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A TO)NIC Grove's 'rasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching tho Blood. When you feel its! Strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks (and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's. Tasteless clhill Tonic is simply Iron' and Quinine suspended in syrup. So pleasant even children like it. The blood needs QUiNINE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigor ating Effect. 60c. Don't Prod Your Liver to Action MR 4Qtti!dy Overcomoo Di3tousnoso, Conctipation, Gick Meondacho. No Oriping or Pain. Quarantood. The organs of 0igestien, nasimila 'tion find l imuilnatiol-tho stomnaeha, liver aind howeli-are closely allied. and the proper netion of any of theso (IrgalS is lar rgel% d pendent uponj~ri tho 'Corrot funltiollnig of l11 the others. "whipping" your liver into action with caloiel or forcing your bawelaa with irritating laxativen or- strong enthnrtles Is a great isitake. A bet ter, safer plan is sfrengtheninig and toning tho whole dI9gcntivn aid eliinia tive system with Nature's Remedy (Nil Tablets), whvi not only brings Immllediate relief, but geniniiie and last ing benefit It nets oi the Stomutch, liver, bowels and kidneys, improves digestion and axx-sI IiI Hat tio, overconies hilloutsners. Corre(ct' Conlstipat ion and Ilckly relieven xick ediehle. Get your systcn thoroughly cleansed and plurifled for eo; ntonvch, liver find bowels working togetlier in vig orous hiai1rmiriony, and you vill r t have to take medieinao every day-just tako one Nit Tablet oceauiio:miiliy to keep your' syritem good coniltilon anrd al wnays feel your best. Itemember it is easier aid cleaper to keep well than it is to 1t well. Get a 25.' box and try it with the unde. tanitnvg th: t it must givo your greater roitef anid benefit than any bowel or liver mydicrinetn you ever us0ed or no pay. Natura's Remedy (Nit Tablets) is sold, guaranteed and 'econimended by your druggist. LAURENS D111'4 (10, WilldId U/L A'l 0 Be Sure It's a Willard Battery Make sure of that, and you're sure of full value for every battery dollar. The Willard Threaded Rub ber Battery brings added sav ings because it does away with wood-separator replacement ex pense. Threaded Rub~ber Insu lation outlasts the plates. It doesn't warp, puncture, carbon ize or crack. We're headquarters for the Willard Threaded Rubber Bat tery. We give authorized Wil lard Service. Drive around. Let's get acquainted. Laurens Storage Battery Company WV. Lauz'cns St. Phone 446 Wliard Batteries iLA.D JA2 MUSIC TO CHINA I2cok ei C-C r:ncica of Ihat Countr'j D-ls With Musical 4;riticism to the Point. Ti( hunt fLu' tle origltl of ja:z h1as led to the African jungle anid to the HInsic of cnnnibal feasts and orglastic (an1ices. 11it, further back It (.1nn L e trieed to tile beginnhiugs of eivilizat 1(n in C1na itself. ConfueluAs, who livd nit:tlIy '.500 years ago, e(dited it bo (if ceremlonlivs Called the "Ll KI." Thle book of cereiionies was a venerable (?hinese eltissle long before- Confueus gatb his at tention to It. The smayinigs In tle "IU Ki" represent n1 Viewpoint of musint crI(itelseimiIn C'11hin Whvilleh perhaps correspoids to the (ndate ns signed by the Jewish chronology foz the Garden of Eden. The "L 1(l de ribe5 miiusic as a poverful iIluillence for good or evilI, nnd pletilres the pre. ilstoiie sylopat lon ls follows: "The a irs of Klng go to wlb ex (es' and (ehnuclh the mi1ind; Ihose of Sing speak of slothful inlulgeniles end of wonien and subnierge the imind ; Ihose of Wel nre strenuous 111d fast 11114l perplex the 11111d; an(d those of Khl arie violent and depraved and manke the mind arrogant. 'T'le airs of these four states all stimulate lihidi Dous desire an( are injurious to virtue." If not jazz, what else falls In with the description? (nnig. Sung. Wel mind Khi--all their scores have beern lost. Only the monotolous drum heat whlh they doubtless eontributed to prehis torIe jazz remains in modern Chinese musie.-Toledo News-Blee. THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS It Dates Back to the Time of the An. cient Romans, and Probabty Is Much Older. It was a custom of the Iomans to paint a rose on the ceiling of the hn (luet hall, Nignifying that what was toldf at the feast was not to 1,e re imated. Froi tihiis custom originnteel the expression, subrosa, the )etrolt News reen-ls.. The rose Is the queen of love and beauty 1111d Is tle m1iost eloquent of all In the language of the flowers. The red rose is a token of love and the white of purity. A moss rosebud is a confessIon of love, while a rose leaf says, "You may hope." A white rose signifies, "I am worthy of you," and the yellow rose asks, "Are you jeal. 0110" The yellow bu'ttercup is dedicated to the memories of childhood and - riches. The Greeks and Rtomans used one variety of buttercup as a remedy for leprosy. It was also sai( that the root was a sure cure for insanity if It was gathered at the wane of the moon, wrapped In linen and carried around the neck of the afflicted person. Pained and Surprised. At the time it was more painful than fumny, but the years leave only a ree ollection of my intense surprise when I hit into what I thought was a bright red apple. Always I had loved apples, and one diy When I saw a dish of bright red objects in the pantry, I took a couple of the largest, and silently left the house-with wilat hatppy anticipation. Safe in the biik yard I proceeded to take. a large bite of a red pebpper. Such shili screams of agony Its re'achied miy muothler's ears. She rushed to thie Vescue to fhind rie, not content withI ha~vIig fIllled Iny' mouth1 i withI thle fiery pieppuer, rubbing frantically at my13 Not knowIng that oIl arnd not water shiould be1 u)sedl to remlove tihe burninlg sensaition, ict dlatinpeid m11 into the hiathlub1, an Ilstarted..to scour. It wasl manlly ai weeCk before I again appr iniitedi wvhat (did1 nOt helouig to ume. IExchan go. Electric Hatching of Chicks. A third of a millIon chickens a sea son Is thle p~ropoised capneity wlehlo a eust omier of thie IElectrIc l'ower nom-i painny of Poruitiand~, Ore., int etiods to at tini in his electrienii 11'(periatedl chic': ein farm known as "Ih(I*ers."' Ills output this season wvill be in (lie neigh hiorhiood of 100.000 chIckens, us comn pored with 415,000 for last year. This farm started with 0one smnll electic inetthator in 1015 and now~ is equippiied to opleraite on a large scnle, haiivinzg a single incubator with a capacity of 20,000 eggs. The totalI connected 10ond for- this planlt ('onsifts of 33.5 kIlowntts of heating and 3 klowatts of ighing. For emergency service, cont Inules thie IElectiena Review, a 20-klowatt direct current generator is installed at the farm and( Is so arrangeod that It may be dIriven from the owner's truck. Magic Carpet Up to Date. A plan for seeIng strange sights comues from Firancv, In the anunotnce nient of thle Comfpngnlie Latecoere. T1ijIs aerl line will take yotu from Toulouse, ut 8 :30 a. mn., over the P'yrenees to Barcelona. Spain, by uch fimie. Next (lay yout lunch at Malaga, then fly across the Mediterranean to Taingier-s. Then you sail above the Atlas mlontains to far-away Rtabat, a greeni onalis of thie Saiharat, oir (eento Fez, where, it is said1 the comlpany lias opened the grndo vizier's painace as a hotel. These are Indeed thle days of niagle cnrpet anrd thei sevo'r-heaigue hoots to those who rear not adhventure Inl the air !-Thel Outlook. Wanted HIs Money's Wor-th. MorIlher - ielen's mus! * ' tenheri seems qite ipre's:ed wIith lher. It looks to mue l!ko- a i:'ve ifl'aiir. F~athet -- Whati's thia t ! Now see here. I'll lbt-yn .hi:t 'youn-iZ m0:1 uindorstaind l11ii Oato d~i.o h'ii fiou--th:g ei~ renem an otwil 'mpuyr; . an WILD Y0 '"N Not Much Worse Than Those of Go;iaer Days., Writer Answers indictment of 'These Wild Young People"-Frankneos a Striking Characterist!c of the Generation of Today. "We of the yotunger generalIon," ways John F. Carter, Jr., in tho Allan tic, ansvering tin Indlictitient o? "tIhose wVild young people," by at certairn "'r. G1rundy" in the same tumg.ine,"we are frank vAth each other, frank, or pretty narly so, with our l'.nlers; frank in the way we feel toward life and tis badly damagCd world. It may he nt disqilet Ing aind' mlisleulding"' habit, hbut is I ita had one'? "We find someo few t hings in he world that we like, and a whole lot that we don't, nd we aire not afraid tq say so or to give reasons. In ear 1ier generations this was not the case. The young men yenried to Io gitter ing generalities, Ihe young vomien to act like shy, sweet, innocent fawn'i toward one another. And niw. when grownti up, they have come to helieve that they actually were tigures of pris tine excellence, knightly cliiviiry, ador able imodesty and 111ipeccaible pro priety. "lINt I really doubt if tihey were so. StatistIcs relating to, let us say, the immorality of college ,tudents In the eighiles would not compare fatvor ahly with those oif the 11r'(senit. IIow ever, now, as they look hn'k on it, they See their youth through :a mist of fnuts In, fltiniels, teniis, hicycles, T.'tmiiy son, Browivtng and the 'Bilte Danube' waltz. The other Ithms, the ugly things that we know nitbtt aid Ialir abouit, nust also have beeti there. Itnt oilr eldors didn't enre Or didn't dare to consi(ler them. attd now they are for gotten. We talk about themi unabashed nd not necessarily with Presbyterian dlisapproval, and so they jlump to the ccmelusion that we are thoroughly hnd, and keep pestering its to inake us good. "The trouble with theni is that they can't seem to realize that we or( busy, that what pleasure we snatch must he incidental and feverishly hurried. We have to make the most of our tine. We actually haven't got so much time for the noble procrastinations of modesty or of the elaborate rigmnrole of chiv aIry and little patience 90r the lovely formulas of an ineffective faith. Let them (ie for a while! They (dd not seen to serve the world too well in its black hour. If they are inherently good they will come back vital and in tarnished. But just now we have a lot of work, 'old time is still a-flying,' and we must gather rosebuds while we may. "Oh, I know that we are a pretty bad lot, but hans not thnt been trie of every poeceding generation? A least we have the courage to net nceirding ly. Our music is distinctly barbaric, our girls are distinctly not a mixture of arhutus and barbed wire. We drink when we can and what we enn; we gamble, we are extravagant--but we work, and that's nbout all Ilat we can he exprgted to (10! for, after all, we have just dliiovered that we are st1I1 very near to t he stoniue a ge. "'Oh, I Suppliose thaiit It's too laid that wve aren't huiiible, sirtry-eye'd. shy, re spectful ininocents5, standtiting re'veretIly at their side? for inst ructions, pinyinrg pretty little games, in which Ithey nmo loniger belhve, except for us. Itint we Creni'(, nnd te best thIing the oldsters can dho about it is to go inito thlei r re Spectivye bacitk yatrds andl dig fnr wvorms, great big pink ones-for the (Irutnihy tribie are Juist ot Ias Iiportnalt as they are, andit theiy will doubt less tmakec c'ompani ty miorie congzeil andit docite t hin 'thlese wil young1 iieoiple,' thlet titen nad wotieui of ny genei(ration." Enough. A ljttle lad who wanted a small broihe' '..ais told by his iuoi ot' to pray for (one1, itnd this lie tli unt il htope and pat ience wtete aliike 'xhiauist 0(, Not long aifter. however, lie was entlied to his mother's buedroomi and hntyi three tiny baby brothers ahl ! the sante crtindl. itor somie time the little fellow staretd, then he htenvedl a sigh of tre lef. "Oosh'!" he remtirked solemnuly, "Just suppose I hadn't stopiped praying when I didl I" Fixed. "What perfect (denrs !" thte visitor to the Sunday school excinluil in ad miration. "Your classi is tinder perfect conitrol. During your talk on the les SOnl rnot a child even'i miovetd. You have taught themn to love their study." "Yes," agreed the teaeher a bit sad( ly. "They (d0 very well. Youa see, I made al rule that everey timie a child mnovedl or whisperedi I would talk live minutes longer." Sheet Muilage. One may buy tmuclnge ini sheets ntowatdays. Th'ley arec very convtenilent for (lfli(c uise. Th'ie mueilige is spr'ntl on bothl si'les of thin shteets of pniier, whidch are made ito it sort (of boo0k. If It lie (de ilredl to stick two thinigs together'i, a sheet Is tortn out, maoisteed ont both sitles ind piIllacetil betweent. Th'lat does the trick, Comment. "I's too had.'" "What t?" "'t~ls.i t maqi alt tbints' inh-o rmc""ess hl.rmne atre T--OMO ~j(RRT~OW .n i ....no...no. 4r4 an Fondedon dM Barie'aFamu s IX. RI TH ADAAL CNRIA AN Remld t nare toourheat'sdesre? famlyoferiiluebrsCs the onanoulndedhereJthe voice~ Afdthe orddfwa lost.sTumbled n.yJate a~e Ah , lovbte, coldyo andIwihFtcospr Tomle n femals thiaugrheme hng nie atteioer glot the former i obtadte hadiap.ointd ta naedoorhatsdr? SOuFTgleiru ed n hemy-wil rbss, a asi!Rsce oe thand saiNw wee halee woe IspiEoenonhlowd Thene leadership, ofctheewildwahol ta ema, lordm an buterlad and thm ndse gcry ad, ino ancommndi ssdaineedht erce de ahi foervd lores, thi--formr pinatghetutemnosi handcaps Poitedoanuntaed The sope, surb n its arld way andsad:~No w sal se wo aI to "Oide con veos, forlNowdi" ruls,""Dnto ngDde Yorusbove,"h The th buler beaus hewas "Fr etters, o Wthe, Til hIl a man, beame a kin; andeth ComektYo and alle.h grea lad wh ('rce dsdaned the groancie ascheees him seved loed im-fouht pou'ln ev, oerfol rge meandsi with a slavery"flrhisivissfoFeNale! USUAL'PRCEorsbn,