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' *~" T ^ ' fct. The Press and Banner! WW. * W. R. BRADLEY, Ed I tort* ABBEVILLE, S. C. WPabllRhed every Wednesday at 13 a year la ndv&noe. " : ; Wednesday, June 1,1910. The 6raded and High School CloseTbe city schools closed for the scholastic year on last Friday. There was no graduating class this year, this was due to the fact that one more grade has been added to the schools which makes a total of eleven! now instead of 10 grades as before, and the present 10th. grade instead of being graduated are promoted totheelventh grade. The graduating exercises were held in the Opera House as usual. Dr. Wilkins of the Baptist church opened the exercises with prayer. The speaker of. the occassion was Mr. Hugh Haynsworth of Sumter, a former pupil of Prof. Dick. Mr. Haynsworth is a very nleasant speaker, while he does not resort to pyrotechnics yet his voice is easily heard in all parts of the theatre. He impresses one as Toeing more interested in having something to say rather than in the manner to say it. He took for his subject "The Preservation of Our History." His speech was listened to with rapt attention and it made a most favorable Impression on those who heard him. He taught us a lesson that all of ' j us should learn. Unless we chronicle ^ .the achievements of the past, who will do it for us? Will some one from another oountry, fired with the glory of our past write of us so that. we may not be forf - gotten by our posterity? It is a duty we owe ourselves and a duty we owe our posterity. Mr. Haynesworth selected a fruitful theme and handled it well. After the orator of the occasion had finished the Superintendent introduced the contestants for the, declamation medal. Mr. Cecil Cromer was first introduced, his subject was "Now." Mr. Cromer Is a brother of Mr. Hugh Cromer who won the first medal offered for declamation by Mr. Allen SmltB, Sr. The J.I J- 1 ? ? ... - - iuouoi w suown as me smitn medal. '1 he seoond speaker was Mr. Leslie McMillan, whose subject.was "America's Greatness," ' a grekt 'Subject and was well spoken. The other speaker for the .declamation was Mr.Ralph Adams and his subject was T "Nations aad humanity." These .young men had thoroughly prepared their ? peiqe and spoke them splendidly. The t judges in awarding the prizes gave the W declamation medal to Mr. Leslie McMillan *, The next contest was the elocution contest. Dr. P. B, Speed offered the medal for the best elocutionist in the class. The first young lady introduced was Miss Marie Barnette, her subjeot was "Old Ace." She was followed by Miss Jiou El len McFali who recited "The Whistling Begiment," and lastly came Esther Graydon. Miss Graydop's subject p*B the "Bioux Chief's Daughter," a stirWng peloe of "' composition. All of these young ladles pleased the audience with their peices. They should feel . highly, complimented to hear the many expressions of admiration for their part of the qpfcertalnment. The judges awarded the elocution medal to Miss Esther 5 Graydon. One. of the interesting features of the oooaalon was the reading of the honor rolls. - Tne superintendent maae out five honor rolls as follows: Those pupils " who were not tardy during the year; v> those ' ,who were not absent during the year;'those who were neither tardy nor absent during the year; those who made an average of 95 and over for the entire year and those who made an average of 90 to 95 during the term. The reading of these lists was listened to with rapt attention, on the part of the pupils especially. A notable feature was the High School - Orchestra which furnished music for the occasion. The leader of the Orchestra, Mr. Alex Dick, in addition to his many othe^talents is interested in music and has organized a school orchestra which has been a great addition to the public entertainment of the school. Death of Dr. A. B. C. Lindsay. Dr.'A. B. C. Lindsay, a well-known resident of this town, died last Saturday morning after an Illness of a few days. He was 70 years of age and belonged to one of the old families of Abbeville County: The body was taken to Due West Sabbath for interment, and will be laid alongside his relatives in'the A. R. Presbyterian churchyard. Mrs. Lindsay has the sympathy of the people of the community in her bereavement Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay Wilson, of Rome, Ga., Dr. and Mrs. Abercrombie, of Dallas, Ga., and Idrs. Davis, of Greenville, were among the residents of other/towns who gathered at the home to pay tlie last tribute of respect to him. He belonged to the old school of gentlemen, and his friends here and in Due West were saddened when it was announced that he had p^ssea away. Dr.JLindsay was a doas Of ''Squire" Jas. Lindsby.vwho lived near Due West and who donated to Erekine College a large part, if not:ioll, of the land now included in the campus of that institution. He built the old Lindsay Hall which formerly stood between the College building and the Boys' Dormitory, and Dr. A. C. B. Lindsay as a boy assisted the workmen in erecting that building; he possessed for many years a trowel used In placing the brick in the walls of that old hall which many of the older people of the county recall with pleasant memories. Forty-six years ago Dr. A. B. C. Lindsay was married to Miss Martha Clark McCaslan. Dr. Lindsay was intimately acquainted with the older, families around Due West land loved to speak of the companions of hi| young manhood, and had many in terespng'experiences'*) relate or incidents that happened during and after the war in which he was a soldier. After the war he engaged in farming for a time in the Cleai Sprin&s neighborhood and was a planter ol no mean skill, carrying off niany prizes ic the fairs that were held at Abbeville. He was of quiet retiring disposition, and will be missed by his friends here. No Sig. Closing of the Fondville School. The Fondville School will close to-day The Hon. J. Moore Mars will he tor of the occasion. The SchodftMgni| most prosperous year umta^EfnagSM^ of Miss Haddon who teacher. Blue PiMoo Dftrgaii-Klojf Cotton Mill For Abbeville. Some weeks ago Mr. W. K. Stringer of Belton proposed to the people of Abbeville, if they would raise a certain sum of money he thought he could raise by individual subscription and by the subscriptions of his friends sufficient to build a cotton mill at Abbeville. The people of Abbeville promptly raised the required amount and a conference was arranged with Mr. Stringer. In this conference Mr. Stringer frankly admitted that he could not fulfill his part of the agreement. While our people regret the Inability of Mr. Stringer to carry through the work, they are glad to have our fellow townsman Mr. J. Allen Smith come to the rescue, and take up the work where he left off. When the proposed mill is in operation, there will be plenty of room here for another, and we will meet another proposition from Mr. Stringer should he see fit to make it. Mr. J. Allen Smith, who for some time contemplated building a mill gracefully, acquiesced in the movement by Mr. Stringer, and subscribed liberaley thereto. He realized the importance of the mill and volunteered to take up the new subscription, and carry the mill to completion. Application has been made for a character Mr Smith is a man of wide financial ex perience, and with his ability, energy and abundant capital the mill will be pushed to successful completion.! A most economical and business like administration of the affairs of the mill is guaranted. Feeling sure that the best interest of the community will be promoted by the work in Mr. Smiths hands, the Press and Eanner congratulates the citizens of Abbeville on their good fortune in his undertaking tHs work, which greatly tends to the up lift of the town. Now that the work is about to be begun, let everybody put a shoulder to the wheel and help to bring it to completion. ^nless another mill is put in operation now, the town will go backward--we will hot even mark time. In the small town of -Easley with a population of less than 1200, outside of the mill population, there are three cottoa mills, all prospering. Will Abbeville, with a population of 6000, halt when Its capacity i6 so much greater, and when the needs of the hour are so apparent. New Drug Company Opens Today. The new drug company, incorporated as the Abbeville Drug: Co., opened today. They are occupying the corner store, formerly occupied by Meros, the candy man. Meros goes back to his old stand. The young men Incorporators of the company, are live business men, and in every wuy Identified with the interests of the town. A Preventable Nuisance. Not long since an Abbeville Physician was called to 6ee a patient who bad contracted in some way a fever. Upon diegnosis it was found to be typhoid. The physician at onoe began to examine the premesis for the source of infection. He analyzed | the "water, he examined the food supply, he went over the premises thoroughly but could detect no probable source of the disease. The case wore out its weary length but before the patient was free of fever a neighbor only a few hundred yards up the road was stricken with fever also. Diegnosis proved this case to be typhoid also. Again the physician made an effort to discover the source of the germs but failed to find any clue to the origin of the disease. Not long afterward, a little farther on the same road another ease of typhoid fever developed, and again the physician went to wprk to discover the cause, but his search was fruitless. Here were three cases of typhoid fever in a row. They were only a short distance apart and yet no source of contagion could be discovered. The pnvsician in cnarge 01 uih cases charged the spread of the diseaao to the house fly. The fly came and went ad libitum between these homes and thus the deadly germs were taken from one patient to the other. The House fly is so small, so friendly, so domestic, so universal that we look on him as a part of the house-hold, a sort of .acolyte to all homes. We do not stop to meditate on his hideousness, his impertinence and brass, his filthy, uncleanly, incorrigible habits or we would banish him from the home. The Honse fly is an unmutlgated abomination with his ugly proboscis protuding h ir a an alpnhants snout to touch and con taminate everything he comes In contact with. With his ugly hairy legs envenomed with malaria, misma, fever, and filth he Is an ogre to be shuuned. We should all chip in and havo some skilful artisan to construct a model of the amiable little Housefly enlarged 10,0000 ' just as he is in all his hideous glory, probuscl8, hairs, bugs, germs, microbis, micrococci, and all, and place the insinuating scoundrel on a pedestal where we might all get a look at him from time to time. There is much for us to accomplish in this generation and one of the importan*Vitnrra ic tHH tho lanH nf thA "musfia do UUtUgO 19 V\s 4*v> v>?V ?? v- ?. ?? mestica." If we could see the fly as he is we would not stop until we had screened every door and window in our homes and removed all breeding places of this plague. 1 Our Physicians tell us about the fly but the most of us pay no attention to what they say. We are all from Missouri, we must he shown, but from time to time the 1 dreaded typhoid is teaching us lessons. 1 Line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little, we are all learning the lesson. Some has placed the House fly in tha same category with fleas, bed bugs, snakes and other snch cattle, and the sooner we all do so the better for us. i 9 ^ Card of Thanks. 1 ' Through the kindness of fiiends, I have i been enabled to attend for medical treat. meat, the Sanitorium in Baltimore. I feel that I have been greatly benefited, I aui under obligations to you my friends, that t I can never repay; but most ussuradly i yau shall not fail of your reward, for the , master has said "whosoever shall give Eou a cup of water to drink, in my name tcause ye belong to Christ, verily I say . unto you, he shall not lose Ills reward." In as much as ye have done it to one of the least of these my bretheren ye have done it unto me". I simply say I thank you. A. L. Patterson. KH The Civic ClubCulture meeting of the Civic club n^Hbe held Monday afternoon, May 23ird Sjj^Wf past five o'clock in the club rooms. Bg^Bneeting will be conducted by Mrs. C. ^^^Kmbrell and the discussion will be ajg?t? "Health lines. ?B?M??????????Pi | Machine Plowing The price of corn Is much lees in tt West than it is in South Carolina. Ti price of stock is much lower in the Wes than here. Labor alone is higher. In the West i breaking land on the large farms tl mules and plowstock are being discard( and instead the powerful gasoline engii and gang plows are used. | Land should bd broken thereby in tt fall of the year. It should be broken dee I The gasoline engine will do the work mo: thoroughly than it is possible for the rat j behind the plow to do it. In addition i doing the work more thoroughly the e gine will do it much faster than will tl man behind the plow. The advantage he is that the ground may be broken whi the season is in it, at which time the lar is much more benefited by being brok< than when it is not in season. As a matter of fact very few farms Abbeville County are broken in the ft of the year. Very few farms are broke deeply at any time. All farmers realize tl benefit, the necessity of deep breakin but not all are able to break their far a thus. Many men who have not the faciliti for breaking their land would be willii to pay another man to do it for them they ever met with such a propositio We are anxious to see some enterpri ing farmer introduce one of the late m odel gasoline gang plows into Abbevil County. It would be an eye opened many to see it work. It would be a she that many farmers would go to see, f the farmers are aroused and awake to i Improvements and renovations as th< have never been before. If the gang plow pays out \yest wj will it not pay here? Clemson College should investigate ai let.us know about it. It is true that o. land does not lie level as do the Weste plains but there are thousands of fiel in Abbeville County which could be plw with such machinery. Who will be the first to make the expe ment? Let some farmer who has the 1 terest of farming at heart, who wishes aid in the improvement of farming fac ities and who is able to meet the expen buy such an out fit and show us what will do. J The Care of The Drinking Water Suppl Health is of first importance in all occ pations, since it governs the ability of t individual to do work. The progressh ne6s of a community is governed by i healthfulness, and this healtlifulneae measured largely, directly or indirect! by the purity of its drinking water. J most our entire rural population and t inhabitants of a majority of our smi towns get their supply of drinking" wat from springs or from shallow wells. It to call attention to the often improper si roundings of these sources of drinkti water that this article is written. The principal diseases supposed to 1 commnnicable through thedrinmugwat are typhoid fever, cholera, dysontery ai other diarrhoeal affections, cholera Infa turn,' animal parasitic diseases, enter fevers soarlot fever. Of the diseases me tloned typhoid fever oholera, dysenter cholera Infantum and scarlet fever m? also be carried by milk; entoric fever ai typhoid by flies;, and typhoid by raw oy ters and raw fruit. In order that the wat supply or any of the other agoncious me tioned may carry these diseases it is fir necessary for them to become infect* wittf the specific infection which commui cates the disease. The infection of all the sources mentioned except mosquito< is derived from the ejecta of a patient si ferlng from the disease. It is a fact proven by statistics that tl water borne diseases befirin to increase July and are at their maximum durii Augnst and September, decreasing in C tober. The Spring.?The ideal conditions f the spring are that its watershed is uni habited, that the watershed does not co tain stables, barnyards, pig pens, privk cesspools or cemeteries; and it shpuhl n be traversed by railroads nor hlghwa for all of these make infection possib The freedom from all of these objectlo is not always obtainable. The eprii 1 1 1 1? ""J In annK a TPRV 8QOUIU UtJ UlWJiiou aiuuiiu tu ouvu ? >~j to carry off all of the surface water, bo during a downpour of rain and from pon ed areas, and never allow It to be ovt flowed and filled with tilth or trash of ai kind. The surroundings must be scrupi ously clean. The spring itself should walled with rock and covered to preve trash from falling into it. The Well?Too many of our wells a located In the barnyard, in order th water may be convenient for the stoc regardless of sanitary conditions. T source of the drinking water for the faml should be removed from any such possit danger of infection. The well should located on a well drained area, rerac from barns, pig pens, privies, cesspoo cemeteries or drains, and should become ted from the edge outward to the distan of several feet. Above the surface of tl cement, a tight box should bo built and tight fitting cover provided, if buckets a used. The pump Is much to be preferr to the' bucket because it lessens the dang of trash falling into the well. All was watei should be drained off and no wat allowed to spill back into the well. ] puddles should be allowed to form near in which hogs might wallow. The hog a great gatherer of filth, and by wallowli In a puddle which drains into a well, the is great danger of infection. Deep wells, properly protected to preve , an inflow of surface water at the top, a to be preferred to either shallow wells springs, especially in the southern part . this state. i T. E. Keitt Chemist S. C. Experiment Static Deplorable Accident. Eugene McCurry the little son of 1 Augustus MpCurry and grandson of 1' 1 W. A. McCurry lost a leg as the result an accident on last Friday evening. The little fellow was attempting to boa a freight train which was slowly mountii , the grade and approachiug the Depot wh( t it is supposed, his foot slipped and foil 1 1 tween the wheels where it was crushed n | t ; Candidates for Senate to Speak at Sfi ron. On Friday the 10th of June thoro will held the annual picnic. The speakers this occasion will be Hon. W. N. Grayd Esq. and Hon. J. Moore Mars Esq. Bo these gentlemen are Candidates for t Senate. Bee the Aoker Buildlug auil Repair Cot pftoy'a "ad." - .. - I Trolley Surveyors Reached Town Monie . ie <fey- " t Mr. Lee and his corps of snrveyors reached town monday evenining after plot-1 in ting out tho proposed trolley line. The ie lino as surveyed leaves tho Due West Kail-1 >d road between the A. It. P. Church and tho is old Grier home, drops below the College for women and crosses the branch delow ie Dr. Cowan,s homo. Thence it comes to p. Bethlehem Church* down in front of Ellis re Brothers, following the road to Mr. Green,s i in and running parallel with the road the en- I to tire way until it reaches the Cemetery of n- Long Cane church. Here it leaves the le road and runs near the home of Mr, Evans re Gordon. Thence directly to Mr. Jonn Hi ll's' le running back of his house and also back id of the home of Mr Lamar Clinkscalee. ;n The road comes into the city parallel -with the new street opened by Mr. J. E. Mcin David and thence directly to the shops, ill The survey crosses two branches or rather >n one branch twice Mr. Lee saw that this tie could be obviated but that It wonld make if? the line three quarters of a mile longer as and that making the longer haul would bo more expensive than building and manes tainiug the bridges. ig The surveyors say that the ridge is ideal if for a trolly line. "there is no grade in the n. whole survey over one per cent which is. means one foot fall or rise in a hundred, at any no deep cuts any where. to LOWN DESVILLE. ?w_ ? j Happenings of a Week In and About the ' 3y Seven-Hilled City?Personals. Lowndftsville, May 30th, 1910. The looked-for total eclipse of the moon came to time Monday night, and for the time being it aroused m6re interest among 1(1 our people than the great comet had ' brought about, in that many did forego | their usual pleasure of "early to bed" and rn awaited the total obscurity of the great ds luminary and were amply repaid. None e(> dreaded nor feared the taking place of the loot hnf cn mn/ih (iflnnnt. Via anirl no t.hp 1 first. ri- In honor of the ending of the last term n_ of the Iva school, an entertainment was . given Monday night consisting of music, 10 recitations, dialogues, &c. Quite a large il- crowd was present, which" by close attense tion and other signs of approval, gave the lt best of evidence of enjoyment. Some of our people were among the favored many. , Such attractions were offered for Tuesday < night as to induce a larger contingent of our fun-loving, sight-seeing citizens, to at- ] y. tend than went the night before. Mr. Mac Beatty of Anderson county, !U- came down Tuesday to look after his land he ed interests a few miles from this place. A change of 38 minutes later in the time ,e" of arrival of the 10 a. m. mail train, puts ' its somewhat of an additional burden upon is the rural mail carriers at 1 his place, in that it required hurry work to make their daily ' rounds even wtyh good dry roads in daylight. Now^ they will be pushed even with he above favorable conditions to finish their jij work before dark. Ttoe venerable Mr. Joseph P. Young of er Anderson, was here for a day or two about is the middle of last week, looking lifter hi*. ir_ farming interests in the Fork. Mrs. J. D. Wilson and her four children went to Iva Friday and spent the day with the family of the father of the first, Mr. be JoeSherard. Mrs. A. J. Speer and her two children ' went to Anderson Friday, then to Elberton id to attend the funeral services of a relative. ,r-. Mrs. R. T. Kirkpatrick of Donalds, has .ie been here for a week or two waiting upon and ministering to her sick son, Dr. T. 0. n". Kirkpatrick. y, Mrs. R. W. Humphries, her three chilly, dren and her sister, Mies Maud Chandler, o left for Kingstree Monday, the old home of the first and last.- The last named had s- been here for several months with her siser ter; had gained the goodwill of ourpeon_? pie, who much regretted her depaiture and , " return to her former home. Mrs. Poilie Williams, Mrs. C. T. Baker 3d and her little boy, who have ispeut months ii_ with their kinswoman, Mrs. M. E. Baker, f left Tuesday morning for New York, where . they will make their future home for some time. The good ladies above na?ed have f- hfton known and hiffhlv estnemed bv our people for years, and have ever been heart, lly welcomed, and their late sojourn with us ha6 been one of much pleasure to their in kinepeople and many friends in and < around this place arid they will be very * , much missed. t Mr. G. C. Sullivan of the Anderson Bar, i delivered quite an interesting and instrucor tive lecture Friday night in the school I _ building., Owing to bad weather the at- ( tendance was much smaller than it would n" otherwise have been. < ;s, Dr. H. H. Harris of Anderson, has been j 0t here for some days, by request of Dr. T. O. . Kirkpatrick who has been quite sick, to 1 "8 attend to his practice during his illness. < le. The upper division of the Abbeville Asso- ' ns elation met with the Baptist church in this t place, beginning Saturday at 10 a. m. and i ? continuing through yesterday. The meet85 incr was of much interest to the member- t th ship of the churoh, as well as-others in a4i- ( (j. tendance. Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Barnes went to An- i sr" derson Tuesday, and the flrst traded for an ' ay auto car, came home in it, and has since < been trying it, and is much pleased'. A few nights ago Mr. Lewis, our depot agent, lost a va'.uable horse. ' nt A few days ago Mac Smith, who had been , a familiar figure in and around this place 1 re for twenty odd years, became helpless, I with no one to take care of him, and being | at willing to go, was carried to the "poor . ;k, house." Troupe. 1 he ? I ly Death of Mr. J. N- McDill. >le Mr. J. N. McDill, who suffered from a be stroke of paralysis, died at his home near ' lt? Donalds last Monday, and was buried at ] Due West today. Mr. McDill was a usels ful citizen and lie was held in the highest in- esteem by all who knew him. His wife, ce who survives him, was Miss Ida Stone. . He was a momber of the Associate Re118 formed Church at Due West, a mi re D. A. Tompkins IIIed The friends of D. A. Thompkins of Char er lotte will regret to learn of Ills serious 111ste ness at his home in Charlotte. He had a stroke of paralysis last week, and at first , his life was despaired of. He is improving: now, but it is not likely that he will be by able to keep his engagement to deliver an . js address before the meeting of the state . league of Building and Loan Associations Anderson nest week. Mr. Tompkins is a ire great believer in building^and loan associations, and has doue much in promoting t them, and his address here was being I looked forward to with much interest. It re is to be hoped that he will recover, for he or is a very valuable man, not only to Charnf lotte, but to the entire south.?Anderson 01 Mail. ' Textile Mills Along Southern Railway. >n' Atlanta, Ga., May 17.?(Special) ? The Land and Industrial Department of the Southern Railway has just issued the Company's annual directory of textile mills J along the Southern Railway and Mobile & jr Ohio Railroad. The directory makes a j ' book of thirty-two pages, and gives the < 11 names1 and capacity of all mills located In of the cities and towns through which the lines run, the character of the output and the kind of power used. It shows that the number of textile mills alon the roads on January 1, last, numbered 758. that they >n. I contained 188,723 looms and 8,277,800 spin- < )0_ dies. Of those plants 595 were coiton i ? mills, 43 woolen mills and 121 knitting ,K* mills. Tho cotton mills in the different 1 States are as follows: North Carolina 244, with 41,903 looms and 2.215,751 spindles; 13- South Carolina 150, with 86,840 looms und 3,441,724 spindles; Georgia 88, with 28,337 looms and 1,200,289 spindles; Alabama 49, with 12,534 looms and 017,300 spindles; I Virginia 18, with 8.921 looms and i on! 251,418 spindles; Tennessee 21, with 3,098 , on : looms and 101,930 spindles ; Mississippi 13, th with 2,209 looms and 75,000 spindles ; Indi I ana 4, with 1,828 looms and 75,028 spindles, I and Kentucky 3, with 25.434 spindles. At the beginning of this year there were under construction seventeen new mills, and n since that date a number of others have] been started. j I - ? - / . BIG BA During the month of Ju 1 of Abbeville and At best bargains ever c we mean bargains, or any special discoui up of goods which r greatly benefitted by portunity. We menl able goods that must r.inon Sulfa Pnffnn ! UJLUVil K/ UAVW j WVVVVM I White L Shirt Waists, Ging These are all new goods, 1 fashion. BARGIANS I These so-called remnants are all different yardage and each pi< tnent. This lot includes White Linens, Linenes, etc. J Great Silk Bargains Short Ends in Silk of all colors and kind Each piece has enough in them for a shi waist or skirt and some enough yardage f making a misses' dress. V LACES?2,500 yds. of Imitat R. M. Ha I OFFER t CORE Y For Sale " m > 593 Acre8 of land partly in the Why will | own of Due West. 8ix good tenant the agonies of louses, and bar us-, Btablea and out louses, good pasture, plenty of water geivea - to ' be > the place. Rents for 12 bales oi when a certai sotton weighing 500 pounds each, be* Doan's Kid lidea the owner works a three horse J? une, becaun _ , the help the.' arm. Price $8,000. worjj 3-room Dwelling House on a 8Vm own acre lot, with good out houses, yourself now, jams, etc. Good bermuda pasture, in or Brigbt's di he town of Donalds, 8. C. A bargain Abbeville tent lt *1,35?* beville!" I 511 Acres of land 4 1-2 miles south >f Ware's Shoals on Saluda river; 3 back caUj Iwellings and 3 tenant houses, 75 acres neys. I i svood land, 75 acres bottom land, good ney reme pasture, 7 horse farm oppn on the cured a b place. It is now rented for 3,600 lbs. Pilla. T i lini; cottou. Can be easily made to and belie' bring double this rent. Price $12.50 reliable I peracre- mending 2 Houses and Lots in Fort Pick- For sale b, jus. These are nice new cottages, cents. Fosu t s New York, ti Price $7o0 each. States. Dwelling and Store in the city ta?e e bfer of Abbeville near fe. A. L. shops, Price $2,000. The very place for a . ~ uian wautiDg to do email mercan- Victor ai tile business. bolts and ] House and Lot corner Churcb /aiAtiri he and Tanyard Streets. This house . , is new, well built and has six rooms. barrels Price-$2,000. Souse and Lot in Mt. Carmel How t in located in the best section of the town. Price $550. One Lot on corner of Orange and Lemon Streets, beautifully located It is an Inter! ^level and well drained, $500. an II ?- t ^4-t, tir??ji? The cause of TWO XiUtO ucai TTo.uiaYY oucoi, J^seS ig an two minutes walk from Graded blood. To cur< School; near in, and a bargain at acid must bo e S?00 f ach regulated that 3>ouu encu. jn gjcessjve qui internal diseas 111 Acres one and one-fourth mile remedy. Rubb from City limits, price $2000.00. at beat^cause^ 260 Acres land near Mt. Carmel, firmer^hoVd on S. C., price $2,GOO, possibly enough the pain, but tii wood on this place to pay for it. Stten'Vood! P Li?t your Real Estate with me and an^Jom^letec :ome to see me. If you want to buy I macide." Test< ;iaveor can get what you want. If you willcj vant to sell I can find you a buyer at the joints fr I also buy and sell all kinds of poisons out of stomach, reguli _ . -i i t? i and makes you Stocks and Bonds, strikes the * moves its cause Remember I reriesent the Equita- sold by druggis - ' T r\ 5(V. nnil SI fill SI I >1 , tile hlroilge.si IjI e luourauue ??? >uuy iu ilie world. i J1 piY? Booklet freo ir ic-al Co.,Baltim< Bolt S. Link 7iV: Ofllce over Milford'a Book Store. gom at Gl "A. KGAINS ine we will give to the ladies )beville County some of the ( rffered. When we say this v This will be no cut price sale nt sale, but a genuine cleaning / nust be moved. You will be / / 5 taking advantage of this op= :ion a few of the many season= : be sold: Suits, One-Pieee Dresses linen Skirts, ham Dresses, Kimonas. well tailored and made in the latest I N SHORT ENDS clean and in good condition. They are ece has enough in it to make some gars Goods, Madras, Percales, Ginghams, : *" . / N , . . . '' ( K :% '> ' ' ' ' . Bargains in Shoes |s A splendid line of Shoes in odd numbers lrt and discontinued patterns. All of them good 4 y and seasonable styles. We have them in or price $i per pair were $2, $2.50. Children's Shoes 25c up. . ' > 'V v . ion Torchon, 8c to 15c value, at 5c ddon & Co. OOR KIDNEYS. ?***& ' . Pickens Sentinel-Journal.' ' One hour a day withdrawn from frivn^flr Ufa When an Ab- olou8 Pur?uit8? aDd profitably eu?Dger Ldie wnen aa ad- ployed( would enable any man of jit Zen Shows Yoa ordinary capacity tp oiaaier a com-the Cnre. plete scleuce. Onenour a day would make au Ignorant man a well-informed people continue to suffer man in ten yearn. One hour a day kidney complaint, back- would earn enough to pay for two dally y disorders, laiueoe.-s, and two weekly papers, two leading nguor, why allow them- magazines and a dozen good boobs. Iu come chronio invalids, au hour a day a boy or giH could read n cure i? offered them? twenty pages thoughtfully?over seven ney Pills is the remedy tbousaud pages or eighteen large vole it Kives to the kidneys umesinayear. An hour a d?y 'might f need to perform their make all the difference between bare existence and useful, happy living. a on if" oven nne. nf the An hniir a dav might make?nay, has ' kidney disease#, cure made an unknown man a famous , before diabetes, dropsy one, a useless one a benefactor to sease nets in. Bead this bis race. Consider, then, tbe mighty imony : possibilities of two, four, yen, six hours teller, Main St., Ab- a day that are, on tbe average, thrown C., says: "I ouf- away by some of our youug men and ome time from a dull women in their dt-sire for fun and dims the small of my version. ted by disordered kid- " decided lo iry a kiddy and went to P. B. A big bowl of . [tow feel much better itZT?ri Quaker Oats hesitation in rec?m- VUImI Doau'fl Kill ney Pi I Is." . Boffl," 18 the.best dish you )le agents for the United SCI*VC * ' ' the name?Doan's?and Delicious and i ad Terrell sweeps, nourishing riows, at Glenn's. Good for all ages is extra good syrup and all conditions. Economical and 0 Cure strengthening. Packed in regular size packages, and in h?r'flP1lfT15ltlC!T1 tactically sealed tins for hot climate*. 58 aa1 Disease ani Requires |J _ _ ^ 1 l4"Y7 iternal Reciedy. If ? J ^ey Rheumatism and kindred ? fKia tarpihln rlisPJlKfi this I Is the Most SolidFoundation ixpelled and the system soj- ^ Business Can Be Built Uq no more acid will be formed antities. Rheumatism is an That's why you'll find here the best, e and requires an internal and only the best. ing with Oils and Liniment We c"rry the fine,st *??ds we caa (fordsonly temporary relief " ' Ou^'cSstome^^havoTearaed'they I jou to delay the pioper can depend on what we sell and on >ws the malady to get a what we say. you. Liniments may ease A reputation for reliability, coupled leywill no morecure'Rheu- prompt service and a square ?i?t will cliaugo the flbro of ?$jSfttoi/'S.'KP.KS it last discovered a perfect One of our specialties that Is conUl'e, which is called "Rheu- tlnually making: new friends for us, Is }d in hundreds Of cases, it coffce. We recommend especially 1 most marvelous cures; we ure you. Rheumacide "gets l/I t7gllT A f'/l I/l/lT/I? om the inside," sweeps the fcLLL 1 A CUf t Eat the 9V8tem, tones up uiu ates the liver and kidneys the highest grrade possible to produce well all over, Rbeumacide ? a selected, cup-tested coffee of K)t of the disease and re- incomparable richness and delicacy. This splendid remedy is The superior flavor is the result of its and dealers ?enerally at slow-curingr. dry-cookinsr and quickMittlH Til tablet form fit 25 sealing: while still hot. so that none xitue. in tawei rotm at a o{ ^ volatile coffce C3sense ls jost. a^e. Get a bottle to-day. ,, . , , you write to Bobbitt C'hem- ^'"J? f~ma|f,?c?canr hlfndiw" r.. T.s i k uK4.ii *.r> serves it from dust or iianannff. >re, Mil. bottle tablets Order some today. A revelation 1a r salo by C. Milford Jfc Co. coffeo awaits you. md white milling r^' ^^LER, ,nn?8 Abbeville, S. C - ? ^ ? ?Mittfi ife . . J