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(The Rosei Dei I! Dry G< | Special F Good ( Fruit ( Browr II River I IOC Pi I 100 Gr 10c an 25c "ft Beauti | , These are all Ne I will be surprise I in this departm in and look. I TheRosei I Gf Interest to Housekeepers B To Clean White Furs. If Half fill a stone jar with white J corn meal (for a child's muff and tippet a 2-galIon jar will De suitaDie; | i place it on the stove and heat the | j meal as hot as the hand can be borne ] ^ in it, stirring to prevent the meal < from scorching. Put one piece at i a time in this and rub until thor oughly clean, then beat out the meal j with a stick. Heat further if need- j ed for other pieces?the meal must j be hot. i A very simple salad which is popu- ] lar with men is made of Irish potatoe < and onion with French dressing. If i used for supper, at dinner time cut s the onion very thin and let stand in l vinegar until ready for use. (Jut corn boiled Irish potatoes very thin, add the onion from the vinegar, season and pour over it a dressing made of oil and the vinegar in which the onion has been standing. A secret f of well mixed French dressing is to ! thoroughly dissolve the salt in the oil before adding vinegar very slowly. Freshly ground coffee and camphor burned together make an effective and refreshing disinfectant in sickrooms. * ^ To make bacon taste like ham and make ham gravy, soak meat in butter milk several minutes before cooking. < To remove scorched taste from 11 victuals, dip vessel while victuals are 5 boiling, into a pan of cold water. 1 1 Raw tomatoes, sliced, mealed ] and salted, then fried in hot grease, \ are fine. j To bake potatoes quickly, grease 1 with meat skin, butter or lard. I r..nM + Vi mAof nrtnefirirolivD rtrmr ' JLiVCU tUU 11IVOK VVlt^VJ. TMVtT V IIV II admit that the full skirt, so long threatening to transform the fashionable silhouette into a new shape, has actually come into its own. It . promises to rule the world of fashion for six months, at least, if not for the whole year. In heavier materials the gored skirt will prevail, and for the more supple plaits, gatherings and shirrings will be in style. iberg Merc >artment Sto: 3ods Depa 'rices for I quality 4-4 Bleaching I the Loom Bleaching 1 Sheeting, 40 inches wide - - 5 and 6 Dlcn'^o _ _ ? 01U.C7 X J.CtJ.W.0 , ^ ercales 5c Percales s Ginghams inghams - 7 5c Ginghams id 12 l-2c Curtain Scrim - rhite Linen [ful colors Sylk Spot Crepe w uoods and New ;d at the Large 5 lent, and we invi > iberg Merc SHERIFF NEUFFER [low to Arrett a Man With the Help of a Big Word, a Big Pistol it the Vogue Now. Below we publish a story taken From "Memorabilia, an Anectodal Reminiscences of Columbia, South Carolina," by Julian A. Selby, | which will be of interest to the many friends of Dr. G. A. Neuffer. The Sheriff was a cousin of the doctor j and must have been as bright as he is, to be able to think of such a word n such a hurry. Our old friend, Sheriff Charles tfeuffer, had a warrant for a man :harged with some trifling offense, vho, when he found that officer was after him, determined to give him a ong chase. Both were mounted, jut the offender had the better horse ind kept just far enough ahead of lim to annoy him. He took the Earner's Ferry Road, and when Sheriff Neuffer got in calling dis;ance, he would let off a volly of ough remarks to the discomforted )fficer. Finally they reached the joundary line between Sumter and Richland, when the delighted lawweaker drew rein, and addressed the >fficer as a "Bull headed Dutchman" ieclaring that he was now beyond lis jurisdiction and dared him to at;empt to arrest him. "Guess not," eplied the angry Sheriff, "I've got i 'Slapdamicus' for you and you'll :ome, I bet." "The devil you lave," was the surprised response, and he returned to Richland dis:rict, quietly submitting to service of :ne warrant. wnat s a biapaamicus?" inquired a curious individual, who had listened to the Sheriff's account of the arrest. "Damned if [ know," said Sheriff Neuffer, "I thought the big word would scare him into coming back, and I had no more trouble with him." Tho finwinw rlronorl uail IC novor quite out of style, but this season it has surprised even itself by the favor accorded it. Some hats rely upon their trimming for the style that the veil will give it. I Southern Railway Schedule. Effective Dec. 20,1914. . A.M. PM PM Leave Abbeville 9.00 3.55 <>.20 Arrive Abbeville 11.20 5.25 8.05 antile Co. res irtment Saturday >l-2c 10c 5 l-4c i l-2c 8c 10c H-4c ' l-2c 10c O 8 1-3 20c c A uu Patterns. You jtock we carry te you to corne antile Co # SANTUC * * ? * > V ************* $. * * $ $ Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Milford and children, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Milford near E'onalds | Saturday night and Sunday. I M* Pnwl D CVioyno onnr.f Tnoo^Qir | lUi van ? uitai |/v< x mvuuuj , night with his brother, Mr. J. W. Sharpe. Mrs. Lark Wilson, of Little Mountain, spent several days of last week with her daughter, Mrs. J. R. McCombs. Mrs. J. M. Strawhorne spent several days of last week with her daughter, Mrs. Dave Mundy. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sharpe spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Simpson. Mr. and Mrs Eugene Newell spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr and Mrs. D. E. Newell. Messrs Sam Strawhorne and Vernon Simpson spent Saturday night and Sunday with Master Albert Milford. Messrs Carl Sharpe and Joe Strawhorne were the guests of Mr. Andrew and Arthur Newell Saturday afternoon. Miss Addie May Uldrick spent the week-end with her parents. Mr. J. B. Sharpe spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Uldrick. Miss Macie Sharpe has many friends in our community who will be glad to know that she is improving after a long illness. She has been confined to her bed since December with rheumatism. We hope she will soon be restored tD her usual health. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Hagan and children were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Simpson Sunday. Mr. D. E. Newell is quite sick at this time. His many friends hope he will soon be better. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kay spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sharpe. Betsy. Belton Home, a white man livi ine- in the Cambridge section of I Greenwood county, committed suicide by shooting himself with a shot gun. He pulled the trigger with his toe. THE COW AND HER PRODUCT Clcmson College Weekly Note* for -Farmer and Dairyman A. pure bred cow should have pure bred attention. Now :is the time to select the land for that Bermuda grass pasture. Bermuda grass sod should be broken every four years. One acre of good Bermuda will pasture two or more cows. The dairy cow should have a ^ood pasture, not an exercise ground. An old field grown up in broom sedge and old field pines is not a good pasture. Each week several thousand pounds of country butter sire shipped from the upper courties of South Carolina to the renovatL.g factories of the North. The farmers receive from 15 to 20 cents in trade for such butter. Each week several thousand n/Minrlc nt" ronnvatpH hnt.t.er shinned into the lower counties of South Ct: olina and sold for 35 to 45 cents per pound. There are ways of stopping this. One of them is to join the co-operative creamery movement of Clemson College. The Dairy Division of the college will furnish all desired information. The last quart of milk given by a oow is much richer than the first quart. The moral is easy to read. Milk the cow dry every timo. Dehorning a cow does not check her milk flow. I The good dairy cow pays the highest price for a farmer's hay and grain. Why not sell these products to her? She will nevei refuse them and she will always return a profit if you will do your p.irt. The dairy cow is a maohine for converting feed into milk and butter. The machine is unprofitable unless the value of the milk is greater than the cost of feed and upkeep. How about your cow? Use the curry comb and brush on o rlairv f?r?w pvcrv Hflv. Tt navs. There is more money in feeding a steer than in feeding a poor dairy cow, and much lass work. Every pure bred cow does not make money. Keep records and see if every one of your cows pays for its keep. A Tomato Club Organized. Miss Martha Piatt paid a visit to the Abbeville High School last Friday and a tomato club wa? organized. Miss Piatt made an interesting talk to the children on tomatoes and much enthusiasm was evidenced. The following young ladies have given in their names: Misses Forrest Thornton, Ilva Ferguson, Sara Mundy, Charlotte Telford, Mary Graydon, Mattie Eakin, Fannie Edmundsi, Margaret Sutherland, Pauline Wosmansky, lydia Owen, Mary Stevenson, Maude Hawthorne, Minnie Ruth Cox, Rebecca Edmunds, Grace Link, Gladys Wham Ruth Beeks, Fay Andrews, Madge McLesky, Edna McKelvey, Margaret McCord, Mary Aiken, Elizabeth Faulkner, Eugenia Coleman, Mary Adams, Eleanor Schroeder, Katherine Faulkner, Leo Wilson, Clayton Shirley, Isabel Cantey, Mildred Cochran, Victoria Howie, Edna Bradley, Virginia Aiken, Mary Greene. After the organization of the club, the young people elected their officers and the result was that Miss Maude Hawthorne was chosen President, Miss Mary Graydcn, VicePresident; and Miss Mattij Eakin, Secretary. This is the la/gest club ever organized in the State and much good work is expected of the High School Club. Exhibits :For Field Day. At the Teachers Association held in Due West, it was decided that in order to be fair to all schools in their school exhibits, that a distinction would be made between articles made at home and those made in school. All articles made in school must be so designated, and all articles mace at home must be designated as made at home. All teachers should take special care to see that the articles for exhibition are so marked before they ar; sent to the Fair Grounds. H. B. Blakely, Jr. Chairman of Committee on School Exhibits for Field Day.. Notice to Telephone Subiicriberi. Because of necessary changes on Switchboard, the Telephone Office will be closed from Saturday night, 27th at 10.30 until Monday morning zytn mat. Abbeville Telephone Co. On His "Beat" "Officer, there's a terrible fight going on round the corner to the right." Thank you, sir, I'll do as much for you some day, sir," said the policeman gratefully, as he took the turning to the left and quickly disappeared.?Ex. Red, white, blue, green and yellow calico for decorating fioats to appear in public on Field Day can be found at the Hot Hustler Racket for no per yard. Hot Hustle?, on the corner. { 1 For Southern Pottery Plant*. That the mining of domestic white-burning clays is almost in its infancy and that America must look to the South for its supply of such clays are the conclusion of a paper by Joel H. W&tkins, geologist of the industrial and agricultural department of the Southern Railway Co., presented at the last meeting of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. His paper dealt with the residual china clays of North Carolina, Virginia, and Georgia, the sedimentary paper clays of South Carolina and Georgia and the sedimentary ball clays of Florida and Tennessee with a reference to the pocket deposits of white clay in Augusta county, Virginia; the bauxitic kaolin of Tennesse, Georgia, and Alabama, and the halloysite deposits of Tennessee and Georgia. The mining of these clays has become an important industry in the Southern Appalachian States with the nicreasing demand for them in the manufacture of white ware and creamcolored ware, bone, delft and belleck chinaware, sanitary ware, porcelain electrical supplies, architectural terra-cotta, tiles for walls and floors paper and fillers in paints, plasters, pastes, putty and school crayons. But the total production of them in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Tennessee in 1913 aggregated only 182,518 tons, valued at $788,409, in a total production in the United States of 197,nnc a! (fono f7CO T?, L. I U UU11Z, YdlUCU at ((IOVU) I t/ ?/ Xll fVia coma irociT* tViic cftiinlrv r>r<iHiiPPr1 $31,443,450 of white-burned clay ware and imported $9,340,890 worth. For domestic manufacture 268>666 tons, valued at $1,623,993, were imported, practically displacing domestic raw material, which experts regard as having no superior if properly handled. Reciting these facts, Mr. Watkins insists that not only should this country supply a sufficient quantity of this clay for its own demands, but should become a competitor in foreign markets. He recognizes that there are reasons why such a desirble situation has not developed, but only reasons that can be readily overcome. For instance, against the objection of American potters that domestic clays are not uniform in character, he opposes the fact that the United States Bureau of Mines has advocated a central depot for the proper mixing and grading, under a supervision of a trained ceramic chemist, of the output of a number of mines, and he argues that such a plant could be operated in North Carolina, South Carolina or Georgia, and that if successfully engineered, it would stimulate greatly the mining of kaolin by : mall operators, inducing a higher price than domestic clay is now bringing. Against the further objection that American white clays are not more extensively used because most of the mines are remote from the manufacturing centers he argues that, although most of the clays now mined in the Southern Appalachian States is shipped for manufacture distances ranging from 400 to 700 miles, if the clays were properly prepared and sold under guarantee, the pottery plants would get closer to the sources of the raw material. Natural gas in West Virginia has in recent years brought that State, with an annual output valued at: $3,500,000, to the rank of third | among the States in the value of pot- j tery products. It is but another step to the olcation of potteries closer to the raw materials in abundance. The South has the fuels and the materials in abundance. It will do wisely applying the suggestions that materials will be so handled as to appeal more strongly than at present to American manufactures, and, at the same time, to leave nothing undone that may contribute to the biulding up of convenient markets for the finished products.?Manufacturer's Record. Mrs. H. M. Geer, will continue to manage the Belton Hotel, a decision which will prove of great interest to the traveling public. Sam J. Nicholls, of Spartanburg, will be one of the principle speakers at the Firemen's Tournament in Greenwood this Spring. Edward Evans, of Yorkville, committed suicide last Thursday by hanging himself with his belt in a clump of woods near his home. Health Promotes Hnpplnes. Without health, genuine joy is impossible ; without good digestion aud regular bowel movement you cannot have health. Why neglect keeping bowels open and risk being sick and ailing? You don't have to. Take one email Dr. King's New Life Pill at night, in the morning you will have a full, free bowel movement and feel much better. Helps your appetite and digestion. Try one to-night. Comparison is the highest form of flatter}'. All cigars sold in Abbeville are represented to be as good, or better, than Speed's Cinco's. There is nothing like them. Stick to them. They keep o tnaf.A in vntir mouth and a clear ? J tiead. Misses slippers with hose to match Red, white and black. See the Hot Hustler's windows for prices. COTTON MARKET. March 23rd. Closed. March 9.01 May 9.19 July 9.49 October 9.80 December 10.01 Local spots 8x/t cents. MAXWELL'S MARKET T. H. MAXWELL, Proprietor ALL PORK SAUSAGE SMALL HAMS, ROAST PIG, FRESH FISH and OYSTERS Highest Cash Prices Paid for Cattle, Hogs and Sheep, Green Salted Hides. PHONE 298 Maxwell's Market Reduced Rates VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY Premier Carrier of the South . FEOM ABBEVILLE, S. C. SAX FRANCISCO, CAL. Panama-Pacific International Exposl? tion. February 20-December 4,1915. FLOBEXCE, 8. C. South Carolina State Teachers Assoclaion, Florence, S. C. Date of sales, March 22, 23, 24, 2&. nnai limit marcn tj. j are $.65. B. F. Sweetenburg, Agent. Here Is Good News for Stomach Victims Some very remarkable results are being obtained by treating stomach, liver and intestinal troubles with pure vegetable oils, which exert a cleans* ing, soothing and purifying action upon tbe lower bowel?, removing tbe obstructions of poisonous fecal matter and gases and preventing their absorpKir iKo hlnn/1 Thin rlnna. t.h? fond i-t allowed free paesage from tbe stomach, fermentation ceases and stomach troubles quickly disappear. George H. Mayr, for twenty years a leading Chicago druggist, cured him self and many of his friends of Bto m tch, liver and intestinal troubles of years' standing by this treatment, and so successful was the remedy be devised that it has since been placed In the bands of druggists all over tbe country, who have sold thousands of bottles. Though absolutely harmless, the effect of tbe medicine is sufficient to convince any one of its remarkable effectiveness, and within 24 hours the sufferer feels like a new person. Mayr'* Wonderful Remedy Is sold by leading druggists everywhere with the positive understanding that your money will be refunded without question or quibble if ONE bottle fails to give you absolute satisfaction. Master's Sale. The State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. Court of Common Pleas. ? ri ni.i.iiA AMAtMa^ William npaou, riauiuu, ogajuow Richard Wade, and others, Defendants. By authority of a Decree of Bale by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbe* ville County, in said State, made In the above stated case, I will offer for sale, at Public Outcry, at Abbeville C. H., 8. C., on Salesday in April, A. D. 1915, within the legal hours of sale the following described land, to wit: All that tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Abbeville County, in the State aforesaid, containing Forty-Six and One-Tenth (46 1-10) Acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of G. A. Visanska, George Cannon and Sol Rosenberg. Terms of Sale?Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. R. E. HILL. TIToflfor A P P Prosperity in York. (York Times.) A visitor spending last week in the city says that one of the most positive indications to be found that busi ness is improving is the fact that people have again started to buying automobiles. When the "panic" struck this part of the country automobile sales almost ceased but the visitor says that the people in his sections are again beginning to purchase the "buzz wagons" and that some of them are even going so far as to pay $50 down and $50 per month. Disqualified. "If thev nersist in teaching the boys in the schools military tactics, I don't believe our Willie would go in for it." "Hn vmi mpnn hp's too chicken* hearted." "No, he's too pigeon toed." Ribbons, ribbons, all colors and widths for school colors, society colors* 5c, 10c, 15c yard. Get yours for Field Day at Hot Hustler Racket. If you can't find what you want, any where else, go to Speed's Drug Store.