University of South Carolina Libraries
MAN'S BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs; he cun be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with G"LiD MEDAL Tho world's standard remedy for kidnoy, liver, bla.der and uric acid troubles F;*no 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital cegans. All druggists, three sizes. Lnck for tho n-:no Ocd Modal on Cn:y boz ti.kd LeCtO vu ZEmitation 4 Money 1riCk withoi: u (ticion If HUNT'S SnIve fati in the trentment of ITCH. ECZlM'NIA, RlXN GWORNM, T 'lm er , y Oth.,r Itchingi citencl ew . -:... Try a 75 cent box ot ox ., .. .;', / Cold. Cause Grup and hiflienza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablemt remove the cause. Thero i, only enu "Drono QuIlin." E, W. CROVE'S si~noture o:1 bo:.. Me A 0I (,' It'd \ M o tid ro. form i. \littitly h lI ai t ti h r hi.I bi t in a f t ar. (o m-'Itggit iounl wiaf th youry Iother ilementr .'A hu1 and m ildic in that yill ceciS .1 cohl J m1 ) -Ad iat(l.. 'T ) sa' t i -- t'y h It deanlI for thi s Prsc ipt ion inl( <itickly obt ainabl1e( for! It I .lurray has his chemrists pi O'p' nt(1 it lies iand spply the dru~.'its.A:'k your. dru:A.gist for 3111' RtA Y'S HOREHOU101ND1 MULLAEIN AND T u Chibiroen enliny it. Your druggist wvill refun1d your 1Me il ou .;at i4fac(t ion is. o comlplete. Colds and inifluenTza are success fuilly treated by uising D)r. lIlltonj's, Life in con.iuntction with Murray's Hlorehound .\lullein and( Tar. Manufactur111ed bly 3MURRiAY Ditt'(. co. C'olumb11W, S. C. % 1 E, w'a. diq Th b.9 -. wn p1n we 7 ~A m too forbu duho t" ie.M huttsband was worried .. ]J One eventing, wh1'ile read- j j Q intg the' lthday AIhna- p2 p gj nae, lie camne across t. 3 case smutlar to mine, and 03 g went straiht for some Q g Cardui for tme to try. * nTAn a The Woman's Tonic "1 took it faithfully and Xthe results were immedi Sate," adds Mrs. Gregory. " I continiued to get bet.. ter, all my ills left me, * and I went through... with nto further trouble. My baby was fat and strong, and mnyself--thank God-am once more hale and hearty, can walk miles, do my work, thottgh 44 years old, feel * like a new person. All I owe to Cardul." For many years Cardul has been found helpful In building tip the system when rtun down by dis orders peculiar to wom~en. Take Cardui Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN (Copyright, 1920, by Jance Morgan.) THE STRENUOUS LIFE 1858-Oct. 27, Theodore Roose velt born in Now York city. 1880--Graduated from Harvard. 1882-4-Member of Now York legislature. 1884-6-A ranchman at Medora, N. D. 1889-95-Mcmber of national civil service commission. 1895-7-Member of New York po lice commission. 1897-8--Asistant Secretary of the navy. 1898-Colonel of the Rough Riders in Cuba. 1899-1900 -- Governor of New York. 1900-Elocted Vice President. 1901-Sept. 14 took the oath In Buffalo as the twenty-fifth president, aged forty-two. 1904-November, elected presi dent. r i I Et!)014 RtOOSEVEILP was ite moswA pioplla (if -IIlI our presi dents. With tihe xceptioni of Linicol, II,, w2as the I raciest, tli liost interest ini character 'lm we have had] In the( pres4idency. Yet h' was horn apairt frti the nil titlmbla' wh1411m be lod !1i1t1Ia' ih t liave callv d M itdr to hItII Il a'i sss Wo hi 11 ai e liltlryien but1 aor (Ioe i thing: I ,111 : 111n 1 thev heali t h 4 to enj 1th Ilfe (1f 1,aso which opened'l to him) at h hirIh. UIs11 evelt 1:1rt ia Ia ti:Iht for his very batro:h inl h6 is'aspilig, asthilitle childhloot. Fililly he took nI post -graduate course inl physilI cultu1re in the wild West, wh e the "i'our-eyedi t(enlerfoot" had to fight the batle of' his youth 111 Roosevei ( -cu v l l an na-r. :. i:, ini a 'r a Wa wor1, with t 11.1 f tru V h; ali', ti oth i nl' plit (11n21 leaoh- ri in tiaia ra ii i i i i a dta.l, inilatat 5'n iirs dEa [:11 a.-'. otil paol r'ealliin i his idr-:nlismo :21 iiimade' the n:ia'mrije raifo'rmaer laveri inito theiC laigr had1 In t he'i.i ';sltanay. THe deldedIIaI the out'lalset to ne1 in each otliet' as If' it was to ibe the last 15 year~'s aifer h' lefti thie legislture, Statfe (at New'~i York'. Foar ai ilong t' Ira wi.as "shlved"l'l' on, thea 'ivail servic'e cammiitssion at Wasingtonill, utili a ra' faarni niayo ar of Newv i 2rk lapoainted himi on thIea four-hleaded'a tatiCa coranm~iis sionl ;hut It was son Sgil'-he'ladedl so) tflr 11s th uile c (ubal seae, and itIm11t han wa11~~;s full of teeth faor 1polle1 gr'aft - t'rs 121 ai(1lawbreakerPs. At tilrty3-Pighlt th ml' iost lhe coul d ask of t hae Repuba lill po~llielanls, wvith any hodpe oaf get ting it, was the assistant secre'taryshlip sighed wIth relIe~f wvhien at last lhe went off to lead hits Rough Rtiders. In flye months he was back from Cuba In the far more troublesome role of ai popular hero. The0 Newv York ma ChIne was in such sore need of a good name to pull1 it through the pending cinetton that It met him at the wharf and humbly laid at his feet the Repub tlii no'mination for governor, flut in the goaverniorship, he realized the worst fears of Boss liat~t that he harb rored, as thai hoss naively wrote him, "a~l 01us altruIstie ideas," and that he was "a little loose on the relatIons of capi tal and lab)or, on trusts and1( combrina tions and . . . the right of a man to run his own business In his own wvay." The~a only thing to (10 wIth this wild engine was to turn the swait(ch antd shunt it on to the sIde track of the vilee presidaency. Roosevelt loudly pro tested that he wvanted1 to be re-elected governor. And wvhlle Platt wvas tryr~g to push1 hIm on to the nationet ticket, MCJ(Inley nnd flanna Just ns earnestly trIed to pushi him back on to Platt. The Itepublicnn national cont ent Ion -one 'j;g and roared hbt; nomination, 'ng~n him, in spite of ims('4f, upon on Ha tite tha le fmrtwe -Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN (Copyright. 1920. by Janes Morgan,) THE DIG STICK 1903--February 6, Roosevelt in duced Great Britain and Germany to arbitrate with Venezuela. November, the Panama revolution. 1905--May 12, brought Russia and Japan t' agree to dis cuss peace. August 29, the peace of Portsmouth. 1906-Roosevelt awarded the Nobel peace prize. 1918-January 6, death of Theo. dore Roosevelt, aged sixty. A T the crackling of a twig in the still delths of the Adirondack iountans Roosevelt turned to see a guide coming out of the woods with the unexpected news that McKinley's condition wis worse. Although lie hastened to Buffalo, the president iad] died 13 hours before the vice president arrived. At the outset of Roosevelt's ad 1nistrat'nl at fearful eltizo/en bekved t1 rou1h idr not to perimilt his fight ing spirIt to itluntige thev Country 4ito an linternational war. "What !" the pres Wdent exhaimned. "A war, and I eoope~d Ip Ihre iII the Whilte louse? Never!" Many forgot Ihe first hl1f of the obl m11t0to 1:hat floosevlt inuule IsI, own). "Speak so tlmd 1ary1 big stick." No inan ever li:i. a simpler faith iII Ohe vli(ncy' of fi-rt "talking it over," 111:1n fa ioni. with an ad(4versIry, whtI sviultor, or 11n a111massador. Th'le nneldd lo' G ermn kaiser .was 1le (ariest to feel Ith. "bIg stilek" to see If It was only stuffod with straw. iiiiiny and a Tory goveriiment of l'In.laid were oil Ot point of seizing territory as a security for some clalins Ed ith carow Rocsevelt. a11lal.1t Ve' i!(uiean lii;, when~: iii useveltisu, hit woiint id .u iii i.:g huu!i frmi such a tee. buti he fion liiit t' nihe (ljiln :eil th iiier (;'iian ugis ir that ur 1( la- arlini in ten da.'-y, he wo(ul seil: Ahoirs iin' i Venuuizuea Tha e ia' lissa iiro'.lig iiioni tghatkaiserto co not iitek d nowii, ioosvelt reill that htie ali not arluin t un( I bt'was hslyting im ha oet oh teppen. lif iti ewi t n th wo wii t hou''t5 anwit r fra ('i rin, hle tiild ah uln-l hiratsas thath as Ien wol cu the lin together taosqunivehat unegh horman Atared in -tehored to arbl-o coreeatIe wIouldsaol. aint itus will sambad owrd camebace oft r aon mesageon annouingatht rmssany eclar in thaohi tee rst hntiered ota tzunc'thtnete of thiqe position befored th world timbent andta "tendr rthe Atuiso-Janpnesient-Iu' Srewdlys choosin cth~e ofgh lomnge nf sereen, ine appae toon the twon hlligerents wItad commo statns an ate bipl dtirctess th aorinygra war tseat bringkn otognethe rodo iutsn nswgh hors.an Atrahe eteredf the peaceo wflamaily ioArica pec of renon claon,an 'pae"tereusiandetlad, "but tht hos"sel ofist hamm-erpedn tr agratyitn tat neitherofth oerel wantred ats t~A ice andthata "the oer rile Amer. ehi prident- i Streutso -as i capabe aslckn h conflieees into ale roosevndtarvngwthe.. s'tlek!1ope the onary gratrwar that broe t marr th prind ofd Isway aWhie heldooseveits Eit en I ats, tho ht s was n eur - "bu th oe fasl-rsetn ALWAYS AT WORK Man's Network of Brains Never Really at Rest. Every Action of the Body Controlled by Thousands of Nerves of Which Few Persons Have Any Ade quate Conception. It is only withtn recent times that the brain has been recognized as a thinking organ, the nelents having lo ented the thinker in the liver. But even in the gooi old days there were pliyslologists wlio regarded the kiineys as the real seat of the mind. ERvn nowadays we speak of a person as heing "of the same kidney" an 'urselv~ es. We spenik of a covard as a "Vhite livered" Indl iv Idlua1l. An i ill-teipired 1person we 'till 1splenetle " becnuse in erlier days tie emotion of anger was sujpposed to he engeialered In tiel wileen. indeed, the word spleen is in our language a synonym for ingry ir It was formerly inungineel that the etl 'emotion , were enmendere(d ii Iie 1-:r.ip Oh n cons"iderable14 extent.Tnt ill t' 11c 4 (ofe it. ht: we44'irnk of' a "kirnl-lmii"d' 14n-rson or f n"loingheat." Theo hwvr -nlis his lady fa'r h 1 w1:4 oln rt. To 1rfer to the *wnro : t < ~rt \ 141 1 1amt o two in it fi' : I4 s : n his :14 t senllt an'4'r e '::1-; : i t -r. it ' : :i:4l. i * 4 4 4~ . t t I. n les it flttie; fr!1::I4 w'.ilt ':(nse tfr 44 momen' t or' two( to. 4og ben4' i b:V1eenu'. thero is n th' h' 1r hra ins. hoing mainly- vm1s( l of' the sfi41ne sort of gray 14i4ter that ;o-s to mi)iake uip the ceribral cortex. Ad1inag as it grotip, it is 1t i 141b inIlless to cnitrol the rhylhmie puls:ti1ons of the hlenrt. These littlo brhins, strung like heads along the sympathetle nerve, are dis tributed through the body. One finds the biggest hunch of them in a com plex interplacement of nerves behind the stomach. This is the "solar pilex us" we have heard so nmch nhout. It is, of course, a highly sensitive piece of apparntis, so much so that a hnpl blow in the stomach may kill n You havo probabl.y noticed that keen anxiety will give you 1anl untcoifort ahle and even' sickish feeling in the region of the stomaeh. The solar plexus Is responsible. It Is perfectly trte that some of your thinking Is done for yout by your liver, your heart, your kidneys nnd other parts of our body. Ninety-nine per cenit of tihe thiniigs you to are done autoimitien1c ll'y 11111 l iho t conlselousi effritlit of, Ihe i11nl. Th' thousitid4 of little braints diIiist'5hutl throughmti your. hinly are lit work inl.pingx. They knowm thel.ir busineiss bett 1r th ily l InOW it. Tiry' it fix Vou' 1101.. fiio th1 y3 r of yt iir 1 url[-i- 1-11:1 sef:14 I e .44441 you 1 i l tI liar yi our 4 doi it 114 'i4 111m41wh .(r eluiV v thant4: It' you Teach With R1uhber GtimprS. ti: ite St1mp11 4 f 'l4, I n Ilu - unt r llt 1Fre;!i goit' )1 4int' t ' the people'.' iby l'ay iofi tet rublo-r4 star tinir'l4 enneeb 11h4 pi ngoUtr. 8t'i' it s''4im4s tO bt' pule t't('4n-nt4ry' ruiies lit the us'e ttf 41h4 mlili, 44ne( diteldest Ithat therie( 11nust hte n4 intew 4'in4s' wr'iin g letters. Cian it A'ustra4ihini, tHrttish, Italian1 and4( Ini 'The use of1 th~e stamp inl thIs fashion extinp tllit's how ('harn:Ie'tit ily ev ery nation41 d1evel'op~s 4avatIi~l'ilal 4441' luitie hs. Germiianyi, be(forIe the warli, AIIneri4enns tuirn it into) a m4oney'-tnik lag schem'Ite, for 1 Bumrleson, yiebitin g to edt t he (1ance'4llation(4 statui to carriy ad-' Ivertiemnts of (1 Litber'ty loans, the near Eaist i'elle4f 4and4 many 13 othter patr1io(tic an14 dl hiltropc (causies. And44 now' thie Frech4't w~ito a message ini acordi'( anlce' wtith the pu4rest bur (eaucrat ic trait ion.-Indianapol is News. Kenya Colony. A huge voilcinmounitain wvith its base5 al tnost onl the equailtor' antd its summiit high in thie regions of snow is giv'ing its natmie to) the niew British colony which has hitherto been a pro teetorate, uinder the title of Hrltish IEast Africa. The new name assignedt to the for mver Gherman East Africa is atso taken from the cief nttiral feature of the counltry, the great litte which was the goal of the nneient Arnh highway from the coast, and1( which is now reachedl by tthe central railway anod is known as Tanganyika Territory from the take of that name. I is hoped that Uganda, Kenyni andi Tan gaiiyika will co-operate in4 opening the vast portion of tropicnt Africa which is comprised in these thi'ee countries. States With Record Crops. According to the latest nain~ilie fig ures Kansas cor'.tributedl one-fifth of the winter wheat cr'op, North Dakota, Minnesotal andi South D~akota nearly tiree-fifths of the spring wheat nnd seven-eighiths of the anUxseed ; Pennyl. vanin and New York nearly two thirds of the buckwheat, Louisiana about one-half of the lece, and that state, California andI T1egns nearly seven-eighths. Tobacco is highly con centr'ated in Kentigeky andi North Car ohina, from which/ more than one-balf ofth crqpn eama. For Real Tire Repairing b RIM CUTS,rBLOWOUTS REATREDING A SPECIALTY City Vulcanizing 3tation AT CITY FILLING STATION Cotton Buyers \\'hy take the risk of lower mar1111 ;tswhenl you buly colhtt1n? Iled-4e yolur pur-ilchse with us.. Malke a leg'itimate.I mer-1Chat.'s profit. avoid losse i nI! L11 your. (-redit good at Iti' i iibak. \\'w y i tn . shor an onl Yo.r1. hlort - n ur-s - 1 - oit S ' s. Si Broad Si Edmud A. eoer Nev Yrk (iv, N. '. I112 Sumter St., Columbial, S. C, NOW ON SALE! | JANUAR Y hIe h r t PP Ap 1-24t hi v..c. ~ POWE DRUG CO. Lauren8, S. C. prfsina ti soe Gf ug sisa i p--* 4 9" -'H .2' ai ..1 - . VJ.