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SHORT COTTON CROP St. Matthews, Aug. 31.?What promised a few weeks ago to be something of a bumper cotton crop now promises to be a short crop with an early harvest. The recent) burning sun has practically cut off J the blooms and growing forms, while the bolls, many of them imperfectly! formed, are popping open at an in- j ? v credible rate. It hardly seems pos-! sible that rains will in any way affect the crop except perhaps to help the) fruit now on the stalk. The fields j are as white in many places as isj often the case in early October, andj in some places where the land is i light it is said that the greater part ! of the cotton is open. Farmers are; attributing the shortage partly to thej dry weather and partly to the ab-| sence of potash in fertilizers. A few who succeeded in getting potash are said to have benefited by it to a marked degree. jV'/ ?r. . VVVVVVV>^VVV v V LONG CANE V Pl^vvvvvvvvvvvvvv^ Long Cane. Sept. 3.?Dr. J. W.J Keller of the city, spent a few days of last week with his sister, Mrs. ly - J. R. Haddon. Cotton picking time will soon be here as we see it is opening real fast. Mr. R. B. Haddon spent Friday with friends at Martin's Mill. Mr. Ben King is at home from! Spartanburg. He was working there j at the carpenter's trade. Mr. Shelton Beauford spent a few( days of last week in Bethia with friends and relatives. Misses Linnie, Allie, and Clara, Beauford spent Friday with Miss Eppie Beauford. Mr. Eddie Keller was a business visitor to the city Monday. Miss Nina Beauford is spending this week in Troy with relatives and friends. / I We are glad to learn that Mr.' Edgar Keller is improving very much at the hospital. Mrs. W. D. Beauford and twin ?r daughters, Iona and Viola, are spending this week with the former's daughter, Mrs. A. L. Drennan at y Iva. v The farmers were sure glad to see the nice, rains. DRUGS EXCITE YOUR ' u-invpvc Iter CAT TS (Vll/llEi 1 >l| l/Wb wnu>? i|/r If Your Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers, Drink Lots of Water. When your kidneys hurt and your back feels hore, ,don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drug? that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you i keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removesthe body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they Strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of lroonincr kldneVS active. & O Drink lots of water?you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad 1 Salts; take a tablespoonful <n a glass of water before breakfast each morn-j ing for a few days and your kidneys1 will act fine. This famous salts is I Sfc* j made from the acid of grapes and] lemon juice, combined with Hthia,j and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; 4 also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot j injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. TV*t this olon Irepn tin thp water I ? ?* -* ? drinking, and no doubt you will won/ , ' der what became of your kidney 'A trouble and backache.?Adv. vvvvvvvvwvvvvvv * V ANTREVILLE. V V V vuvvvvvvvvvvuv $ ; _ J Antreville, Sept. 3.?Rev. and Mrs1 M. W. Hook and family of Marion, were the guests of their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Haddon last week Rev. and Mrs. W. S. Martin left last week for a three weeks stay; with home folks in Hendersonville,! N. C. We will miss them very much, but hope they will have a pleasant trip. v> ; Misses Elizabeth and Martha Kil ; T >/ 1 f lingsworth of Columbia, visited rela-J V tives here last week, viz: Dr. and: Mrs. Anderson, Mrs. nuoe rnnce. and Mr. Killingsworth and family. Mrs. John Knox of Birmingham, Ala., visited her mother-in-law, Mrs. Amanda Knox, last week. - Messrs. Johnnie and William Lander, of Brazil, were the guests of J their cousin, Mrs. J. A. Anderson, j last week. The young people findj it interesting to hear them play the, piano and talk of the customs in yV* /. / I /f . . I Brazil. Miss Sara Boyd came up to An treville Thursday afternoon an spent a short time with friends. Mis Boyd was our efficient music teache last year and formed many friend while here, who welcome her i: Antreville any time. Miss Marie Black gave a delighl ful party last Wednesday evening i honor of her visitor, Miss Alph Graves. Delicious cake ana crear was served during the evening. Miss Pet Hawthorne of Latimer, i the guest of her sister, Mrs. S. J Wakefield. George Gray, and Elmore Subei who have been in Augusta, Ga., fo several days, are home again. Miss Gladys Wilson of Watts, ac companied Miss Martin to the Dc mestic Scijence class at Antrevill Friday afternoon. Miss Wilson is very interesting young lady and w are glad to have her visit Antrevill any time. Miss Winton and Mr. Archie Kes ton have returned home after pleasant stay with relatives near Bel ton and Anderson. Misses Winton and Althea Keator Prude Mann, Annie Bell Little, Grac Donald, Eva Black, and Messrs. Ai chie Keaton, J. W. Wilson, Marcu Pennell, Joe Feemster and Fre Brown, were the spend-the-da guests of Misses Olivia Pearl an Lillie Branyon last Saturday. Mr. Boyce Wakefield is at hom again after spending sometime wit his sister, Mrs. H. L. Hunt in Shelbj N. C. Messrs. Joe Feemster and Fre Brown of Gaffney, were callers ii our community Friday evening. Misses Prude Mann and Anni Bell Little of near Abbeville, wer the attractive guests of Misses Win ton and Althea Keaton the week-enc Mesdames E. N. McCarter an W. W. McCarter spent last Frida with Mrs. Tom Stokes. Mesdames D. L. Haddon and Rc ger Williams spent last Thursda with Miss Allie May Power o Brownlee. A CHILD HATES OIL, CALOMEL, PILLS FOR LIVER AND BOWEL * i Give "California Syrup of Figs" i Cross, Sick, Feverish, Constipated. Look back at your childhood dayi Remember the "dose" mother insisl ed on?castor oil, calomel, cathai tics. How you hated them, how yo fought against taking them. With our children it's differen Mothers who cling tothe old fori of physic simply don't realize whs they do. The children's revolt i well-founded. Their tender littl "insides" are injured by them. If your child's stomach, liver an bowels need cleansing, give only de licious "California Syrup of Figs, It's action is positive, but gentl< Millions of mothers kep this harmles "fruit laxative" handy; they knoi children love to take it; that it neve fails to clean the liver and bowel andsweeten the stomach, and that teaspoonful given today saves a sic child tomorrow. Ask your drugigst for a 50-cer bottle of "California Syrup of Figs; which has full directions for babies children of all ages and for growr ups plainly on each bottle. Bewar of counterfeits sold here. See tha it'is made by "California Fig Syru Company." Refuse any other kin with contempt.?Adv. PRICE OF WHEAT. Chicago, Aug. 31.?The Goverr ment price of $2.20 sent for whea is fair, should make flour sell a approximately $10 a barrel, an should enable bakers to make a ? cent, 14-ounce loaf of bread, Jam A. Patten, "wheat king," declare today. Charles Paesch, president of th Illinois Master Bakers' Associatioi declared the 5-cent loaf of bread ha been relegated to the days of th prairie schooner, so far as the bs kers are concerned. Bakers ca make a 5-cent loaf if they get $9 o $10 flour, he said, but he exp~esse the belief that flour can not be mad at that price from wheat which cost 2.20 a bushel. BIG RICE CROP IN SPAIN. Valencia, Spain, Aug. 30.?Th rice crop in Spain this year is e> tx-aordinarily plentiful.. It will r? quire the services of 15,000 worker to harvest it. AMERICAN AIRMAN KILLED. Washington, Aug. 27.?The firs death of an American navy flier a the French front was announced her today in official dispatches to th navy department. He was George Herbert Manlej a machinists' mate in the naval aerc nautical corps, and was killed in a airplane accident, the nature o which was not described. Manle was a son of Herbert Manley of Ma plewood, N. J. J SPREAD BEAN RUST ON VINES Wisconsin Plant Disease 8j>eciallst of Wisconsin College Gives Some r i Timely Advice. sj ^ n "Farmers who understand conditions in the spread of bean rust or ;-; anthracnose, as It Is termed, never colli j tivate or walk through the field while a the vines are wet with rain or dew." nj This is the information given by R. j E. Vaughan, plant disease specialist at the College of Agriculture, University j. j of Wisconsin. When the bean plants 'j are dry there is less danger of brushI ing off the tiny spores which spread the disease. r: The bean anthracnose, In common ! with one or two other spot diseases of :-1 garden beans, is most successfully controlled by careful selection of healthy e seed. Owing to the greatly Increased a acreage of beans in Wisconsin this e! year it is highly important that growi ers become familiar with conditions j which affect the crop. Spraying Is of ! imip vfline in controlling the disease l" under field conditions, a ! KEEPING HOME GARDEN BUSY1 ' By Using Intensive Methods and Suee oewlve Planting Maxim Amount of Food 8ecured. d As soon as one crops has been hary vested In the garden the gronnd should d be prepared and another one planted. The early crops are removed In time e for late ones and by practicing suc^ cesslve planting a supply of fresh vegetables can be had all summer and Into r'i the late fall. Sweet corn, string beans, beets, turnips, tomatoes, squash, pumpd kin8, late cabbage, cucumbers, winter n onions, fall lettuce, radishes, spinach, are some of the crops that can be e planted after the early things are out e of the way. Sometimes It is practicah ble to start corn or beans between the I radish and lettuce rows and by time j the latter crops are used up the former will hare made a good start By y following Intensive nlethods and successive planting the garden can be kept busy all season and be made to y produce the maximum amount of food f j material. ! TO CLEAN SEPARATOR BOWLS ! Handy Washing Machine Will Perform S. Operation in Short Order?Simpler Than Brush. One of the cream separator manufacturing companies has added to Its j list of handy things a washing machine 3 ! which will in a few minutes clean the separator bowl. You stick the washer | Into the separator after you are r" through with it, turn a crank and U L_ s\ a! Separator Washer. k quickly find the bowl Is clean. It Is ! much simpler and easier than the old tt hand and rag ttr brush method and Is a boon when you are all tired out and jJ face the prospect of having to clean out the separator or risk disease by ' letting it go dirty until tomorrow.? I Bnoi'noofl . X' OiUIiUg AJUOiUV.^O< ! d> BLAME MOLES FOR INJURIES Real Miscreants Are 8matl Animals That Follow in Runways? Skins Are Valuable. '-] Although complaints of damage done it by moles are frequently heard, the real it | damage is often done by umall animals d that follow the moles' runways and ;_| damage corn and other seeds. The ,s mole Itself lives very largely on earth j i worms, white grubs, beetles, spiders and other insects. They very rarely eat seeds. In recent years, this little e rodent has assumed a commercial lm i,! portance as a fur bearer, and there ts are now more than 8,000,000 mole e pklns sold annually at the great Lont. don fur sale. r CAUSES OF MANY ACCIDENTS d e Horse Liable to Hip Fracture by Hits ting Doorpost on Being Released From Shafts. Narrow driveways are responsible for such accidents as fracture of the hip, which may also be caused by a e' horse running against a doorpost when >1 allowed to rush out of the shafts of a s-j vehicle immediately he finds himself s unharnessed. In the case of twowheel rigs, after all the buckles and straps are free, it Is better to push the 4-Y%s* Kn?OQ fV? o n laf fho YClilVJie XI ULLl IUC XAV* OV, tuuu .v. horse walk out of the shafts. * APPLICATION OF LIME HELPS e Inherent Fertility of Soils Gradually Becomes Available Only as It Disintegrates. >- Some soils have an Inherent fertility n that gradually becomes available only f as It becomes disintegrated. This pulyj verizatlon usually is accomplished 1 through constant and thorough working, but in many cases an application | of lime would hasten such action. |GIRLS! WHITEN SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a Beauty Lotion for a Few Cents to Remove Tan, Freckles, Sallowness.? Your grocer has the lemons and *.ny drug store or toilet counter will supply you with three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Squeeze the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle, then put in the orchard white jmd shake well. This makes a quarter pint of the very best lmeon skin whitener and complexion beautifier known. Massage this fragrant, <reamy lotion daily into the face, neck, arms and hands and just see how freckles, tan, sallowness, redness and roughness disappear and how smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, and the beautiful results will surprise you.?Adv. ' First Men Mobilized Will B? Whites, According to New Order* from Provost Marshal General. Adjt. Gen. W. W. Moore, who ha? charge of the mobilization of the .'State's quota in the national anny, i;oday transmitted orders to locul exemption boards throughout the K MAW 4"Vl IJbOtC l<V llJVUKX^C %J VCUU VJL l/liVH quota on September 5 instead of the 30 per cent, originally planned. In addition to the 5 per cent, called on September 5, 40 per cent will be mobilized September 19, 40 pe cent. Ociober 3, and the remaining 16 per :ent as soon thereafter as practicable. "In view of the fact," the order states, "that the 6 per cent called for September b is such a .small number from each local board it will be necessary to string out the mobilization for five days, but on the contrary the 5 per cent, can move readily on the day set forth without interfering in any way with the local traffic of the respective railroads.". Only white men are to be included in the first 5 per cent called. "CASCARETS" FOR A 1 COLD, HAD BREATH OR SICK HEADACHE ] Best for Liver and Bowels, for Biliousness, Sour Stomach and Constipation. Get a 10-cent box now. . j Furred Tongue, Bad Colds, Indi- i gestion, Sallow Skin and Miserable ] Headaches come from a torpid liver i and clogged bowels, which cause your i stomach to become filled with undi- : gested food, which sours and fer- < ments like garbage in a swill barrel, j That's the first step to untold misery ; ?indigestion, foul gases, bad breath, < yellow skin, mental, fears, everything j Al-.i. _ 1 !L1. J A . uiul 10 numuiv auu iittUBeatiiig. jtl . Cascaret tonight "will give your conI stipated bowels a thorough cleansing :and straighten you out by morning. |They work while you sleep?p.- 10 cent box from your druggist will keep youfeeling good for months. Millions of men and women take a Caacaret now and then to keep their stomach, liver and bowels regulated, and never know a miserable mo: ment. Don't forget the children? their lttle insides need a good, gentle cleansing, top.?Adv. ."SAMMIES" WAS OF UNINTENTIONAL ORIGIN I( The origin of nicknames is lost usually in a blaze of uncertain rumor and of perfervid imagination. ' When no true explanation is avail- < able, someone gifted with the latter j starts out with a pen?or a type- \ writer?and evolve# one. ' ] j There has been a deal to do over i the name "Srimmies," which the i French rare said to have christened ' our soldiers with on their arrival in : La Belle France. The boys them- 1 ? 1? . 1- A 1*1.. ii. _ t.11. i selves say tney ao noi use it s on. i It's undignified, they complain. But the fact, is?if reports sent in persoqfal letters by officers to their colleagues still remaining at home are to be trusted?that the French never thought of such a name. The goes that at the "port in France," where our first contingent landed, the fighting lads swung into I the main street of the town to march | to the railroad depot and were given I | such a reception as made them al-| most weep. Crowds that completely covered' the sidewalks lined the street along1 which the American fighting lads strode their way. And up and down J :those crowds swept the cry: I i "Vivent nos Amis! Vivent nos1 Amis!" (Long live our friends.) !f The boys strode on. Some listened. ! One of them heard it with his ears, 3 but didn't get it with his mind, be- ^ cause he did not understand the \ language. ' <j "By George, they're calling us i jSammie!" he exclaimed to his line- 4 .mate out the corner of his mouth. 1 jAnd that explanation went about (among the soldiers. Then a corresjspondent heard it from one of them. 'It got on the cable and the trouble i was started.?Atlanta Georgian. t FaTAnno 1J7 I- i vv e ure uiwuys i We have an army mers continually "h store. We. have b newer goods, and n you usually find. N< want in line of Dry Shoes, Ladies' Reac find here a bigger va Money, or an eque Money than anywhere else. We advertise to get new 't , 't customers. Are you going to learn why It pays to trade here. A full and complete line of Ladles', Men and Children's 8hoes for Fall and Winter. beacon 8hoes for men,/ Price $4.00 to SeLsoL 5 ' _ _ D. POLI Abbe villi 3ARNARD BARUCH, A SOUTH CAROLINIAN fiii Mother, Mist Isabelle Wolf of 1 Winnsboro?At 47 Years of Age I He is Worth Millions. Mr. Baruch is a son of the venerable Simon Baruch, who is still, de- ' 3pite his years, a leader among the best medical thought in New York, i and was in his younger days in Soilth Carolina, when he entered the Con- : federate army as a surgeon and serv ed under the Stars and Bars as a surgeon until Lee's surrender. Dr. 1 Baruch was practicing medicine at 1 Camden, S. C., when his son Ber- ] nard M. was born there, August 19, 1 1870. Dr. Baruch is or Prussian 1 birth, being born in Schwersenz, near 1 Posen. Mr. Baruch's mother, who ; ?ra3 Miss Isabel Wolfe Of Winnsboro, 3. C., is, however, of old American stock, being a member of the Daugh- < ters of the American Revolution. i Mr. Baruqh was brought to ' this : ;ity from the South when he was 11 i /ears old, his parents coming to Man- i liattan to live chiefly because of the l better educational advantages here i for their sons. Bernard immediately < Eras sent to the public schools here 1 and then was graduated a bachelor : sf arts from the Colleg of the City i af New York when he was 19 years i aid. - Started at $3 a Week. ] The day after his graduation he : went to work for Whitall, Tatum and i Company and was assigned to weigh- < ing the mails at $3 a week, He stuck 1 to the mail weighing job a year, when < fie got a new job in a small bank, for j a while, after he took a trip to Eu- i ? ?-* v _ j.xi nn. *1 _ - . rope wun ms iamer. vvnixe iie waa ] abroad his mother obtained a place < for him in the growing firm of A. A. ] Housman and Company. Here he < ?ot into touch with the big men of i Wall Street and in time was made a ] partner in the firm solely because of ] the great genius for finance he had ] shown. Although he had entered the , Housman firm at the age of 26 he ; retired from it at 32 worth more ] than $1,000,000. i In the meantime he had taken a night course in public accounting, aw and economics and passed his jar examination. Then after a short 1 zip to Europe he was sent by Wall Street financiers on a business trip i ;hrough the West, during which his j YOrK lor ine uuggenneim mteresutj md others was so successful that he! lecided Wall Street was his forte,) lot the bar; and from that time onj le stayed in the financial district here j ind soon had amassed a great for-J ,une. j It is little more than a score ofj rears ago when Mr. Baruch?who! vas 47 years old last Sunday?was| vorking as a clerk in Wall Street for >15 a week. Today he is rated finincially as the owner of a fortune 'somewhere between $10,00U,UUU! ind $20,000,000." PERSHING'S MESSAGE. It might be a mistake to draw: rom General Pershing's statement j he conclusion that no part of the) | . uncement . . it.'V-** busy because?, >: ' _? i.' ?' J .-t- b ui s^usnea cu?iu^ ?oosting" for this ?etter assortment, tore of them than o matter what you- 1 Goods, Clothing, ly-to-Wear you'll due for the Same il value for Less 5, S. C. ,, 4 ; American army will see battle' wt~ nee in France fcefore next spring* ' Undoubtedly the great war army- C which America is creating will not ' ?o on the firing line before that time, and it is entirely possible that ,v the same thing is true regarding t$e . Regulars now in France and the other. Regulars who will be sent there ./% ' That General Pershing meant to jive this latter impression*, however, v, is not altogether clear, i ln, the fir^/ place, nothing, is to be gained apprising the enemy of one's pla^a. >Y However this may be," the Genernl'a of o f ATYi nnf amn1iaai<niifl> +Vl a fftlltr, of hasty action is opportune. The public at large is earnestly opposed to a policy which would send an Am-' / H erican force into battle prematurely ? or before it had been properly prepared for its task. But here and there in this country are partisans unable to forego, any opportunity;to criticise the Government and those ; ?eek every opportunity to give the impression that our war work is tyg?ing and that our delay in gettingInto action on the European battle^ fields is purely and simply the re- . suit of incompetence at Washington. ^ A. VAOU*i<5, VM VV VMM*? J v*vu?v the mouths of those who have ai- ; ready uttered such criticisms and', r Beals the lips of others who would 30011 have been doing so. Very impressive is Pershing's appeal to us to try to realize the magnitude of the task before us. No man's words on this subject could v; carry more weight in America than his. They will be pondered and studied. They are provocativ e;of grave and sober thoughts. In effect they tell us that the German army is mighty, that the German lines are ( 9trong, that the successes which have been won on the western front are only the beginning of a tremendous: I, and costly task. They will help in no small measure to bring about the result which they were intended to promote?to create some approach, on the part of the people at home to ' an understanding of the effort that lies behind the war.?News and Cou- / rier. v Wm. Duckworth of Camp Sevier, was a visitor in the city the past week. , .'Ji l JHOHDHHOni The Beauty Secret. a Ladies desire that irresistible charm?a good complexion. Of course they do not wish others to know a beautifier has been used so they buy a bottle of ' Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDER and u?e according to simple direction*. Improvement is noticed at once. Soothing, coo Lin* and refreshing. Heals Sunburn, stops Tan. Pink, White. Rok-RcJ. 75c. at 'DraggUU or hi moil dlrtcL Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. Lyon Mf*. Co.. 40 South Fifth St. Brooklyn. N.Y. "i Kti