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lllHT Ill ^ H El IP w B ! m. ^ It is a matter o "P*1 c,tlcs 1 higher pric< ?SgS -than in? I S i^rK^ ^ctc' a^e lytti final test of A Used Or 1 Awju Its motor < i have been s ^0^1 Its "finish" has ijjfiffy come off at L^"' $?/& Its Rears, its re '? - uBHS endure IvCTft and dayout HmSR ness is plait strength. The Used Car broken dow * E&Sl strong, robu &tcfl\ ?ready an that nan cai That, we repeat |jj?S? In this test ti SfeKffr After fif tut Ithousmd rr ? ? m S Br< I ZeS&i Lu ! Set ft . ? ... ' 'Mk g Class Pins and Medals which can tice. Mail orders receive prompt atl Bring me your broken Watches, C mended. Repairs made same day r< T. E. BAG WfcfEWELER, K Bend lis Your Jc Vie Most Final Te; if record in fifteen of the priry that Paige Used Cars bring a :?proportionate to first cost other American automobile*. r all is said and done, is the quality lias been "through the mill" ind all of its working parts objected to constant strain. t ? * rr -r . n ocen knocJcea oir?u it win all. ar axle and its transmission rd the punishment of day-in : pounding All of its weaklly evident and likewise its either stands before you a n, dispirited "has-been," or a ist champion of many battles d eager for all the service a give it. t, is the final test of quality. he Paige stands supreme. i? twenty-five ? thirty-five liles of service, there is still atford "Six-51" seven-passenger irfield ,*Six-46" seven-passenger lwood "Six-39" five-passenger xiklands "SiX'51" four-passenger rtmoor "Six-j^ a or 3-passenger fwwttinA 4lQiv/r UVW1JJV UiA 1 vX. VWI1 ian "Six-51" seven-passenger lan "SiX'39" five-passenger im Cvr "Suc-51" seven-passenger -Detroit Motor Car Cor MOTOR & I7MTER, \ . Mow Is the Time j :or you to make your se- I j ection for the sweet girl graduate. Make your gift i lasting remembrance. I lave for this occasion a selection of beautiful , ^oods in Diamond Rings, j Jold Watches, Bracelet . batches, Cameos in all , settings, Brooch Pins, ; Necklaces and Hat Pins, ilso an assortment of be engraved on short notention. Phone 44. 'locks and Jewelry to be jceived. GETT, JNGSTREE, S. C. ib Printing!! \ 'dCarin/lmerica st of Qualit enough goodness left in a Patj command a record price in usee markets. Frankly now, js there anything that could tell you about our product would be more convincing? Coulc have any better guarantee that a Pa all that we claim it to be?all that could possibly expect it to be? As to the selection of a model, this is m a matter of your own personal req ments In our line there are two seven-pass< cars, a five-passenger car. two road and a complete line of enclosed cars. You alone can make a choice, but pleas member that you cannot make a misi For all these models are Paiges?b brothers of the same strain That i, really important thing. But don't lose any time. Come in am spect the Paige line today. Let us you the kind of demonstration that definitely settle your automobile pro! and place your order while you ca cure an early delivery. $1495 fob Detroit ' Si 375 fob. Detroit Si 175 f o b. Detroit $1695 f 0. b. Detroit ? S n 75 f o. b. Detroit S2750 f. o. b. Detroit S1300 f. 0. b Detroit ' S1775 f o b. Detroit S2750 f. o b. Detroit npany, Detroit, Michigan &LES CO., SO. CAR j Don't LdfYour CoughEHuit On A cough that racks and weakens is dangerous, it undermines your health and thrives on neglect. Relieve it at once with Dr King's NewDiscovery. This soothing balsam remedy heals the throat, loosens the phlegm, its antiseptic properties kill die germ and cold is broken up. Children and grown-ups alike find Dr King's New Discovery pleasant ? take as well as effective. Have a mottle handy in your medicine chest for grippe, croup and all bronchial iflfections. At druggists, 50c. BMHtOsH I r HmlHraH p S R33?M3iffiffimfi^/*T?H9M t i Bam WiY'li mm ill Irihi t WM~ J w oj k \ M m ]m m M mm $M. It Urn Jgg*** mm ig m i y g ^ to i car I B AxtyCI :tw m 1 you ? s CTC,y wW M ss Egg P?5 10^ f?? lood' ?*>s?j ,,he 8&S i in- W& M >ia?. . raj - |gj 1 ill jj ngii Wants Joffre to Decorate Flag. Atlanta, Ga, May 3:?Atlanta's ? n 1- ??,;?k :ommuniiy riajr poie, p?iu xui mm I public subscription hts been erected, and the raising of the flag now waits the arrangements of General Leonard Wood and General Joffre, who have been invited to come to \tlanta and run up the flag in its naiden journey to the masthead. The pole stands at Five Points in ;he heart of the city, facing the fourth National Bank building, and s made of steel tubing painted in vhite enamel. Twenty feet above he ground is a small crow's nest vhere the flag will be kept when aken down. The Schemer. Mrs A?"Don't you think you ose patience with your husband on ather slight provocation?" Mrs B? 'I have to provoke him sometimes o that he will lose his temper and hen give me anything I want so as o atone for the way he has acted." MR. THOMAS TO LEAVE FLORENCE. Will Succeed Rev. Henry D. Bull at St i Luke's Church, Charleston. Rev Harold Thomas, who, for nnavlif t-nnvo V> r% a V*nnn vnnf 1 licai i j in iccii j cai a iiao uccu icliui j of St John's Episcopal church, has r i resigned his charge here to accept a f call to St Luke's, Charleston. The r resignation was presented at a meet- j ing of the vestry last night, to take e elfectJune 1. In a letter to the vestry Mr Thomas makes it plain ] that he has determined to accept the t call and the vestry feel that it would f be in vain to urge him to remain. j Mr Thomas has been one of the j hardest working ministers who has ever been in this section of the \ country. He was always at some j work, and he never spared himself nor heeded the earnest solicitations ( of his family and friends to ease off from his service to his fellow men and to the community. His mis- I sionary and philanthropic spirit nev- s er knew any dividing line of sectarianism or creed or even race and condition. He was every where that people needed comfort and con- 0 solation andjthe ministration of the * gospel. * Some of his very best work has e been with the boys of the Industrial 8 school who felt that he was their 8 friend, and he has been the means r of bringing many of them into one 8 or another of Christian churches. He was made nominally chaplain of * fkof inofitntinn enma voora a or A antil. t Vliat lUOblVUVIVU OVI1IV J VUI U wpi V TVS via out salary, but he has devoted him- c self to the work ardently and the 8 fruits of that work are noticeable. * Florence will regret to lose Mr * Thomas, who has not only proved 1 himself a great church worker, but v a man deeply interested and work- * ing hard for all community inter- c ests?Florence Times, May 3. 1 Mr Thomas has often officiated in * 4 C the Episcopal church here and is much beloved by the Kingstree peonle. who hone for him a faithful ministry in his new charch. The * church of which he will soon become rector was formerly in charge of Revs Robert Wilson and Rev H D Bull. _ PLENTY OP COAL. Prices of Anthrscite Now Too Hifh, Ssys Commission. Prevailing retail prices of anthracite coal are unwarranted and the supply for next season is adequate, the federal trade commission has stated in a preliminary report based on a partially completed investigation ordered by Congress last winter. The commission warns consumers against buying larger quantities of ( coal than usual this summer, saying 4 r there are symptoms now of such a buying panic as that which enabled 1 speculators last winter to force 1 prices above normal. No good reason exists, says the ' report, why May prices should not * be subject to the usual summer dis- i count, but "if the public is again so 1 deceived as to indulge in a scramble 1 for coal, the favorable situation 1 may be nullified." ( The commission is keeping in close touch with the anthracite situation ' and promises to "expose any unscrupulous wholesaler, jobber or re- ; tailer who seeks to mislead the public into a belief, that exhorbitant 1 prices are justifiable.or that there is ' > any necessity to join in any frenzied ' bidding to secure immediate deliv. ery for far future needs." 11 i Alligators to Clean Sewers. 1 i Atlanta, Ga, May 3.?Trenton, N !1 J, and other Northern cities have j' borrowed the south Georgia and ' Florida system of using alligators to j1 clean out sewers. Acknowledging (< their indebtedness to the South, j' several city engineers have used the j' alligator with success. The scheme < consists in tying a cord to the alii- < gator's tail and sending him crawling from manhole to manhole. A rope is tied to the cord, waich draws! i the rope after it, and a chain is then: < tied to the rope, and the chain drapr- 1 pred back and forth in the sewer to j clean it out. t Whenever You Need a General Tonic c Take Grove's < The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless * chill Tonic is equally valuable as a c 1 General Tonfc because it contains the j : well known Ionic properties of QUININE : and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives J out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and j > , Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents, c SOUTH CAROLINA ITEMS Va They Will Remain in the River tad Harbor Bill Reported in Congress. Washington, May 5:?South Caroina projects are cared for in the iver and hardor bill reported today I .L.'TI !ii.. rom ine nouse commute*:.iuccubw nan of which|said that every item >ad the approval of the President md the Secretary of War: \ Charleston harbor and channels? i^or first half 'of Jproject' providing ;hirty feet depths to the sea. $70,000: or | maintenance [of completed im>rovements, including $10,000 for Ishley river, $50,000. Maintenance[of improvements in Vinyah bay and Little and Great >ee Dee rivers, $70,000. Maintenance^Santee, Wateree and Jongaree rivers, including Esterville ."M -Minim creek channel, $30,000. Maintenace of waterway between leaufort and [St John's river, Fla, 134,000. ' I ' M War Frnnnmv England has avoided a few seriius mistakes in this war. One of hese was the sudden stoppage of' >usiness and trade by overdrastic conomy. The marvelous financial tamina which the British have hown is due as much to their war notto of "business as usual" as inything else. The United States should heed England's good example. A busiless depression in America would lo much to hurt the cau#e of the lilies. We must keep them fed; hey must have ships; money to aid hem must be poured out. And it s not possible for Washington to vave a magic wand and have all of hese things trot forth, regardless >f the condition of the nation. Jncle Sam must have a few coins in lis jeans before he can give them to( i worthy cause. The preachment of histerical war iconomyjcan scarcely fail to wreak lavoc on our financial hopes. Money nust be kept in motion; business nust flourish; there must be bo itagnation of trade, if we are to sise $7,000,000,000. A sound econ>my education is much to be desired lor those well meaning but misguid- , id persons who are preaching to the nasses the doctrine of "don't buy inything and help win the war!" The true version of this doctrine s: "Come, stagnate business, put a :rimp in the banks, force a panic, md you'll help win the war." So ;hey will help win the war?but for vhom? Our economic structure is a deli;ate organism. Its various parts ire almost magically interrelated, rhe girl who works in the cotton mill spends her wages in the department store for necessary clothing. Deposited in a bank, it can form the basis of credits to the government, )r to any number of other business jnterprises. The store will, in turn, pay its employes. They will pay the butcher, the baker and the gas man. And thus, slowly but imperceptibly, the money will work its way about the throbbing veins of business. It will return at last ta the girl in the mill, as wages agaiz* paid. If this money was not in the business arteries, they would dry up,, and perhaps atrophy would resultAnd that is what a wave of falseeconomy can produce. Let us not clog up the arteries of business, if we expect to finance the war. Let us all remember the lessons of past wars and the present war that it takes trade to accumu late enough surplus for the government. Extravagance is not called for, but neither is the equally vicious iju.reme ui uimuuttt ainpuiaiiuu. rhi8 is England's lesson to us. "Busiless as usual" is a motto to blazon >ver the land as a slogan for finanrial success.?Chattanooga News. Muscle Soreness Relieved. Unusual work, bending and liftng or strenuous exercise is a strain >n the muscles, they become sore ind stm, you are crippled and in Dain. . Sloan's Liniment brings you luick relief, easy to apply, it pene,rates without rubbing and drives >ut the soreness. A clear liquid, deaner than mussy plasters or ointnents, it does not stain the skin or dog the pores. Always have a botle handy for the pains and aches of heumatism, gout, lumbago, grippe, iruises, stiffness, backache and all 'xternal pain. At your druggist, 25c.