The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, April 11, 1917, Page SEVEN, Image 7
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V FAIRFIELD V
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Fairfield, April J).?Mrs. ^ E. C.
Young spent last Jf riaay aiternoon
with Mrs. H. G. Bowens.
Miss Maggie Young spent last
week with her sister, Mrs. J. T. Wiley
at Lethe.
Miss Janie Belle Long spent one
night last week with her father, Mr.
J. S. Spence and family.
Mr. J. C. Bowen came down from
Greenwood and spent last Sabbath
with home folks.
We are sorry to report that Little
Dorothy Bowen has been real sick
for the past few days. We wish for
this dear little one a speedy recovery.
Mr. J. T. Moore of Abbeville,
spent last Sabbath with Mr. W. R.
Bowen.
Mr. Robert Young and sister,
Miss Margaret, spent last Sabbath
with Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Crawford.^
? Mrs. J. M. Adams of Georgia, is
here to spend a month with homefolks
and relatives.
Miss A. Z. Spence spent last Friday
night with her aunt, Miss Zellie
Langley.
Mr. Wardlaw Campbell spent last
week with Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Wiley
and family of Lethe.
Mrs. Mary F. Creswell ppent one
day last week with her daughter,
Mrs. John McCaslan.
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Young spent
Sabbath in Lethe. They were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Wiley
for dinner.
Mr. Robert Young and sister, Miss
Margaret, made quite a pleasant
call at the home of Mr. Joe Yotfng
on last Sabbath afternoon.
Miss Irene Young spent one night
last week with her aunt, Mrs. John
McCaslan.
Mr. Joel Young dined with Mr.
i
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I Wai
8 *
I New shipir
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I for immedi
ISummei
Tyson &
Durham
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Owensb
Chaise C
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WA'
?and other
W. A.
burg on last Friday.
Messrs. Edmunds and Hill of McCormick,
dined with Mr. Joe Young
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Young called
at the home of Mr. J. A. Brown on
last Sabbath.
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Wiley and little
onea of Lethe, spent Sabbath
with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Long and
family.
1 nniorc
HOGS BKIINUIINU niun rmvcn}.
Clemson College, S. C.?The following
letter has been received from
the County Agent of Colleton County:
"I am glad to report that on a
carload of hoes shipped from Green
Pond to Richmond, the farmers
realized $2000 net. One man had
27 hogs weighing about 100 pounds
each, and received $375. The highest
price paid was 13 1-2 cents per
pound. These were common grade
hogs. If they had all been of one
breed more would have been realied."
1
SOME PAINTING.
Billy Bradley, of Greenville street,
is an artist of the first water- Some
days ago he commenced painting the
nicture of a nretty srirf who existed J
only in his imagination. The work |
progressed steadily, and Billy's
grand-mother, who is an artist herself,
was much interested in the
work, and from time to time made
inquiry over the telephone, as to
how the picture was going on. One
day her grandson Jack, the business
manager of the Blue Jackets, answered
the phone, and in reply to
the usual question as to how Billy
was getting on with the picture,
Jack reported, "He is just doin fine
Gramma, he is down to the navel."
esand I
jons
lents ready
ate delivery
'S I
cJones I
1GIES I
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'ity !
SONS
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TWENTY-FIVE WELL P"
BALANCED SCHOOL LUNCHES
1. Graham bread with cream
cheese, four large stuffed dates, milk
to drink.
2. Two baking powder biscuits
with honey, an apple, milk to drink.
Q White hrpnH with cold lamh.
two oatmeal cookies, orange.
4. Eight small crisp crackers with
peanut butter, four prunes stuffed
with sugared nuts, ginger snaps.
5. White bread with roast beef,
an orange, milk to drink.
6. Graham bread and lettuce
sandwich, few pieces of candy, milk.
7. Rye flour muffins, grape juice,
peach gelatine.
8. Boston brown bread .and butter
sandwiches, tomato and two sugar
cookies.
' 9. White bread with chopped
eggs* preserved figs, slice plain cake
and milk.
I 10. Graham bread with ? cold
chicken, one banana.
11. White bread with currant
jelly, salted peanuts, fruit juice.
12. Graham biscuits with bits of
cold thinly sliced boiled ham, stick
candy, an apple.
13. White bread with marmalade,
fifteen walnuts, an orange, milk.
14. Boston brown bread with pimento
cheese, ten dates, stoned and
rolled in sugar, fruit juice.
15. Biscuit with sardines and lettuce,
one frosted cup cake, apple.
16. N White bread and cheese, one
doughnut, stewed apples.
17. Sandwich made with one slice
Graham and one slice white bread,
ispread with apple jelly or black1/iiiafav/1
naonnfa f
| ocrry y uaxwv* VU0VC*J.V?} |?VI?UUW|
; 18. Cold roast beef sandwich,
two molasses cookies, canned straw:
berries. <
19. White bread with crisp bacon,
one celery heart, two chocolate
marshmellows, milk.
20. oiston brown bread with jam,
one small popcorn ball, soaked
prunes.
21. Lettuce or celery sandwiches,
cup custard, jelly sandwiches.
22. Cottage cheese and chopped
green pepper sandwiches or a pot of
cream cheese with bread and butter
sandwiches, peanut sandwiches, apple,
plain cake.
23. Hard-boiled eggs, c::isp baking
powder biscuits, celery or radishes,
brown-sugar or maple-sugar
sandwiches.
. 24. Raisin or nut bread with butter,
cheese, orange, maple sugar.
25. Baked bean and lettuce sand- i
wiches, apple sauce, sweet chocolate.
CAREFUL FEEDING WILL
PREVENT ODORS IN MILK
Clemson College, S. C.?Several
farmers have made complaint to the
Division of Animal Husbandry and
Dairying of Clemson College that
the milk from their cows have a peculiar
smell and will not churn. Just
what is the cause of the trouble cannot.
he criven. but the following has
been y>und to be the usual conditions
when the complaint is made:
The cow is getting nothing but dry
feed, she has been milking several
months, and there has been a sudden
change in the temperature.
I The treatment for all such cases
is to give the cow some green food
or potatoes or turnips. If she is'
constipated give her one pound of
Epsom salts. Then raise the temperature
of churning.
Difficult churning is, due to trying
to churn whole milk or very thin
cream at too low a temperature;
having the churn too full and churning
at too slow speed. Butter
should come in not less than 25
minutes. The ordinary feed of the
cow will not effect the flavor of the
milk. Feed having a high flavor
as cabbage, onions and bitter weed
will give a bad flavor.
WONDERFUL STUFF!
LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS
Apply a Few Drops Then Lift Corns
or Calluses Off With Fingers?
No Pain.
No humbug! Any corn, whether
hard, soft or between the toies, will
loosen right up and lift out, without
a particle of pain or soreness.
This drug is called freezone and is
a compound of ether discovered by
a Cincinnati man.
Ask at any drug store for a small
bottle of freezone, which will cost
but a trifle, but is sufficient to rid
one's feet of every corn or callus. ?
Put a few drops directly upon any =
tender, aching corn or callus. In- y(
stantly the soreness disappears and
shortly the corn or callus will loosen
and can be lifted off with the fingers.
This drug freezone doesn't eat out D
{the corns or calluses but shrivels
I them without even irritating the
surrounding skin.
Just think! No pain at all; no
soreness or smarting when applying
it or afterwards. If your druggist
(don't have freezone h&ve him order ge
it for you.?Adv. ac;
THE FOUR P'S. ? f?'
an
er<
Clemson College, S. C.?If your sj.c
policy is "live at home and board at
the same place," nothing, probably
is of more importance in the meat W1i
production side of such a policy as Pa;
the four P's?pastures, peas, pen- Ca1
nuts, and pigs.
Now is the ideal time for starting clc
Kai-mn/ia r?actnr#?n, and a little later SOI
grazing crops of peas and peanuts, an
A bermuda pasture with a few ears fr<
of corn or an equal amount of good sy:
rice meal daily will give a gradual
profitable growth of pigs after they
are four months old. Previous to yo
this time they should have a full fr<
ration of shorts preferably fed in stc
slop. Feed them all the surplus uh
buttermilk. Dc
Peas and peanuts planted at in- Ca
tervals from now on, should, lurnisn ne
cheap finishing crops which will produce
pork at a profit if finished
with corn for two or three weeks in
connection therewith. m<
Write to the Extension Division, I i
Clemson College, S. C., for free bul- e(j
letin, "Forage Crops for South Carolina."
w<
THE ROSitf
DEI
Copyright Hut Schaffnrr & Marx
Our coi
clothing, s
makes it easy i
for any occasion a
Correct ai
in dependable merchai
men.
Our revo
offer you the advantag
Come in and let us si
THE ROSEN
JU'RE BILIOUS! LET j
"CASCARETS" LIVEN
* iifPB a vn DAllfpf e l
JL.1 Y JLX\ DKJ TW "
n't Stay Headachy, Conatipated, !
Sick, With Breath Bad and
Stomach Sour.
Get a 10-cent box now. ;
You men and women who can't <
t feeling right?who have head- J
he, coated tongue, bad taste and j
ill breath, dii^iness. can't . sleep, I
e bilious, nervous and upset, both- ;
3d with a sick, gassy, disordered ;
?mach, or have a bad cold. ;
Are you keeping your bowels clean 1
th Cascarets, or merely forcing a '
ssageway every few days with salts <
thartic pills or castor oil?
Cascarets work while you sleep; ;
janse the stomach, remove the <
iir, undigested, fermenting food ;
d foul gases; take the excess bile ;
)m the liver and carry out of the j
stem all the constipated waste ;
itter and poison in the bowels. ;
A Cascaret to-night will straighten i
u out by morning?a 10-cent box !
)m any drug store will keep your <
>mach sweet, liver and bowels reg- <
ir, and head clear for months. ;
>n't forget the children. They love ;
iscarets because they taste good? ;
ver gripe or sicken.?Adv. ;
Die when I may, I want it said of j
j, by those who know me best, that !
^ ' * Af.S_Ll. J ]
always piucKea a uiisue anu pmut- <
a flower when I thought a flower ]
>uld grow.?Lincoln. J
IBERG MERC
>ARTMENT ST<
ABBEVILLE, S. C
nplete
hoes and
For you to ma)
nd for every day
id becom
ldise assures satisfac
lving wa
e of seeing everythin
liow you.
BERG MERI
INCORPORATED .
IheBe
Of the!
The Anderson F
i "FISH AND 1
: Is that their customers
; know there is nothing 1
I there is anything quit<
j: the gilt edge value of
is the crops m?
''Word to the wise."
We can furnish yo
We have Soda for i
|i We have special co
j; at the F "utilizer Mill.
I ANDERSON PH(
i 117 TP P41
|: Sold at the same
|l results are so much bet
:antile co. j
stock of I
t 1 . :M
rurmsmngs |
ke your selection f
" WmM
ming styles
:tion for men and young
.11 cabinets
g before you buy. fj|
CANT1LE CO.
i
st Proof 11
Popularity of iji
'hosphate & Oil Go.'s
BLOOD GUANO" [1
use it year after year. They ;jj
better and they don't believe ]||
i as good. The best proof of ] \
this "Fish and Blood" goods i ;
ide when it is used.?
u with Potash goods.
sale. i|;
nveniences for loading wagons
3SPHATE & OIL CO. |
ifcMER, Secretary. I|:
price as the others, but the jj;
for ""Wnrrl fn t.TiP WIRft.ii
" '" :" : I.. '. . -