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'No Worms fa a 'Healthy C0N6 All children trodbllewlthWorms eve 'an an. lhs&Jthy color; wl*hi lhgates poor bhd,'and " a Iatle, there Is me or I eft fstomatmh o10(afo. .GROVE.S TAKTESS(OILL TO iven rent. fatly for two; ort threelweeks %will ea2'k -the blood. lmbrv the diehIlmnad ata~s aea6 treugth. ening Ton o tbviftle wyatemi Iffirnre wilthen 4throw off or dtaptl the wortmteatheohildwlllbe la vafect hre"lh klamatGQ;ta %Wo 6 bisJottle C. E. Kenn UINDERr 'EMBAl Motor E( LAURENS, Why don't you useA FERTILI. T HEY wil back to I of productiot you to sell ktobacco, truc money crop substantial p The American Agri Ashepo. Fertilizer BuILT Up SOLD BY M. J. OWINGS CLYDE T. FRAN] Prompt *e*elc. Rollable goe OE at Redpath C (THIRD KATHARINB Nationally-Known able Interprei HARRY YEAZ Great American T the hearts of Cha HAROLE Violinist-One of younge *Redpath ( Seven B SEASON TICKETS $1 Chautauqua Wee4 Getting Acquainted. Alma aitd Jtnnte had come tfrm dif ferent towns, but were ,v Attug Myra, our foui-year-old. I e ftildren were Strangers to each other and rather 4 slow 4t becoming acquainted. Myra was heard saying, "Alma, meet Jen nie; I Yeanne meet Alma;i now bow and let's play________ edy& Son [AKERS id... 3N1ERS juipment . . 0 S. C. 4 HEPOO for all crops ? help you get )re-war costs i and enable your cotton, k and other s at a more rofit. ultural Chemica Co, Werk, Charleston c a standprd NOT DOWN So a prios Laurens, S. C. CS, Laurens, S. C. Ua. Bee ~~Ankef ~odftlen. the hautauqua NIGHT) RIDGE WAY for her Incompar-. ative RecitalsI ELLE MERCER enor who has won utauqua audiences * AYRES the foremost of the a r artists 'hautau qua ig Days ~.75. PLU3 10% T AX AUTAUQUAEEEEE Here April 20.,27 FAXI MAN'S DEATH STILL UNSOLVED [oroner's uJry Orders T. E. Lanford Held in Connection with Affair. No Trace eYt Been Found of Glenn Fos. ter. Elpartanburg, March 31.-The in luest over the body of Guy H. Mc )owell, the taxi driver who was found lead in a clump of woods a few miles vest of the town yesterday afternoon vith two -bullet holes through his head, vas 'held.this afternoon at 3 o'clock. t was bi'ought out at the inquest that IcDwell, Grlenn Foster and T. IB. Lan ord went out of town toget. _r Tues lay afternoon a-bout 3 o'clock, going n the direction of where the body vas fund, and that was the last seen f MdDowell alive. UIt 'was 'testilled tihat Foster told J. 3. Worley that he and McDoawell and aanford were going out in the coun ry to get forty gallons of whiskey s son as McDowel came back from trip in the country, that while they vere waiting for 'his return the tele )hone rang and 'Worley answered it, Lnd a voice he took to be Lanford's Lsked for Foster. After ,Foster left he telephone' he said to Worley, 'Lanford wants me to 'go with him clone after that whiskey, and I'll not lo it. If I go with 'him, I iwant a wit iess." -Directly McDowell returned ind 'Foster went to the phone and alled someone and the two left. They went in the direction of the 3partan mills and there they were teen to get Into Lanford's car and he three drove off. It was testified hat a car looking like Lanford's vent to a .branch near .the scene of he killing, and three men alighted, mnd soon afterward the report of a run was heard. The men se)arated, )ne going in one direction and two oing up the hill together. 'When the tiwo taxi drivers did not 'oturn to their cars 'by yesterday norning, two other drivers, Worley tnd Cash became alanmed. Worley lad heard Foster express fear of Lan 'ord. and Cash had heard Lan-ford iay that he had been robbed, that iomeone had igone Into his garage and aken three gallons of whiskey, two .ires and some tools, and he believed McDowell and Foster had done it. When they inquired at the home of Poster and found that he had not been n all night they called Lanford and taked him about them. Lanford dis 3laimed having seen them since he left he station the afternoon before, deny ng that it was -he who phoned to Fos :or. The three made a search in the Vods near Camp Wadsworth. It .was later in the afternoon that tome girls going from Saxon mills iome, taking a near cut through the lasture of J. C. Lanford, father of T. '. Lanford found the body and rclport d it to the sheriff. The verdict of the Jury was that liuy H. McD)owell came to his death >y gun shot twounds in the hands of )artles unknown to the jury, but that r. IC..Lhanford and (1. M. Fo~ter be held or investigation. 9 Fester has not ,been found nor ap >rehended. It was suiposedl that who ver~ killed .\lowell killedl Foster also, and a search was made for his iody all morning. No trace of himj as -been found. Mec~owell was shot twice, once romi behind and tihe buuet entevinig t the 'base of tihe brain and t.o ning uit at the left cheek, and the other -n-tering just ab~ove tihe right eye and omning out at tihe top of the head. Thue atter shot was fired after tihe body' eli, as tile bullet has been dlug out of lhe ground. It was a -15 calibre army 'istol, tihe kind Foster was know-n to a try. Foster's Hodly Foundi Spartan-burg, April 1 .--The flnd ing of lhe biody of Glenn Foster early today, half mile ablove tile spot wuhere Gluy lclowell w~as found shot to death on he pr'evious idlay, revealed a double imurder, whlich must have taken place omlet ine last Tuesday afternoon. The lead -men were 'iboth purblic car dlriv r's, married and~ were widely connect dI in thig section of the state. The cene of the tragedies is a small ranch two miles wvest of the city and ordering the Canip Wadsworth reser ation. Foster, 'whose body was found SLOW DEATH Aches, paine, nervouaness, difli culty in urinating, often mear serious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. K(nown as the nationual remedy of Holland for more than 200 years.. All druggists, in three uizee. Leok for the aiim. Geld Medal e ever box anoment nn imtaion this morning -by searchers, had 'been shot,twice and his body had fallen in the stream. The coroner's jury investigating the case tonight found that he came to his death at the -hands of parties un known, but recommended that T. E. 'Lanford, who is now in Jail in con nection with the murder of Guy Mc Dowell, be held in the -Fotser case, pending further investigation. Lanford was seen with the men and is believed to have accompanied them to the section of country where thelir bodies were found. At the inquest over MaDowell's body he refused to testify. He is the son of the owner of the land on which the bodies were found and was until recently an en gineer on the Southern railway. At the inqugst over Foster's body held tonight, much of the testimony taken at the inquest over McDowell's body was read into the record. New witnesses heard were R. A. Wingo, who found the 'body and County Auditor W. G. O'Shields, who aided in inspecting the body shortly after it !wns found. Lanford has made no statement whatever. CAUSES BACK OF RUSSIAN REVOLT Fuel Cris and Lack of Food had Much to do with Revolution in March Stockholm, April 2.-Russian peac ants south of Moscow gladly sell a horse for three 'boxes of matches or a kilo of salt, it is declared by tler sons said to be in touch with condi tions in the interior of the country. Observers cite -this state of affairs as the cause of the counter-revolution In March, which, they eay, began to tafle deflnite form in January. Un wieldiness of the Soviet administra tive machine, the differences among the Bolshevist leaders, and the fuel crisis with consequent stoppage of transportation and lack of food are given as the reasons for the subver sive movement. Discontent which was prevalent throughout ussia during the war pe riod, but concealed in the presence of the invading enemy, could no longer be repressed when the fighting men returned home to find want and dis tress. The first signs of revolt against the existing order are said to haye been alpparent at the Russian trades-union congress in Moscow last November. There were further evidences of dis satisfaction in the eighth All-Russian Soviet congress which convened in splendor awt Moscow last December. These symptoms of reaction, it is stated, were unapparent on the sur face, rbut made themselves felt among those behind the scenes. 'Harmonious resolutions were adepted, 'but the at tack came from a quarter whose im portance could not be doubted. In this eighth congress, the metal workers and miners' unions, led by Schliapnikoff, urged the democratiza tion of the government which, it - as charged, was military and bureau cratic. Schliapnikoff also demanded that the food administration be placed entirely in the hands of the trade uin ions. This was plainly an attack against the Communist execut'ive comn mittee and the highest soviet authori ties. More recently the press of the country has shown sigits of greater freedom and has not hesitatedl to at tack policies of the government wvhich it is said has intrenched itself by3 ap pointin's thousands of petty ofliclil. Press controversies -have revealed animosities between leaders. For in stance, Trrotzky andi his followers are' dleclared to 'be set upon a p)olicy of nationalization of tradle unions, where as lenine believes it wiser to main tain the indtipendence of the uinions apart from the government and to use themi as training schools for Commiun ism. And there are numerous other groups ;which, it is stated, are beCnt upon other projects, revealing a -ten dency to destroy the former unity of front in Russian policy. W~ithin recent weeks the transp~or tation of coal from the Donetz valley has grown steadily less. The pirodue tion wvas between 300,000 and 4100,000 tons monthly. Only about 150,000 tonts were loaded for rail haulage, dlue I the practice of expropriation b~y sub ord'ina te soviet corporations or coun cils. Simultaneously with the reduction in the coal supply, there was an al most comtplete cessation of delivery og good. In addition to this, the snow less winter and the slaughter of hors es in 1920 addedl to the dilffleuilties of local t ranpsort. Lack of fuel resulted in the shut ting udowvn of rail traffle. According to isovie~t newspapers no trains are running on 30 lines and on the othersI only rudimeintary schedules are he--I lng maintained. Littlec hope for improvemient is held out unless suhtit)les of na pt ha stored at -llaku can 'be brought into the cen ler of the country. Quick Service. Telephone P'ntro1-Central, get me double-silx dlouble live ine, Main--and get it quick, like they do it in the ple. urllea. Don't Neglect Your Tires ---They Cost Lots of Money WE GIVE FREE INSPECTION We Build New Life in Old Tires Rim Cuts, Blowouts, Rebuilding and Retreading a Specialty City Vulcanizing Station Oldest---Largest---Best At CiLy Filling Statirn Goodyear Tubes ALSO Save Tires Under-inflation destroys more tires than all other causes com bined. When we remove that one source of ex)ense from your tire pr'oblem, we have performed a service you will alAi)recia-te. It's really quite easy, too. We supply tubes that actually hold air. The Gloodyear Heavy Tourist Tube, with its extra thickness, purity of rubber, laminated con struction and built-in valve patch, prevents under-inflation, ERNEST W. MACHEN BUICK DEALER OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE LAURENS. S. C. Preventlon better than cwre applies to baery ills 9too (! Get that examination NO!j IN spite of the old proverb, it IS sometimea too late to mend. When plates are buckled and terminals are corroded through neglect or unusually hard service, there is little left for the battery-man to say but "New battery". Don't let it get that far. Drive around to ;day to the Prest-O-Lite Service Station and have a thorough examination made. Sonic trifling fault may be uncovered now that may result disastrously if not remedied. Anyhow, find out. That's what Prest-O Lite Service Stations are for. You will get courteous treatment and, what is even more important, honest advice. When you do need a new battery, you'll be 'glad to know that Prest-O-Lite is back to pre war prices and that an allowance will be made on your old battery. Got that examination now Harney Electric Co. West Main St. Laurens, S. C. S Uses less than one four.-hundredth --- _ of its power--reservc for a single Pull up where start--and tho gcncrator quickly you see this sign replaces that.