore. - * M~;bscurJty of "Jim" P'olk, wi that smug, unsmiling, uninspiredl il man of res;pectahle abilities had servedl on the eminence of the sp er's chair, was deepened by the s lng fame of Van Buren, whota he displaced at the convention, and Clay, against whom lhe was maat( before the people. Those two st -men had taken it for granteff Sthey were to be the champions oft respective parties. hilstory susI that they concocted in a friendly two letters whIch appeared susil ly close together and which were epielously alike in discouraging thc (nexation of Te~xas at risk of war Mexico. 0 Van Buren stood by his guns agi f annexation, going down in the I) ~cratic convention under thle (disp uire ot the southern slaveholders the alarm of northern dloughfaces. faltered intecampaIgn.Qub ,qualifying and taking a back t he wvent dIowa at the election the indignation of the abolitlo ~who polled enough votes for ~third ticket to cause his defeat. SPolk lost Tennessee at the poll is the only man, with the sole e Stion of Wilson in 1916, who has o elected without his own state. , several days the national ciectlor t. in dloubt, with the result hangli a complete count in New York Iast it wans found that Polk ha( ried the state by 5,000-thanks I Liberty party, which had drawn more thar. that number of votes "the ,i cat compromiser." Henr) 'had comprorrlised his last chani the presirdency.