T V/U1XV. UV4W J f f v**j vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv V V FAIRFIELD V vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv Fairfield, July 16.?Misses My tie and Ruth Young spent Saturdi night and Sabbath with Misses Irei and May Belle Young. A WISE AND When prices are hig can be had on easy ter duces all he can, mark* at low rates. When prices are lo credit is hard to obtain, all he can and borrows Now is the time to p row when the banks at circulating. In 1914 when cottoi about not producing so and farmers could no! were sold out. Money terest high. Keep money circula and banks will lend at to get Northern money cotton. Sell your products m borrow money while fi business man, and bai crease your products, 1 ?*?/! kni>i>nw at a low ra C4A1V& WA A V ?V %* ?? WW - w your products. The wise man is boi crease his yield, be it f etc., because money ca products bring high pri to wait for prices to go tight and interest high, of a life-time to get ca rates and develop the S ern money and investii (Adver | jjj On a 1 a < 9 ||j In addi yfj keeping o ffi patented, jjj abundanc 2U impurities | AUT S is a blessii is conscienti ^ fitting do( ffi ly insulati Sfi INSURE jg COLDNE S tomatic g vents the ifi flavors j Sfi PERFEC H FOOD, S best. ij; You sin yj Automatic ffi your refri |. w.. ^ Dr. L. W. Sheppard dined with Mr j E. C. Young and family on last Saby bath. \ Misses Rebecca, Margaret and Ruby Young spent last Iriday with t- Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Crawford. iy Mrs. Joe Russell and Mrs. Hugh ne Bowen called to see the Misses Cres-| I well and Mrs. M. A. Bowen one day' I FOOLISH MAN. h, money is plentiful and ms. The wise man promts all he can and borrows w, money is scarce and . The wise man then buys > as little as possible. >roduce, to sell and to bor-j e eager to keep the dollar i was down, you talked much, about "buy a bale" :'borrow or get credit and r was then scarce and ini fSrinr anrl KlieinPSS 1ft outh by borrowing Northig it in Southern soil. Publicity Campaign. tisement.) iririw m n ririnnnn r*i r i r? JLJuUUIJ UULJUUUUUI lot day you'll say "Bless that water tion to its 100 per cent, se -C A I yUUi iUUU, tiivr n.utvuiai built-in water cooler, give e of drinking water that i i can reach. The OMATIC Refrig ig, too, for its economy < ous workmanship put into )rs?its thorough9d 8-piy walls? A CONSTANT SS, while the aucirculation premixing of food f, a n d INSURES FLY KEPT A\<= tasting its very / | ''if npiy must see me ~ c before you buy gerator. VA. CALV last week. f . Miss Mary Jane Young died at Ll her home near Hartwell, Ga., Tues-j day, July 10th, 1917. Her remains^ ^ were brought and laid to rest in | Long Cane cemetery in the presence: of many friends and relative!?. Fun- i eral services were conducted by Rev. ^ "D T? | XV* X' iJiauivj* <1V Mr. Tommie Young and sister,' pe Miss Maggie, also Mr. W. H. Kenne- 78 dy, dined at the home of Mr. Joe tl< Young on Sabbath. SP Mr. J. W. Long dined with Mr. " W. R. Bowen on last Sabbath. m' Mr. Claude Martin of Greenwood, spent a few days last week with his ^ grandfather, Mr. W. H. Bowick. CQ Mrs. J. W Long is spending a while at Lethe with her daughter, Mrs. R. M. Wiley. j pr Mr. Charlie Brown spent Tuesday ne night with Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Craw-j til ford. j st; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Creswell called th to see Mrs. M. A. Bowen and the! *r Misses Creswell on last Sabbath. Mrs. R. A. Crawford called to see 66 Mrs. Joe Young one day last week. . "Pet." w] gr FREE OF CHARGE. se ri c< Why suffer with indigestion, dys-! pepsia, torpid liver, constipation, T sour stomach, coming-up-of-foodafter-eating, etc., when you can get a sample bottle of Green'# August Flower free at P. B. Speed's drug h( store. This medicine has remarkable ; curative properties, and has demon- j a strated its efficiency by fifty years of ^ success. Headaches are often camsed C by a disordered stomach. la August Flower is put up in 25 and m 75 cent bottles. For sale in all civil- f( ized countries. q, jfrpvriL'lit. by McClure Newiptper Syndic*^ ^ Next |! WM I'M rP L y//////A ?ti cooler" | J >rvice in the 8jj L ;ie, with its Sj is a constant Ee! 10 odors or |p Si p erator I \ )f ice. The jn; I it?its tight- gj| J ? * E p ^S i *i sh; ? ? ^?~r ffi! ? v a ERT |: IE P I: |s ITE POTATO BLIGHT SPRAY ork Should Begin as Soon as Plants Are Six Inches High and Continue at Intervals. The weather conditions which favor e spread of late potato blight are a mild, still atmosphere with a temrature around 73 degrees F. Above F. and below 50 F. there is prac:ally no germination of the blight o A'rno fiinno enrnvinc fnr lflte hlicht I WL USJ. K/?UViV ..j, - ? 0 .v. w- _ s. preventive rather than a curative ensure, spraying should begin as soon n the plants are six inches high and ould continue at intervals of one or 'o weeks, depending upon weather nditions until near the time of ma- e rity. The effectiveness of spraying as a eventive depends upon the thorough:ss with which it is done. It is essenil that the whole plant be kept con- antly covered with the mixture if e blight spores are to be prevented I, om finding a place of entrance into I i surface. The wheels of the sprayer do not f em to injure the vines sufficiently to | ; d source of apprehension, even | hen they are large and cover the I ound, as is often the case late in the f ason. 5TIMATE OF DAY'S PLOWING j ime Required to Plow an Acre De- | pends on Size of Plow and Number of Horses Used. Farmers frequently want to know j jw much land can be plowed in a day j ad how much work it requires to | eak an acre. Records at the Missouri 5 ollege of Agriculture on 2,122 acres of - *?- " 1 J O A nt ina snow mat n requireu o.t uuu^ ui an labor and 9.3 hours of horse labor >r each acre. Of course, the time re? uired to plow an acre will depend on le size of the plow and the number C horses used. A four-horse gang low with two 12-inch bottoms will avrage about 4.12 acres a day of 9.6 ours when it is running six inches eep. The same plow running eight iches deep will break a quarter of an ere less. A three-horse sulky with a 1 or 16-inch bottom will average about 5 acres at a six-inch depth, and iout .2 acre less for the eightlch depth. A two-horse 14-inch walk* ig plow will break about 1.75 acres a ay at a six-inch depth and about 2 ere less at the eight-inch depth. 00D RACK FOR IMPLEMENTS evice Shown in Illustration Keeps Tools Together and Saves Gardener Much Time. To have the tools within reach lakes for economy of time in putting i odd moments in the garden. Tools D.ve a way of scattering and hiding hen wanted most. A tool rack as ilistrated, placed In a handy place, eeps the tools together. Such a rack MOT Tlr I Garden Tool Rack. i merely a modification of a carpen;r's saw horse. Holes bored through ' le top hold the handles of tools and| board across the bottom Is lor the andles to rest on. LAN TO FERTILIZE TUBERS j Ise of Barnyard Manure and Acid Phosphate Recommended as ideal j by Ohio Station. Selection of a good clover sod where otatoes have not grown for at least ve years, and the use of barnyard lanure with acid phosphate are given y the Ohio experiment station aa leal conditions for fertilizing potaoes. After 23 years' investigations ,-itli this crop the experiment station dvises farmers to plow under 12 to 6 tons of manure per acre if plenty 3 available, and then to apply about 00 pounds of acid phosphate per acre s a surface dressing. If manure is carce four or five tons per acre may e used, and then 400 pounds of acid hospliate along with 100 pounds of. nirate of soda will yield about the ame results. These experiments have hown that fertilizer should be spread ver all the land and not confined to he.potato rows, for in this way the otato roots spread out more widely nd succeeding crops make better use f what the potatoes ledve. 00K OUT FOR SQUASH BUGS nsects Attack Melon, Cucumber and Squash Vines When Plants Are Small?Use Netting. Look out for the yellow striped quashbugs that attack melon, cucumer and squash vines when the plants re small. The best preventive is to ut a mosquito-netting tent over each ill, using two little sticks as supports, nd covering the edges with soil to old the netting in place. Erect these ?nts a.'3 soon as the plants come irough the ground, or sooner, and ?ave them in place until the vines bein to push for room. Then store the etting for future use. I 1785 COLLEGE OF CHAR South Carolina's Oldes 132d Year Begins Sept Entrance examinations at all the county-seats 'clock A. M. Four-year courses lead to the B. A. and B. S. ledical course is given. A free tuition scholarship is assigned to each Spacious buildings and athletic grounds, well xcelled library facilities. Expenses moderate. For terms and catalogu HARRISON I ^itiiiiuiiiMiiiiiiiituitiiiiMiiiiinnimiMMiMimiminminnmMiiiKitiimtuiJiiNmimiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiintitiiuiiMifintiifimiiirMNiii |4 . Something I fl/WiiM SH? \ () In our ye I PRESENTS^oK ] turns. Let i | Step in and get our sugges-7/0UrS. Oui tions before you go, anytllOU.Sd.Ild cir further. We can pleaseticleS tllftt 1 you. useful and ! W. E. JOHNSON, . Abbeville, S. C. ? II in . B ^^System m In Your Sav B Make your banl H show some headway pay-day. The man who cull MB j-pmahV savings hahit when 1 lEl prosperity and happiness ral Why not figure now j much you could pui every pay-day, then your savings syste by opening ar ^81 account with us on next pay-da I Safety?Honesty?Court The Nationa Abbeville S. (standardized) m^r For All LiveS EASY AND SAFE TO U KILLS LICE, TICKS, FLEAS, MITES. I RINGWORM, SCRATCHES, ETC. I EASE GERMS AND DRIVES A^ NON-IRRITATING. EFFECTIVE You can't afford to let lice, ticl eat your stock alive. Get a supply i follow directions. It will put an ei and give the stock a chance to thri Use it in barns, hog pens, chicken h nels--any place where there are veri KRESO DIP is a coal tar product, water. It does not burn or irritate li does not blister or take the hair off lik less and does more than any of these better investment than to buy some Y tioks, mites and fleas and prevent di the germs. One qallon of KRF!SO DIP make when mixed with water. Each lot ii by the manufacturers, therefore alwi 4* GIVE IT A TRI If HE McMURRAY I DRUG COMPANY A8K FPU W?| BOOKLB 1917 9 'LESTON t College I ember 28. 1 3 on Friday, July 13, at 9 '-<3 I degrees. A two-year precounty of the State. equipped laboratories, une, address IANDOLPH, President. - "J ii ii ii im imttTtmiuiim 11 iuii? iti iiiiiiimitMinitnHmtM ' * for the Newlyi difficult problem ift that will not be >y some one else. (ars of experience iped many puzzled :e judicious selects help you to make stock comprises a id one different ar u i wuuiu prove Dom highly acceptable. Jeweler A - ? T"T irnniiniiiniTiiiimiiBii? niiNniiiiinituMiiiiUHiiNimiiniiNraNuiiiMiiiiiMiunMim??MM?MM ? ingsfi k book n | for every 9j :ivates a sysyoung reaps wheii old. ust how MB MSr 5 asy?Service j| tl Bank c. 'OR MANGE, SCAB; I : DESTROYS DIS- I WAY FUES. I . INEXPENSIVE. I cs, fleas and mites of KRESO DIP and id to the parasltea ve and put on flesh. ouses and dog kenmln. It mlxea readily with L-~ u :e kerosene. It costs i. You ean't make a treso Dip to kill licei seaso bj destroying 3 s 60 to 75 gallons i STANDARDIZED ays the sams. AL. *.v' i