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"F)R Caldwell's just what I n< did laxative, mild and quickly and easily. I x and keep it in our hom< (From a letter to Dr. Mr. G. C. Murphy Atlanta Dr. Cal< Syrup The Perfect Sold by Druggu V 50 Cts. (si! Recommended as a posi pation, mild and gentl standard family remedy A trial bottle can be c Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 4f Monticello, Illinois. AFTER CHAMP CLARK Democrats in Congress Don't Want Him as Leader Washington. March 25.?Some of the most influential Democrats in th* country are interesting them- j selves in the fight to prevent the election of Champ Clark as minority leader of the next House, and to substitute a leader known to be in sympathy with the President and in accord with his principles. Within the last weeV letters have been received from a dozen national com-j mitteeraen bespeaking thorough ap- j proval of the insurgent program and j declaring the selection of Mn Clark would bring party disaster and de-1 feat. . Although the movement sprang j, spontaneously from the progressive Democrats in Congress, there is evidence to indicate that several members of President Wilson's Cabinet are likewise in complete sympathy with it, and would welcome a new leader in the House as a contribution to party harmony. Impetus yas given the cause by Representative Asbur.v F. Lever's statement. Mr. Lever is one of the veterans of Congress, having represented ?South Carolina for 19 years. He withdrew from the senatorial race last year at President Wilson's request, in order to handle the Administration's food control and conservation program in the House. He \ is perhaps best known as the sponsor of the several food bills enacted , by the War Congress, and the author of the wheat-guarantee bill, keeping the price at $2.26 for the current year. ' <4I will suDDort no man who will say that a conscript is synonymous with a convict," Mr. Lever said, y "I regard it as of the utmost importance to the future success of the Democratic party that the minority leadership in the next congress shall be strong, aggressive and in the fullest sympathy, not an en- j forced sympathy, with the plans and 1 purposes of the President of the United States, who for six years has been the elected spokesman and leader of this party. The leadership j of the minority in the next congress I should have no axes to grind and no personal ambitions to serve. It should be such a leadership as can freely and without hesitation confer | with the actual leader of the party , on matters of national and party policies. Without such harmonious relationship the situation for 1920 is impossible; with it, the future of the party could not be more hopeful, for it is my firm belief that the overwhelming majority of the people of the country are in line with the Presklent in his wonderful fight to minimize to the very limit the possibility of wars in the future. "The million, three hundred thousand soldiers who have gone through the brutal murder of this war, returning to this country are as certain to give their support to the idea at a Leaeue of Nations as it is cer tain that the sun will rise tomorrow morning, and no man can be selected to lead the Democrats in the next House, who does not in full measure believe in this doctrine. To select a man for leader who does not believe in it would be suicide and it is my belief that when the Democrats of, the country realize what the real j situation is, they will demand, in terms which cannot be misunderstood, such a leadership as will give j the President and his policies the j fullest support. "Democrats cannot allow personal relationships or sympathy to stand j hi the way of party success, and they are not going to do it" Syrup Pepsin is i *ed. It is a splenpleasant and acts so vouidn't be without it, s all the time/* Caldwell written by\ , 4 Walker Street, 1 i, Ga. / iwell!s Pepsin 1 Laxative its Everywhere ro\ d* 1 AA es/ 4>1.UU itive remedy for constie in its action. The / in countless homes, obtained by writing to >8 Washington Street, JX)NE WITH DEMOCRATS ; i Jot* Bailey Says Party Has Abandonod Principles and He Will Quit j Newark N. J., March 25.?Asserting that the democratic party has "ceased to support democratic principles" former United States Senator Joseph W. Bailey of Texas, declared in an address here last night that he would "never again vote for the candidate of any party which constantly reduce our liberty and un-1 necessarily increase our taxes." 1 Mr. Bailey, who was the principal .< speaker at the "victory banquet" of the Roadshorsi Association, blamed the democratic party for the passage of the prohibition amendment to the constitution and for the near passage | oi me amendment graining .^un ???,?, to women. . J, "I have been a democrat all my life, he said. "A collar" democrat, if 1 you please, and I have never scratched a party ticket. But those who now control the democratic party have i renounced or abandoned one democratic principle after another in such rapidity and bewildering succession that they have left us nothing except the name. "Since Thomas Jefferson founded it the democratic party has always. insisted that every state should exclusively control the local affairs of j its own people, but a democratic congress immolated that time-honored i doctrine upon the altar of national prohibition and a majority voted to repeat the sacrifice in behalf ofwoman suffrage." The doctrine of reverence ior me' institution, he declared, had been, altered until the constitution was regarded "as an obsolete scrap of |1 paper." j * "The liberty we have thought'1 arorth fighting for and dying for,"!1 le declared, "is the liberty of the in-11 iividual?the right of every man to/ lo for himself, and with his own s whatever he pleases, \so long as he 1 Joes not interfere with the right of i >ther men to do the same." "But in this day they tell us that;1 it is better to be good than it is to \1 ?e free, and they have multiplied jur penal statutes until the lawyers i rannot carry even an index of them i: in their minds. We have restricted |' the rights of men until no civilized j' country on the globe interferes with i the habits, the pleasures and the; business of its people as much as, this free* government of the United j States." o J [' MICK1E SAYS ^ | / OAUBlN' 3\ONS ON FENCES, N AN' BARNS AN* StOEWAV.KS MAN HAVE BEEN CONStOER.RO AOVERTlStNO FORE THEN VAJX ANN NEVMSPARS??,BOT TMEN'f \ no excuse fer soch stunts J ANN MORE i WITH THIS HBCE f ORE AT PAMVLN JOURNAL I , i rrtkuklt /mi< ocai kr> t J w i VJ wnw , w HtN, BOSS? (a1ICKIB! ARE n yoc ravv? ro wock /vie POC J i ^ "' i SEASON LIMITS FOR SPORTSMEN CHIEF GAME WARDEN IK CITING THE DATES AND BAGS Mr. W. G. Gibber, chief game warden for South Carolina, has com-1 piled the facts with relation to the j open season for game birds and animals in South Carolina for the bene- j fit of sportsman. Under the new law, the State laws have been made uni form. The following gives the dates for the open season and the bag limits: Deer?Season opens September 1, closes December 31; bag limit, five per season. riear, mink, musk-rats, opposums, otter, rabbits, raccoons, skunk, and squirrels?Season opens October 1, closes March 15; bag limit on squirrels, fifteen per day. Fox?season opens September l.j closes February 15. Black Birds?season opens Octo- i ber 1, closes March 15. Quail?Season opens November 15, closes February 15; bag limit, fifteen per day. Wild Turkey?Season opens No - i * ?-M 1. i i: vemoer id, cioses april i; img num., two per day, ten per season. Doves?Season opens September 15. closesDecember 31; bag limit, twenty-five per day. Wood or Summer Ducks?No open season. Migratory Ducks, Coots, Snipes and Gallinules?Season opens November 1, closes January 31; bag limit, twenty-five dueks per day of all kinds, twenty-five coots, snipe and gallinules per day altogether, eight wild geese. Rails and Marsh Hens?Season opens September 1, closes November 30; bag limit, twenty-five per day of all kinds. Woodcock?Season opens November 1, closes December 31; bag limit, six per day. Domestic and Migratory, Insectivorous and Song Birds?No open Season. Reed Birds?May be shot to protect rice crops from August 16 to November 15, inclusive. Night Hunting?Not allowed except for oppossums, coons and foxes. GTCT IMP PI ITF 1 JLLiliinU ULUIj LIVER LAZY TAKEA_CALOTAB Wonderful How Young and Energetic'You Feel After Taking This Delightful Nausealess Calomel If you have not tried Calotabs you lave a delightful surprise awaiting pou. Tl?e wonderful liver-cleansing ind system-purifying properties of ;alomel may now be enjoyed without he slightest unpleasantness, for Calotabs are calomel with the liver >enefits left in and the sting taken >ut. A Calotab at bedtime with a -u-ollAni n-f water that's all. No 3 TV atlV n Vi T1MW* ? ?? ;aste, no nausea, no salts, nor the slightest unpleasant after-effects. You wake up in the morning feeling fine. Your liver is clean, your system is purified, your appetite hearty. Eat n-hat you wish, no danger, and no risk of salivation. The next time you feel lazy, mean, nervous, blue or iliscouraged give your liver a thorough cleansing with a Calotab. They are so delightful and effective that your druggist is authorized to refund the price as a guarantee that you will be delighted. For your protection, Calotabs are sold only in original, sealed packages, price thirty-five cents. At all drug stores.?(adv.) o IN MEMOR^JM In memory of ValLie McUutcOen, who died one year ago March 28, 1918: Left us, yes forever more, But we hope to meet our krve On that bright and happy shore. Lonely the house and sad the hours Since our dear one has gone, But oh! a brighter home than oars, In Heaven is now her own. Gone, but not forgotten. W. M. D. EXCESSIVE ACIDITY I is 1t the bottom o! most digestive ills. ki-moids for indigestion afford pleasing and prompt relief from the distress of acid-dyspepsia. made by scott & bowne makers op scotts emulsk)^ COULD HARDLY STAND ALONE Terribfe Suffering From Headache, Sideache, Backache, and Weakness, Relieved by Cardni, Says This Texas Lady. Gon2ales, Tex. Mrs. Minnie Philpot, of this dace, writes: "Five years ago I was taken with a pain In my left side. It was right under my left rib. It would commence ?rith an aching and extend up Into my left shoulder and on down into my back. By that time the pain would be so severe I would have to take to bed. | and suffered usually about three days ... I suffered this way for three years, and got to be a mere skeleton and was ko weak T ennld hardlv stand alone. Was not able to go anywhere and had to let my house work go...I suffered awful with a pain In my back and I had the headache all the time. I Just was unabl* <o do a thing. My life was a mlswy, my stomach got In an awful condition, caused from taking to much medicine. I suffered so much pain. I had just about given up a'I hopes of our getting anything to help me. Onte day a Birthday Almanac wr.r. thrown in my yard. After readli;.-? its testimonials I decided to try Cardui, and am so thankful that I did for f began to Improve when on the second bottle...I am now a well woman and feeling fine and the cure has been permanent for it has beer, two years since my awful bad health 1 will always praise and recommend Cardui." Try Cardui today. E 76 M. D. NESMITH,' DENTIST, Lake City, S. C. HFN i MrYNNFS M R fL V S. B.Kater MclNNES,M.D.,V.M. D VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingstree the first Monday in each month, at Heller's Stables. 9-28-tf SEE John M. Eaddy FOR Surveying and Platting. Notary Public with Seal. S-9-lyp JOHNSONVDLLE, S, C. A. M- SNIDER Surgeon Dentist Office at Residence Railroad Ave. KINGSTREE GLASSES! If yoti need Glasses, come to me. Single and double lenses fitted correctly at lowest prices. Broken lenses duplicated. T. E. BA66ETT, Jeweler "X?si I Lodge, No. 46 A. F.ML J ' . " ^ f meets the second Thursday night in cacb month. Visiting brethren are cordial!) invited. B. E. Clabkson, W. M. W. W. Holiday, Sec. 2-27-lv WE HAVE ON HANI Diamonds, Watch* ware, Cut Glass, China, Hot?W Traveling 1 Eye G nf pvprv rlesrrinti ? ? "J - r" ? convince you as l these goods. Raggett's Je1 East Main Street, Bring me your broken Watch pairs made same day received. COFFINS AN A large and varied assoi Automobile Hearse Horse-Draw Experienced Ser Day or Kingstree H? Phone* 35* 4 We Lead; Ot CHICKEN F( If you want a nic your Sunday your 01 The Peooh We can Supply our C Fowls (CHICK ALSO FRESH BEEF, Pi Poultry Boug THE PEOPLE H. A. MILLER PA1 I AF. fit where you will-alw to be had in Mule gies and harness. Come If yon nee I will surprise; . and in Fresh Car Lc M. F. > ' mmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmam mum VISITINf CAR " WEDDING W A Al?kinds of Commercial 1 THE CO ) A NICE LINE OF es, Clocks, Silver, Hand Painted rater Bottles, Sags, and lasses r< on. A call will to the quality of * r% tvelry Store, KINGSTREE, S. C es, Clocks and Jewelry. ReD CASKETS. rtment to select from. i and Robber-Tired n Hearse. vices Rendered NirfHt. irdware Co. 8, 59 or 122 hers Follow. )R DINNER! , e fat Chicken for dinner leave rder at e's MarKet ostomers with Dressed EN) any time IRK AND SAUSAGE. ;ht and Sold >q UTdmtt o ifmnixtii , Proprietor. I - AT ir's Stable ays find the best :s, Horses, bugd anything and yon in quality price tad Coming. Heller ^r T ' DS I VHATIONS ' NNOUNCEMEWTS, ETC. 'rintiiig neatly executed UNTY RECORD. ' I . J