The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 23, 1917, Image 3
; a
' i
H CHILL FEVER v
W FOB CHILLS AND FFVIK
HI BUM* AOUI BILIOUS Flvr* s
III tHTIBMITTtNT FIVtR AND
ALL MALARIAL DKIABU
Hj AND LA GRIPFS.
II DIRBCTIOrtS
D TWO TCASPOONFULS IN
WATER EVERY THn [( HOURS It
UNTIL IT ACTS WELL. THEN U
THREE TIMES A OAV 3
R CHILORIN IN FROFONTIONTOMI |0
Nil pmr.K 5* rcvTu .1
Imwiii'H'ii""***? | !
k * MANuUCIuK(P) I ^
^ JACHSONVILLE.FIA, I ^ j
| Buy it ?t druggists and \
a?r?*ral stores or postpaid
from th? manufacturers. t
__ i
DR. U. L. MoMANUS
Dentist
Office over Bank of Chesterfield.
Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; 1
Mt. Croghan every Wednesday. t
Other days in Chesterfield.
c
Prices reasonable. All work guar- t
s^Anteed. y
DR. L. H. TROTTI,
Dental Surgeon |
Chesterfield, S. C.
^ Office on second floor in Ross
uunaing.
All who desire my services wil\
L /
please see me ut Chesterfield, as I
have discontinued my visits to other
towns. ?
J
HANNA & HUNLE V
?ATTORNEYS?
E R. E, Hanns C h Hutile.',
Chesterfield, S. (J. L
Ollice ic Peoples Hank Building I
? SPEC]
To R^>ead
The Chesterfiel
This Guarante
I $15
1 rtik.1
S3.00 With Ortlcr. S
Blickensderfer Mai
709 Chestnut St.
Write for Cat,
4 %
I Plan Your Va<
I ATTRACTS
I TRIPS F<
I Tours From 1(1
1 Jill Expense
_ I new Tork
3 I Boston
Ej I White Mountains
M j The Saguenay
I I Quebec
I I Lake Champlain
B I Lake George
I ] Ausabel Chasm
I I St. Lawrence
I | The Thousand Islands
II A Series of Ten-Day 1
1 I Chaperoned Parties of Selec
3 I The very highest class of s
I pleasure comfortable anil enjo
I I The Tours cover the most
B I cipal places of Scenic and Hist
B II Greatest ?ountry in the World
K . 11 Write for Rates, Booklets
F I GATTIS
II TourUt Agents, Seaborn
flak* boauty lotion for a faw cent*
to r*moT? tnn, fraclclo*, sallowness.
Your grocer has the lemons and
iny drug store or toilet counter will
upply you with three ounces of orhard
white for a few cents. Squeese
he juice of two fresh lemons into a
>ottle, then put in the orchard white
ind shake well. This makes a quartir
pint of the very best lemon skin
vhitencr and complexion beautifier
mown. Massage this fragrant,
reamy lotion daily into the face,
?eckj arm and hands and just see ho\y
reckles, tan, sallowness, redness and
oughness disappear and how smooth,
oft and clear the skin becomes. Yes!
L is harmless, and the beautiful reults
will surprise you.?Adv. 4.
There is more Catarrh In this section
>f the country than all other diseases
put t i ;i tl-.er, and for years it was sup>o:ic?l
to ?jo incurable. Doctors preicrlbol
local remedies, and by constunty
failing to cure with local treatment,
pronounced It incuraole. Catarrh Is a
oeal disease. ftrcatly Influenced by conititutionnl
conditions and therefore re'
i.rea c r.ntltutional treatment. Hall's
'atarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
'Iiency A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a eonstiutional
remedy, is taken Internally
ind nets thru the Ulood on the Mucous
Surfaces of the System. One Hundred
tollars reward is offered for any case
hat Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cure,
lend for circulars and testimonials.
F. J. CHEN FY & CO.. Toledo. Ohio.
Sold by DruKRlsts. 75c.
Hall's Family PIUb for constipation.
?reserve Your Complexion
lie easy, pleasing way by using
Magnolia Balm before and after
rntings. You can fearlessly face
lie sun, wind and dutft because
'ou know Magnolia Balm keeps
'ou safe from Sunburn and Tan.
This fragrant loKi
SX?.-., ?i? *?ii?
r ^ uvu 10 vvuiiuciiuiiy
life- soothing, cooling
and a great comfort
after a day
"** (' i outdoors.
J ^^7*1 I Magnolia Balm is
skin-saving
( S "A(7~V) beauty secret
I " '> j which is regularly
/f!i )l /^y.used when once
V f tried.
Magnolia Balm!
LIQUID FACE POWDER.
Pink. K bite. liott-Rtrl
75r. at 'OruMtish or by mail direct
Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp.
.yon Mfg. Co., 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
SAL i
I
lers of j
d Advertiser j
ed Machine j
.oo |
> I 2.00 in 30 Days I
(
nufacturing Co. j
Philadelphia, Pa. j
alogue M2 |
cation Now I
E SUMMER J
OR 1917 I
14d\ J.n nhid
f nw vf iyc* j o p
s* Included k
Niagara Falls ft
Pacific Const
Atlantic City *!
Canadian Rockies
Lnke Louise KJ
Vancouver U
San Francisco
Yellowstone National Park rf.
Salt l.ake City [
Colorado Rockies 5'
Los Angele f
\>urs to Atla ntic City j t
t and Limited Membership 1
erviee, which makes travel for R
yahle.
attractive routes and the prinoric
Interest throughout the *
and Descriptive Literature. a
TOURS I
rd Air Lin? Railway. |
- NORTH CAROLINA II
_ ? I
fjnn
>w. i i ipi iW' ? '
?? n i ' i i ?
f^EAGEWiTHOOT'w
| WOULD BE PRI
Q The more desperate Germany's
Q it will put up; the more it offers peaci
X traitors in Congress who represent
Q States will perjure themselves and w<
Q Germany.
X The sentimental neurotic degen
V a murderer's prison cell with flowers s
Q imitators who will seek to save Germi
X murderer, from just punishment fo
(-J Millions of men have been kill
Q many's fight to conquer the world; h
X have been outraged by her brutal
O babies have died in numbers too gr<
Q mothers and wives have gone to unti
X of suffering through the sufferings c
O minded degenerates, men and womc
Q traitors to America and to civilizatioi
q from defeat and punishment.
0 Let such people be branded now
O and murderers, the favored friends of
q every honest woman and decent man
0 degenerate man or woman who unde
Q effort to save Germany from paying
X and Hell-guided work.?The Manul
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOC
NOTES AT RANDOM N
Somewhere in America, Aug. 20.? |
II.. ?.. ?u.. 1 < ... . r
iu uic (iicst'iu wining nmerica
hus dealt very gently with the enemy;
but this talk about forcing American ^
citizens to fight in the Kaiser's army
against their own country is likely t<>
make somebody angry.
A street speaker was talking like
a traitor. An American interrupted
him. A policeman arrested the American,
not the Kaiser lover. This happened
right here, in the United States.
The policeman was informed, it is
said, that he had taken up the wrong %
man. a
"Henri Poineare was, by general jl
agreement, the most eminent scientifie
man of his generation," says Bertrand
Russell. And Poincarc confes- ^
sed: "I am absolutely incapable of doing
an addition sum without a mistake."
There is comfort in that for t(
the man who is always letting himself el
be short-changed. cl
It shall not be said that the New
York police are selected on account of f;
..a. en
i<i11*11 Mupmiiy. .-aupm uy is noi at a w
premium even if it seems to be so. ()
When the Japanese commission was
about to pass a certain point a lady
asked a patrolman what was about to
pass. "I don't know," he said. Presumably
he wished to keep secret the ((
fact that a public parade was in projrress.
Let us knowledge the unique- u
ness of the patrolman's mind: nobody ^
else would have thought of that. sj
Under a picture of the Star-Spantfled
Banner and the words "Roll of v,
Honor" the monthly bulletin of the js
New York Typographical Union prints
a list of all members who have joined p,
the army or navy. J. H. -,i
F
V
a***
i URGE FARMS I =
j WANTED | ?
hi
ti
0 We can turn your plantation J [
* r
into cash and interest bearing
?i 1 ~C __n:? a I
? J <" I
land at auction. Satisfy your- J
C
self as to our reliability, then
write us what you have to sell. J
No proposition too large?we '
are responsible and reliable.
? ?r
Write us today. %
Atlantic Coast Realty Co. i
"The name that justifies your jy
confidence"
Petersburg, Va., and Green- 9
ville, N. C. ,
Whole Family Benefited ? 1S
By Wonderful Remedy
There are many little tilings to J
annoy us, under present conditions J
of life. The hurry, hard \?ork. | ft
noise and strain all tell on us and ! C1
tend to provoke nervousness and ll
irritability.. We arc frequently so c'
worn out we can neither eat, sleep S<
nor work with any comfort. We , ''
are out of line with ourselves and i w
others as well. w
A good thing to do under such !
circumstances is to take something '
like d
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills ' a
to relieve the strain on the nerves. ' it
Mrs. J. P?. Ilartslield, 82 I'lum St., | d
Atlanta Cia., writes: , d
"I have on several occasion* been 'c
vae'ly relieved by the use of your med- ci
li sues. t'Hpoi tally the Antl-i'aln Pills,
which I keep conntantly on ii.ind for
tl" one of my?elf. huehnnd and two I)
S'ln* Nothing in the world equals them .j,
as a hmil.icha remedy. Often I am
enabled i,y the use of one or two of w
tin* 1 Ills to continue tuy housework foi
when otherwise I would he In bed. My
hush.itid Joins me In my pnise of the
Anti-Pain Pills and Nervine." i 1
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
... ,. I ,f
arc relied upon to relieve pain, ; *|
nervousness and irritability in thou- | ~
sands of households. Of proven 1
merit after twenty years' use, you J
can have no reason for being longer ?
without them. ti ft
| At all Druggists, 25 doses 29 osnts. F
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, IrwJ.
n
c
5?fs??RS8oTOOo55oro
JNISHMENT |
SMIUM ON GRIME |
plight become* the more bluff 0
b on it* own term*, the more the O
Germany and not the United q
ark against this country and for ?
crate* among women who flood X
ind scented note* will have many 0
any, the international rapist and o
r its crimes. X
ed, murdered, because of Ger- 0
'.indreds of thousands of women Q
officers and private*; innocent q
:at to he recorded; father* and ?
mely graves in the awful agony o
?f their loved ones. But weak- X
n. led by Ge rrnany's lecherous ?
*, will struggle to save Germany Q
as the accomplices of the rapists ^
barbarism run rampant; and let o
forever shun and ostracise every x
r false cry of peace joins in the 0
the full penalty of its Hell-born o
facturer's Record. X
JODOC OOOGOOOOOOOOOOOO OCOo
ATURAL IRON BEST
CHEAPEST TONIC OF ALL
IIGHLY CONCENTRATED ACID
IRON MINERAL GOES FROM
TWO TO SIX TIMES AS FAR
[ORE POWERFUL, ECONOMICAL
THAN PREPARED "PATENTS"
When people find their appetite off,
itality low, and are sluttish, tired,
nd worn-out, a short treatment with
ist plain, everyday natural iron is
le wisest course.
You can pret natural iron, known as
,cid Iron Mineral at mpst drug stores
ml a fifty-cent bottle goes from two
) six times as far as other ami weukr
iron compounds of laboratory and
lemist.
A dollar bottle will permit a whole
imily to take it a couple of weeks
hich in its powerful highly .conccn ated
form is usually sufficient to inrease
the family's vitality, strength,
nd appetite in a truly wonderful
tanner.
Acid Iron Mineral has been bottled,
'stud and guaranteed up to its prostit
high standard for thirty years for
se in hospitals, surgery, and dental
<>rk, and it may be secured in family
y.ed bottles. He sure you get the
L-nuine, the trade mark "A-l-M" is
iur protection. It is non-alcoholic,
not a laxative, and is the product of
le only medicinal iron mineral duusit
of its kind known to the world,
()c and $1. Bottled by lessors, the
errodine Chemical Corp., Roanoke,
a.
Note: Acid Ir.ui Mineral contains
ich x 'ii.cn percentile i of i? n. ?t may I
c used as ui ?\*ei'g?.i germicide, an-I
septic, and astringent. Farmers,
jru'eons and dentists use it to stop
leedinff, prevent soreness, and as a
[ alin^ aj;cnt. See directions on bote.
'actory to Customer
Eliminating Middleman's Profit
Food For Man and Beast
Paints, Oils, Greases.
Safes, Desks, and Office Fixtures.
Monuments, Tombstones and
Grave Supplies.
Singer Sewing Machines.
All business guaranteed or money
f unded.
ife, Health Accident Insnrance
Strongest and Safest Companies
All claims paid as soon as adjustlents
made.
S. I SELLERS
Local Brokerage and Insurance
TERRIBLY SWOLLEN
uffering Described As Torture
Relieved by Black-Draught.
Rossvillc. Ga.?Mrs. Kate Lcc Able, of
lis place, writes: "My husband is an
ngineer, and once while lifting, he inired
himself with a piece rf heavy ir.atiincry,
across the abdomen. He was
i sore he could not bear to press on
imsclt at all, on chest or abdomen. He
weighed 165 lbs., and fell off until he
'cighcd 110 lbs , in two weeks.
He became conslipated and it looked
ke he woulddic. We had three different
octors, yet with all their medicine, his
owels failed to act. He would turnup
ten-cent bottle of castor oil. and drink
two or three days in succession. He
id this yet without result. We became
esperate, lie suffered so. He was swol:n
terribly. He told me his suffering
>uld only be described as torture.
I sent and bought Thedford's Black raught.
I made him lake a big dose,
id when it began to act he fainted, he
as in such misery, but lie got relief and
cgan to mend at once. He got well,
ud we both feel he owes his life to
hedford's 1 Hack - Draught.''
Thedford's Black-Draught will help you
> keep fit, ready for the day's work,
ry it I NC-131
No. 666
Thia la a prescription prepared especially
* MALARIA or CHILLS A. FEVER.
ive or aix doaea will break any caae, and
taken then aa a tonic the Fever will not
stum. It net* on the liver better than
ialomcl and doea not tripe or aicken. 25c
a
1 .
?.
INSURING OUR FIGHTING MEN
The plan of Secretary McAdoo for
life and indemnity insurance for the
soldiers and sailors of the United
States, after discussions by representative
insurance men and report on
by advisory committees, has put in
definite form and submitted to President
Wilson.
The President's comment was as
follows:
"I have examined the enclosed papers
very carefully and take pleasure
in returning them with my entire approval."
A bill lias been introduced in Congress
along the lines suggested by the
Secretary of the Treasury and approved
by the President.
In essentials it is proposed that the
government furnish at cost to the soldiers
and sailors of the United States
life and indemnity insurance.
The main features of the Secretary's
plans are that the government
shall bear all the cost of the administration
of the insurance plan and that
no expense of any kind shall be a
charge on the funds created by the
payment of premiums by the sailors
and soldiers. Relieved of overhead
< harges, eight dollars a year for every
thousand dollars insurance will be an
adequate charge, under the plan, and
this figure will put a maximum insurance
of ten thousand dollars within
the reach of practically every private
ioldier or sailor. Insurance in private
companies would cost many
limes this sum for men actually engaged
in warfare.
After the war the insurance may he
converted into other forms. The insurance
is to be payable in installments,
is non-assignable and free
Torn the claims of creditors of the insured
or of the beneficiary, and is limited
to the wife, children, and other
specified kindred.
If total disability results or disease
is contracted in the course of
service, the Compensation is to be based
on percentage of pay, with a mini'mum,
however, of from forty to sev
i"iity-uvt* nouars a inunin acconnii"
to the size of the family. Partial disabilities
are to be computed on a basis
of percentage of total disability.
Medical, surgical and hospital treatments,
supplies and appliances are to
jc given. Rehabilitation an<l re-education
of the injured soldiers or sailors,
fitting them for lives of activity
and usefulness is part of the plan.
The plan also contemplates free
allowances to the families of soldiers
and sailors the government supplementing
the sums set aside by the sol
iliers and sailors *ut of their wattes
The insurance is not to be a gift of
the government hut is to be paid for
out of the pay of the insured men.
The government, however, is to take
upon itself the cost of collecting and
administering the funds and also tin
extra hazard caused by the war, the
rate of eight dollars per thousand being
a normal rate in peace time and
I an entirely inade<|iiale rate for win
1 risk.
The workmen's compensation laws
and the experiences of insurance e<>m|
panics in this country and the laws
and experiences of other countric
have been studied and used in the pre
Munition ..f lion I.ill
Secretary McAdoo emphasizes tin
justice and rightfulness of such a
function of the government by citing
the fact that in this war we art- not
relying upon the volunteer system hut
are drafting American nien and comSpelling
them to undergo danger and.
if necessary, make the supreme s:
crifice for their government not nnl;
towards the fighting men hut towards
those dependent on them and a jus .
generous and humane government
should see to it that so far as is pra"
ticahle they should be given protec
tion, not as a matter of mercy < ?
charity hut as a matter of right. And
that they should enter into the ser
vice of their country with the certain
knowledge that if death or misfortune
comes to them they and their dependents
are protected by insurance
! afforded them by their government :
j part of the eomp< nsation for the service
they are rendering their country
In conclusion Secretary .\IcAdo?
points out that while this plan mav
call for considerable expenditures at
present, yet the eventual cost to the
government of this plan will be verv
much less than that which would rc
suit from adherence to the present
pension program of th<- country, and,
further, that the pension system will
not provide the same benefits noi
cover the subject in the same comprehensive,
humane and equitable
way.
There is no use to which the fundderived
from the sa'e of Liberty Loan
Monds can be put which will la- mor?
cordially approved by the peotne of
the country than to provide this just
(deserved proteetion to the men who
are braving all the dangers of this
war on liinii and soil in tin* service of
their country.
ANTI-BLIGHT
Will euro blight in tomatoes, muskox-Ions.
watermelons, peas, cabbage*
beans, eel.
Can tiive positive proof.
For further information see nn-.
A. A. DOUGLASS, .IK.
Route 4 Chev.terfiold.
For Sale By
I D. H. Lnney, Chetterfield, S. C.
Winhurn Bro?., Patrick, S. C.
1 And All Good Dealers.
What We
Fig!
From the New York Sun:
The Senate has been spendinir much
time this week in discussant what we
are fithtint for.
'
It is to be hoped that .some in-1
'spired orator will include anion;; the ;
things for which we belli,? V .< u rv.
As to specific ends would it not be
(well to fitht a little before travely
discussing terms of peae.? Thus fur
our armies are still in the niakiiifr.
Our aviation fleet is all in tin* a'r in a
slant sense only, the e \istnietion of
the fleet with whieii we are to blind
the Germans beiny: m : yet btypjn.
Our navy is in activ- n laice, but In it
is precisely the f??r ii ol uss.is' me*
which the Allies 11 ! least iho.i.vii
they gratefully accept it Kxccpt for
material assistance i onamial way
to the Allies the part of the United
States in the war i- as yet nejfiit?lo.
The immediate ansv?er t<> the <iuery
"What are we (chime for-.'" is that
we have not yet hejxun to (ieht.
It is a notorious fact that the persons
in our national le/isiaturo, and
in those abroad, in private lirc as well
as in public life, who prole < themselves
puzzled hy the pm '.i. for the
continued restatement of time l'ea
sons and who are clamor >us for peace
propositions, art' in. arinli'y pro-tierinans.
This is as true in our State chamIber
as it is in the spy inf- i d hotly
>f the Russia Wo-'.oei.' ....| Soldiers'
Deputies.
Ihit if there are M j?.r dense
enough to niisunth i m<| the reasons
,vhy we i.re at war it .dmuM r.ot he
lillicult to res'.att :i. n..
The United St "es ,s at v.-.ir primarily
because t>e- any auali'tretl
?n the hivrh seas. ; >r o , .r th ela.ra.ion
of war, D?X A> irr.r.in t-' i; ens in
I... to.. ..i- .1. i
v WIVIOV "I Irlil'll UIIMOUIIll'll riKlll
<> travel on peaceable t><i < ess. lUsrnir
the same peri..-I iwen1 y American
.hips were sunk le. e (i< > mans with
?ut a shadow of a! nisiideation.
U'inp: called to a. in' hy tin I'r. ?:
lent, the (ierman >. .< tniuent at tin t
iromiscd a com! 'ion:l a1*.,ailment
if the illegal prate . then arrop-antiy
leclared its purpo <>f ->?111 inuint' its
uihmarim- warfare a, r. utral ship
>ucr with even yreat.-r i riali! fulnes
han before.
We are at war In :n . (icrmany
font dniiitr to our country, and out
icople, what it has done ar.d . .!. :
0 the provinces of Northern i'ranee
.ml Hclp'ium and their people. We
ire at war because we know that ii
ve permit our enemy to have his will
villi the nations of Europe and reluce
them to subjection, that rulhie s
ne in time will seek to impose itself
1 pun uW. It is better to lijrht now,
boulder to shoulder with the c:\ iliz
on of the world au'ainst barbarism
han it would he to delay until we
ntisl tip. lit alone.
Self-defense and the maintenance
if our national honor are tlie cliie
casom. for our parlicipalion in his
var. Fiven obstructive Senators ot
lie sort of Stone, (ironna a:.d l.a Fob
ctte must recovrniz.e the sufficiency of
.liese reasons. Hut we believe -we
ike to believe that loftier and inon
piritual thoughts had their share it
rousing the Ameriean jk ople to a doTee
of reseat men! which made war
nevitable.
The violation of Ilehvium was evilenee
of (iertaan l>a<l faith ami af;ros:sivonoss
which mi^ht well put
very nation on its liar I. And the
itroeilies which attended the (iefinat
narch throiieh and oeetinalion of that
ountry, the infamies now he n; !?< *
tetrated hy the Roches it, i rate., tin
erniait alliance with the Turk at d
in.rtieipation in the Armenian innssa res,
the wholesale munnrs nov. henj?
eommilte.l l\ - ibn.ar no eomitanders,
al! the . and other hs.rnari
ies deafly pro., i ;t; .lin-t the Kni
'.er's forces and he r , -'|>'e cm
rnnient have made oar panic oat > :
n this war a holy tit t in
famous harhari e
I'resident Wil-'o: ! s.i'd that the
vorld must bo made safe for domoe J?cy.
Let lis r" to-i: r and ay that
t shttll he inside do >r 1 unia: ay.
Wt* anticipate iitt'e ot lr o lead
ntr from the h a - a thi.
-IFT YOUR CORNS
Of f WITH FINGERS
I'ell* how to loosen a tender corn or
calius *o it. lifts out without
p.iin.
v. .. _ . .
i ??u recaiess :: and vomen wno
ire pestered with corn- and who have
it least once a we- k invited an nwfu!
leath from locv jaw or blood poison
ire now told by a Cincinnati nuthortyto
use a Iru. < ailed freezone,
which the mono-lit a few drops are ap
plied to any corn or callus the sore
ness is relieved and soon the entire
orn'or callus, root and all, lifts off
.vith the fingers.
Freezone drn the moment is is andied,
and simply shrivels the corn o
alius without inflaming or even irrigating
the surrounding tissue or si in.
V small bottle of freezone will cost
/cry little at any of the drug stores,
*ut will positively rid one's feet of
every hard or soft corn or hardened
I alius. If your druggist hasn't an
freezone he can get it at any whoU
sale drug house for you. 2-Adv.
-- 1 . -jri^
Are
iting For
week. The talk about peace terms is
utterly premature. The Senators who
are to raise the issue are discredited
because of their inveterate hostility to
the ends and aims of our government
today. They plan now only a disinM'nius
campaign for delay. Hut while
they palaver the nation is giving its
answer in the rapid raising of armies
and steady preparation for the war
upon which we embarked for self-defense.
AMERICA MUST WIN WAR
BY STRONG ARMY'S BLOWS
Paris, Au?r. 18.? Major General
Pershing, the American commander,
told the Associated Press today that
the war can be won only by hard and
forceful blows delivered by a well
trained American army working in
conjunction with the allied sirmO.u
Deploring thy lukewarmness of thy
American people in reyard to the war
General Pershiny added:
"Every man, woman and child
should support the administration in
its determination to arm and equip
the American army and W> keep up its
morale and that of the allied armies.
This war will not he won by talk or
by subscriptions to the Red Cross
fund. The Amur -an people must
come to a full realisation of what the
war means, h can be won only by
striking hard and forceful blows, not
ot herwise."
The j'enera! v. v ry emphatic ift
she interview, which lasted but a few
minutes.
SAVE RYE SEED
Clcm. on Culler. , S. ('., August ?.
Farmers in tils S'ate who have rye
i-ed are ur-.ted t?> save it for sowinsT
this fall. 1'ee: i c of the general
failure of the oat < rop this year and
the shoraye a ><i high prices of vetch
and crimson cdover, it is probable
that there will be much more than
the usual demand for rye for use as
. niiiii', aim citviT crop. ."\orthi'!i
varieties .trt* n< i suitable for sowiiii'
in ibis S' .to aid the nereapre of
rye in this State I . .tin!!, so :11*>t the
available supply of \arieties is liniit< <1.
Every farmer thai has more rye
seed than he is troinp: to need for
his own use liouM notify h s county
urent as to ilie amount In* will have
f< r sale, also tin- v rieiy and price,
f y>u will notify ..oir county apynt
lie wi'l he pjlad to help you dispose
f any surplus seed tin t you may
have.
EVER SALIVATED DY
CALOMEL? HORRIBLE.
Calomel Is Quicksilver and Acts Like
Dynamite on Your Liver.
Calomel loses you a day! You
;no\v what calomel is. It's mercury;
(Uicksilver. Calomel ft- dangerous,
.t crashes into sour bile like dynanite,
cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the hones and should
tever he put into your system.
When you feel bilious, shtRpjish,
amstipated and all knocked out and
lelieve you need a dose of danporilis
calomel just remember that your
iruggist sells for ">0 cents a large
bottle of Hudson's I.ivcr 'lone, which
s entirely vegetable and pleasant to
take and is a perfect substitute for
aloniel. It is guaranteed to start
your liver without stirring you vip
nside, and can not salivate!
Don't tale calomel! It makes you
d?-k the nest day; it loses you a day's
.vork. Dodson's I.ivcr Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great,
"live it to the children because it is
nofectly harmless and doesn't gripe
Have Your Shoes
Fixed Right
Shoes are rapidly growing more
expensive. Therefore, it is important
o have th m repaired where you will
let the greatest value for your mon y
Watt Bittle
is the best equiped shoe repairer in
his part of the County. He has the
xprrinnco, the up-to-date machinery
and the ability. Give him a trial.
^QtegjSS J | -v
ASHCRAFTS
Condition Powders <
A high-class remedy t<<r horses
and nnd.es in poor condition and
in need of a tonic. Huilds soliJ
muscle and fat; cleanses the syv
tem, thereby producing a smoottx
glossy coat of heir. Packed '&
loses her NV? v
D. H. laney