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Jiffy* SliiDeri W Til . Model? power, o 5C7/ Ijffl., a car of ^ f f by natio and ligh ^KT ^ inch who 5i /|^? * rear can Err yyfa assure d LUC KILL THE CROWS A piece of dead horse or cow treated with strychnine, and tied or wired in a tree where crows ccn find it, means great relief from crows. Crows destroy more small Kiime, birds and birds' eggs than any other creature that lives. A young crow in the nest will consume daily two and three times its own weight of food. When young the crow is fed chiefly on animal food, mainly the young and eges of other birds?young rabbits, and r anything else of this kind the parent birds can gather. Crows may be limited benefit to agriculture because of the harmful insects and weed seeds they destroy, ^ but we are satisfied the birds they kil) if left alive, would do far more good than the crow. We recommend that crows be destroyed wherever it is possible.?Joseph Kalbfus, Sec. Game Commission of Penn. DESERVES A GOLD MEDAL FOR THIS c Cincinnati authority tails hqw to dry up any corn or callus so it 1 t lifts right off. I i i 1 You corn-pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the ( shoes that nearly killed you before, I says this Cincinnati authority, be- < cause a few drops of freezone ap- 1 plipd directly on a tender, aching corn stops soreness at once and soon , the corn loosens so it can be lifted I out, root and all, without a bit of j pain. 1 A quarter of an ounce of freezone i costs very little at any drug store, but ^ sufficient to take off every hard oy ' soft corn or callus. This should be tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to inflame or even irritate ths I surrounding tissue or skin, . If your wife wears high heels she will be glad to know of this. Adv 1. I ?rw%cHixj IPUMHAfi 1 jCHioCiixggah ; Um 4mm iw? faed* ami w# wil iukmM DOUBLE DEVELOPMENT < 4untvf the far* ma waeiu of a ehtcka We or * MONEY BACK H pmy to aaa lK? baat feada?Pe?* Sold to?? ( OkUW^ P? *- ] PA9MBLL MBBHAN , SSriSESSMBBKUMnattMBSSfiSSESBEBSBei fce Thrift Car landBicrcrf ian Supply IE than 100,000 have already been >ld. Sales continue to break records. 0 is the big success of 1918 because great value at low cost. a car of beauty, roominess, comfort, omplete modern equipment?in fact, everything desirable and necessary. economical to buy and operate? ith fuel, saving of tires ana backed n-wide service facilities. el 90 has electric Auto-Lite starting ting, vacuum gasoline system, 106elbase, large tires non-skid rear, and tilever springs. r your Model 90 while we can elivery. Ft* Point* of Overland Superiority [appearance, Performance, 'omforty Service and Price [P*^?' ^^<ggra| j" Liffci Four, hi a till qo Touring Car. tSjl f. O. b. Toledo?Pric* subject to ckantt without notice AS AUTO CO., Agent ANIMALS IN GAS ATTACKS Poisonous gas having been constituted by our enemies a weapon of war, various scientific authorities nave made a thorough study of it on t>ehalf of the Allies. Among o.lnr features the effect of gas attacks iron animals has been carofui'v n". id the Germans also having studiously investigated the same subject. Remits .'how that horses suffered n>?< h from noxious fumes, and are subseVJCIltlv thrown into ? ?t?t> of nnr. /ou8 terror on again scenting thcin. Mules are more inclined to stand .heir ground, and appear as if tryin*: lot to breathe. Gas helmets of a <ind have been successfully tried for loth these animals. In the trenches xre many animals kept by the soldiers is pets. Of these, cats quickly scent the gas, and run about howling. Giuinea-pigs are the first to succumb. Rats and mice emerge from their loles, and are found dead in quantifies, which, as the soldiers say, is Lhe only advantage of a gas attack r>y .he enemy. Poultry of all kinds are iseful for giving warning, ducks and fowls becoming agitated ten minutes ir so before the oncoming gas-clouds. Many kinds of wild birds are greatly jxcited, and the usually unruffled owl lecomes, as it were, half demented. Dnly the sparrow seems to disregard the poisonous vapor, and sparrows :hirp on where horses are asphyxiat;d, and bees, butterflies, caterpillars, ints and beetles die off in great numbers. The gas at once kills snakes, ind earthworms are found dead in their holes many inches below the LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this Beauty Lotion Cheaply for Your Face, Neck, Arms and Hands At the cost of a small jar of ordilary cold cream one can prepare a rull quarter pint of the most wonlerful lemon skin softener and comflexion beautifier, by squeezing the iuice of two fresh lemons into a botle containing three ounces of or haad white. Care should be taken 'A sieaSn fka tui/io f kwyvit mU ? A no rw 9 VI mil VIIC jUIVO VHSWUgU n IIIIC :loth so no lemon pulp gets in, then his lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice s used to bleach and remove such >lemishes as freckles, sallowness and an and is the ideal skin softener, vhitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of >rchard white at any drug store and wo lemons from the grocer and make ip I quarter pint of this sweetly fratrant lemon lotion and massage it laily into the face, neck, arms and lands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough red hands. ? Adv. 2. ,f VftiiW'As' liHfr 1 A - * s :ATTORNEYS TO AID WITH QUESTION AIRE ! Once more the war department h called the layers of the country j its aid in helping registrants to f out their questionaires. The nc registrants?men who have reachi the age of twenty-one years sin June 5, 11)17?will receive questio aires for the four days commencii June 'Jftth, and such questionair must be returned within seven da; thereafter. The new questionnaire is difTere from the last one, and the legaj a visory board requests that all a torneys take steps to familiarize ther selves with the new one at once. FEEDING SUNFLOWER SEED Sunflower seed can be used splendid advantage in feeding pou try, especially in the fall of the yej when the hens are moulting. T1 seeds contain a high percentage < oil, and seem to aid the fowl in she* ding and growing new feathers rapii ly.?Southern Ruralist. "A SPLENDID TONIC' Says Hixson Lady Who, On Dm tor's Advice, Took Cardui And Is Now Well. Hixson, Tehn.?"About 10 years ai I was..." says Mrs. J. B. Oadd, < this place. "I suffered with a pain 1 my left Bide, could not Bleep at nigl with this pain, always in the le siue... My doctor told me to use Cardul. took one bottle, which helped me as after my baby came, I was strong* and better, but the pain was stl there. I at first let it go, but began to g< weak and in a run-down conditio so I decided to try some more Cardu which I did. This last Cardul which I took mat roe tnuch better, In fact, cured me. has hoen a number of years, still have no rett.rn of this trouble. I feci It was Cardul that cured m < and I recommend it as a splendid f J male tonic." | Don't allow yourself to becon j weak and run-down from woman troubles. Take Cardul. It should sur I ler Koln SrAti 1 e a a_ ? / uuip ? iv um >u umu/ luu sands of other women In the past < year*. Headache, backache, sldeach nervousness, sleeplessness, tired-o feeling, are all signs of womanlr tro ble. Other women get relief by lakli Oardul. Why not you? All druggist NO-1 RUB-MY-TISIM , Will cure Rheumatism, Neu 1 ralfia, Headaches, Cramps, Coli Sprains. Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Oh Sores, Tetter, King-Worm, Ec aema, etc. AstiMftis Anodyne I used internally or externally. 2& , FIGHT THE' PEACHTREE BORER I ? !? Clemson College, S. C., June.?The j small white larva causes much dam- 1 age to orchards in South Carolina. It bores into the body of the tree J just below the surface of the ground. ( In many instances, the trees are com- || pletely girdled, and ihis weakened condition offer ideal opportunity for the destructive work of the shot hole borer. A simple and practical method of control for tho peach tree borer is by mounding, or throwing up dii i ? around thp trunli# r?f *-- ' height of ten or twenlve inches. Trees should be mounded early it C July. Preparatory to mounding, j coat of trunk wash should be appliei to the trunk of the tree from tht branches downward with a pain, brush. This keeps the tree in s healthy condition and repels insect: { and diseases. ^ Standard Trunk Wash. Lump Lime 20 pounds. . Soap (Whale Oil, home made, or laundry) .... .'1 pounds. 1 Sulphur 4 pounds. 0 Water 25 gallons. / Making The Wath: Shave the soap finely and dissolve in three gallons f of hot water. Make a thin paste ol sulphur and add to the soap solu- ' tion, and while the lime is slacking * (in half barrel) the solution of soaj j1 and sulphur is poured over it, am t the whole quantity is diluted to j twenty-five gallons, a sufYcient quan- f tity to wash from 200 to 200 trees. n six to eight years old. p Method of Mounding: i'ull or o throw the dirt up around the base 1 of the tree to a heighth of ten or " twelve inches, so that when settled " it will be about eight inches high. The trees should be examined before mounding, and if there are any borers present, they should be re ^ moved by cutting out with a knife. u Pulling Down Mound: The mound should be torn down from the first to n the fifteenth of October, and the \ trees examined for the borer. The c presence of the borer will be noted ? by the exudation of gum. After the trees have been wormed, a second h coat of the trunk wash should be np- r plied. It is very important that this ^ mound be pulled down, otherwise it o furnishes an excellent place for the n borer to work. y -r ? - t MEASLES f * Measles is one of the commonest j, diseases of childhood and with the u exception of scarlet fever, it is per- p c haps the most serious of all, especial- r ly in the eornp'icalions that may ensue. U" in'ly. however, the course Af t the d'sease is mild, ami even the E complications are not necessarily re- j rious if you watch for them and take 1 Ithern in hand af once. In infants, < r?j aru aiso 1 :i outer cntuiron, measles is generally very mild; but it is 1 ?!:<;- 1 ly to be more severe in children \vh.? ' as are two or three years of age. The early symptoms are usually .jj tin >e of a tad cold, running a* .re nose, sore eyes, more or less ouvii, las* of appetite and a feeling of gen- T ?d oral s:< kness. There is likely to be f ce diarrhoea, and fever is always pr-'s- c n. ent. After those symptoms have last- f ed three or four ?lays characteristic I rash appears?first on the upper part es of the face and then spreading gradu- v ys ally downward over the face, net!;, w chest, arms, body and logs. The imm) ' nt is in the form of minute pimples of a pinkish or reddish color, which oc- ( ^ cur in large, somewhat eresent-shap- ? ed patches. In very severe cases j, n" there may be numerous purplish ? i spots, caused by small points of p bleeding under the skin. When there 8 are very many of them, physicians call the disease hemorrhagic, or j? black measles. ? With the appearance of the rash v the symptoms increase in severity, ie , ? , , . . n ^ and for two days the patient is pretty ,, j sick. In four or five days the rash ? j begins to fade; it disappears first c from the face, then from the body n and arms, then from the legs and c feet. As it passes away, there is a If bran-like shedding of the skin. The P symptoms subside gradually, and in v a week or ten days after the onset jj > the child is well except for the scaly j, condition of his skin. The most common of the comp'ications and the chief danger of mea- n sles is broncho-pneumonia, or simple lobar pneumonia. That is more likely to occur when there are many B n > cases together, as in army camps. The occurrence of the disease among soldiers might, at first thought, seem j to indicate that measles is incorrectly A classified as a disease of childhood. . '8p The fact is that the susceptibility to 111 the contagian persists well into adult ti life, and if a person has escaped ex- p posure in childhood he is likely to d t|' fall a victim whenever exposed to tl contagion. rl le The treatment consists chiefly in good nursing, in treating any symptorn that becomes severe, and in n a, watching carefully for the first signs e- of pneumonia, inflammation of the ^ middle ear, or any other possible ly complication.?Youth's Companion. w e u- [While it is considered very ini10 portnnt that parents be able to iden^ tify these symptoms and understand p the treatment, it is also important p )g that a physician be called on the first "J 'M. appearance of the disease.?Kditor) p I 1? - SEED FOR COVER CROP " ! It is now time to look for cover c l? crop seed. Don't put it off until time *' g to plant for then it will be almost im- * j ( possible to get the seed. Get a line ti . ; on it now, and make arrangements 8 for planting -the crop in July or A i < | gust.?Southern Ruralist. I > Li i' l" rr?^ _ _ 'BARBAROUS AS I; SLAVE DRIVERS" ' til i t?I Methods of Exponents of German ! ^ "Kultur" in Carrying Out 1i.< Deportation Order. JJJ IDD HYPOCRISY TO CRUELTY (J" !ol Officers of "Modern Attlla" Gave At jl( tltude of England as Excuse for j JM Repeating In France Atrocl- I \V ties Practiced in Belgium. ; hi ? . ! The course of the German armies j" n France was marked with the same ' .1 rulalilics that characterized the oc- . w upation of Belgium. Ample proof ? las been produced that the entire P* proceedings were a deliberate part "j f the calculated system of "frightillnesspi In France the Gertnnn system of ' * erred lahor and doportntlons, with Its j tli lorrors, was the same as In Hclgitim. j e\ n this article Is shown the real idea- I et Ity of (?crmuii practice In both occu- J cl iled regions. This can he done from ? he ofllclnl documents and from a sum- j h; nary hy Amhassador Gerard. The | inrrowing details may he gathered ; rem the scores of depositions which ' |? ccoinpnny the note addressed hy the j w 'renrh government to the governments f the neutral powers July 11)10. ' j-., 'hose are on file In the state depart- j j1( lent, and have also been translated, ; long with the official documents, In The Deportation of Women and i V| Jlrls From IJlle." (New York, Doran.) ! r.<( German Proclamation at Lille. \ ^ "The attitude of England makes the irovlslonlng of the population more (() nd more dlfllcult. I ... I ''' "To reduce tho misery, tho Gorman ' t;i utlmrltles have recently asko?l for i p olunteors to go and work In the j jM ountry. This offer has not had tho i access that was exported. j "In consequence of this the Inhnh- ' qq (ants will he deported h.v order and | j? otnovod Into tho country. Persons ; j)r ported will he sent to the Interior j ,,, f the occupied territory In France, far > ehlnd the front, whore they will he t,j| mplo.ved In agricultural labor, and j ot on any military work whatever, j ty this measure they will be given (a ho opportunity of providing better t(l or their subsistence. I vj "In case of necessity, provisions can ' n, e obtained through the Gorman de- j JU ots. Kvory person deported will he : js illowed to take with liiin 110 kilo- | (jl rams of baggage (household utensils, sl lothes, etc.), which it will be well to ; ^ j anke ready at once. j jn "I therefore order that no one, un11 further orders, shall change his , dace of residence. No one may ah- j lent himself from his declared legal t) esldence from 0 p. in. to (? a. in. (fler- 1 () nan time), unless he Is In possession ,| it a permit In due form. ,1 "Inasmuch as this Is an Irrevocable neastire, It is in the interest of the o( lopulation Itself to remain culm tud ^ ibedlent. "COMMANDANT. ,, "Lille, April. 1010." Notice Distributed In Lille. pi "All the inhabitants of the houses, vlth the exception of children under burteen and their mothers, and also <], if old people, must prepare themselves j? or trans)tortutlon in an hour and u 0f inlf's time. i.. "An ollicer will decide definitely j,. vliat persons will be taken to the Kiiicentratlon esimps. For tills pur- |4I lose all the Inhabitants of the house c, u;ist assemble in front of It; In ease f had weather they may remain In <|, he passage. The door of the house uist remain open. All protests will ,,i * useless. No inmate of the house, ven those who are not to lie trans- j,. orted, may leave the house before )tl a. in. (German time). st "Kneh person will he permitted to tj, like 110 kilograms of baggage; if an.vne's baggage exceeds ttint weight, it .ill all be rejected, without further x. onsideration. Packages must he sep- ^ ratel.v made tip for each person and |xI nist bear an address legibly written nd firmly affixed. This address must XX( ontaln the surname and the Christian nine and the number of the identity ard. f(, "It Is absolutely necessary that each ^ erson should, In his own interest, pro- S1. Ide himself with eating and drink- JU llf lllltll.'llu '?' .....II .... ' " 1 ?...-.Ifiin, 11^1 V..-II Willi il will non 1 j,( lanket, good shoos, ami body linon. | Iveryone must carry liis identity oanl n Ms person. Anyone attempting to (|( vailo transportation will he punished t.r lthout mercy." "ETA I?I?E N-KOMMA NDA NT PR. v<| (T.ille, April, lOld.) elgian Address to French President. To Monsieur Raymond I'olncare, t President of tlie French Republic, si( Paris. "Sir* We have the honor to evress again our most sincere grnti- ,n ale to you for your most kind recejc |t| on, n few days ago, of itie deputa- ol on which went with feelings of legit- ,y note eiHOiion to luforia you of the eportntlon of lads and girls, which | oj. tie (Senium authorities have just car- (h led out in the invaded districts. "We have collected sonic details on j|( tie suhject from the lips of an honor- 1 hie and trustworthy person, who sueceded In leaving Toureoing ahout ten ?j ays ago; we think It our duty to ring these details to your notice by [ producing textually the deelarnlions 'lilcli htive lieen made to us; "These deportations la gau townrda , aIJ There Is more Catarrh In this section f the country than till other diseases tit tog-ether, and for nr? It wot sup sed to he Incurable. Doctors pre ilt)?d local remcdlis. :inri by Collitont- H r falling to cure with loml treatment, B roneunced It incurni.le Cal irrh la n H ioal disease, greatly inttoenced hy con- H tltutlunal conditions and tin refore re- H ulraa c?natltutional treatment. Hull's PHd stnrrh Curs, manufactured by K. J. henejr A Co.. Toledo, Ohio, fa a constl* itlonil remedy. Is taken In'-innlly Hi nd aots thru the lllood on th< J !OUI urfsces of the System. t>nr Hundred H olUra rea-arrt is offered I i coso H int Hall's Catarrh Cure fr'ls to cure. end for circulars and testimonials. H W. J. C11ENKY A CO.. Toledo, Ohio. fold by HraggUts, 76c. fl Mall's Family I'llla for constipation. H vJ?t ^*>.1 A\ ' " ' <w ' " 11 I 1 I II. 'f* 1 {f 1 1 '! aster. The Germans announced thn ie inhabitants of Itoubaix, Toureolnj$ llle, etc., were going to be transport 1 Into French districts where iliel! *ovlsloning would be easier.' " 'At night, at about two o'clock li ie morning, a whole district of tin iwn was invested by the troops of oc ipation. To each house was distrib ed a printed notice, of which we giv< rein an exact reproduction, prcserv Kit he style and spelling.' (See docu ent, above.) "'Tin* inhabitants so warned \wre tf Id themselves ready to depart ui nir and a half after tlie distributloi ' tlie proclamutlon.' " 'Kncli family, drawn up outside tin use, was examined by an officer, win luted out haphazard the persons win, ere to go. No words can express tin irbnrity of lids proceeding nor de ribe the heartrending scenes whleli currod; young men and girls tool isty farewell of their parents?a fare eil hurried by the (Serman soldier: ho were executing the Infamous tasl -rejoined the group of those who wen lug, and found themselves In tin Iddle of the street, surrounded by her soldiers with fixed bayonets.' " 'Tears of despair on the part ol irents and children so ruthlessly painted did not soften the hearts ol ic brutal Germans. Sometimes, how er, a more kiiul-henrted officer yield I to too great despair and did nol loose ail the persons whom lie should by the terms of his instructions? tve separated.* Herded Like Cattle. " 'These girls and lads were taker street cars to factories, where tliej ere numbered and labeled like cnttU id grouped to form convoys. In tliesi dories, they remained 12, 24 or '<< urs until a train was ready to re ovo tliem.' "'The deportation began with tin llages of Honey, lialluin, etc., then urcolng and liouhaix. in the town? e Hermans proceeded by districts.' " 'In nil about 110,000 persons arc sai<l have been carried off up to the pres it. 'i'liis monstrous operation hn> ken eight to ten days to accomplish is feared, unfortunately, that it may 'Kin attain soon. " 'The reason given by the German ithorities is a humanitarian (?) one, liey have put forward the following etexts; provisioning is going t> eaU down in the large towns in tin ulli and their suburbs, whereas in e Ardennes the feeding is easy anil leap.' " 'It is known from the young men id girls, since sent back to thcit nulics for reasons of health, that in e department of the Ardennes tin dims are lodged in a terrible mail' r, in disgraceful promiscuity; they a* compelled to work in the fields. It unnecessary to say that the inlinhl nts of our towns are not trained t< ich work. The Germans pay tlieni r.0 in. ltut there are complaints ol suflicient food.' "Barbarity of Slave Drivers." "'They were very badly received lr u> Ardennes. The Germans laid toll ic Ardennnis tlint these were "volltn ers" who were coming to work, 11111 le Ardennnis proceeded to recoivi lein with many insults, which onlj asi'd when the forcible deportatioi r which they were the victims hccuuit nowii.* " 'Feeling ran especially high in oui iw ns. Never has so iniquitous i ensure been carried out. The Gcr aus have shown all the barbarity ol ave drivers.' "'The families so scattered are in vspair and the morale of ibe wholi ipillalioii is gravely affected. Hoy.* MMII in'll, JM IHHM IIOY.S III KUICIv?'l" ichors, yotinn girls <>1 til t ecu lo sixn listv?? hcon carried off, and tin- domiring protests of their parents faihil i I?iii<-Ii die hi'iirts of ilit* (it-i'iiian ollirs, or rather executioners." "One last detail: 'Tin* persons s< portoil are allowed to writo hottn ioo a inontli; that is to say. ovon lositon than military prisoners." "Such arc tho iloolarations which w< ivo collected and which, without comontary, coulirin in an oven inon rilvinu way tho facts which wo took o lihorty of layint; Iioforo you. "Wo do not wish iioro to enter Into o i|iiostioii of prox isionitit; in tho innlcil districts; others, hotter uuall d than ourselves, give you, as w< io\v, frequent informal ion. It i^ ioiigh for us to describe in a few nrds the situation from this aspect; Entire Population in Misery. ' Tin* provisioning is very dillienlt ; <kI. 111*21 i*t from ttint supplied l?y the mulsh-American committee, is very urn1 mul terribly ?lcui\ . . . People v hungry ami the provisioning is inl<<piate by at least a half; our popntioti is suffering eonstaut |>rivatioiis id is growing notieeably weaker. The alb rate, too, lias increased consulably. "Sometimes Inhabitants of the lulled territories speak with a note of seoiiragciueiit, crying apparently: < are forsaken by everyone." We, i the other hand, tire hopeful, M<>n ur le President, that the energetic iei\ei.tlon on tlu> part of neutrals, tiii h the Trench government is sunevoke, will soon hring to an end ese measures which rouse the wrath ail to whom humanity is not tin empword. . . . "Willi all conlidence in the.sympathy tile government we venture to adess a new and pressing appeal to ur generous kindness and far-reaelig inllueiice in the name of those who e suffering on behalf of the whole untry." 'mis, 1.r>th June, IIHG, ?'l, rue Tn Itbout." (Signed on behalf of various spool<1 organizations by Touleiimiule, inrles I Mouh-rs, Leon llatine-Daziu, td Louis Lorlulols.) \ LETTER FROM A GIRL AT t EPWORTH ORPHANAGE Epworth Orphanage, Columbia, S. C. i Dear readers: 1 know some of you have never been to the Orphange. | will tell you something ubout it. We have a nice time out here sing. !ng and playing. The girls work in each home a month, and do such as , cooking, sewing, mending, working, , .vorking the laundry; and the boys i work on the farms, printing office, marble yard and industry building. Our school is divided up into two , II..ir ? > v......... nun gu in me morning and > he other half go in the afternoon. ! vVe have an Infirmary. Miss Lena Robertson is our nurse We h ivon't ' uul much sickness out here this year. \11 the children are looking fine. < We have a kitchen and two dining ; 'coins, one for the large ones, and the , itnci for tlm small ones. My brother, E. M. White, from r Chesterfield, came out here reeent'y to visit us and I was certainly f ;lad to see him. * Mr. Nobers, has resigned and Mr. ^ r. C. Odell is going to take his place. Everybody is sorry that he is going to eave us, for he has been here with j .is so long, lie has. been here seventeen years, and we all love him and hate to see him go. Miss Minnie (Jodlcy is my matron ! ?nd Miss Estel Humphries is my r teacher. 1 like them both fine. I . have one sister and two brothers out here. They are all smaller than I > am. Some ladies from Chesterfield sent me some clothes some time ago. 1 ' certainly did apreeiate them so much. ' Mr. Nobers has given out forty' 'ij ht war gardens. lie says whoever I nakes the most in his garden, he .voj'd got a prize of five dollars for I it. Well my letter is getting long, so I vill clos". Will write again before long. A friend, i Nozzie White, I'.pworth Orphanage, ; Coumbia, S. C. UNIVERSITY Or SOU. CAROLINA Scholarship and Entrance ExaminaI lion. I , Tho examination for the award of v-acar.t scholarships in the University South Carolina and for admission >f new students will he held at the , -aunty courthouse on Friday. .luly 12, i litis, at it a. in. \p,?!icants must ! not he less than si.:teen years of i^re. When scholarships are vacant ifter -July 12, they will be awarded t lo thos making the h:/hest average I it exumination, provided they meet he conditions governing the awftrd. ' \pplicants for scholarships should write to President Currel for scholur' ship blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the applicant, should he filed with ['resident Currell by July .r?. i Sehoarships are worth $100, free tuition end fees, $'a,s tot ill. The ' next session \vi. open September 18, 1918. For further information and 1 catalogue, address The IMiKSIUKNT, University of South Carolina, Columbia, S. C. Ct-10 Columbia, S.C. I . ScSwwi toWDERfigJ ? &>}<! ot)" in * *.<.;! oar J tap, by PAR NELL. MEF.HAN Can you refuse to lo in your savings when other men trive their lives? '!u\ War Savings Stamps. v *. ? I ASHCRAFTS^ Condition Powderi A high-class remedy f??r h??i i and mules in poor condition a ! in need of a tonic. Builds so' . muscle and fat ^ ?v^ ... ' tem, thereby producing a sinoini; I glossy coat of hdir. Packed x foeea. 25a box ?'-K> V>^ D. M. LANKY > *