The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, November 01, 1918, Page FOUR, Image 4

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vvvvvvvvvvvvvvv V V COLD SPRING NEWS. 0 Cold Springs, Oct. 30.?Miss Rubj Mann spent Saturday night and Sun? -j-i day Willi iuiso i/casic "n't,. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Kay and twc children spent Sunday at Mr. M. B Kays. Mr. W. B. Uldrick and familj spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. T F. Uldrick. Misses Allie Belle and Bessie Mc Combs spent Saturday night anc Sunday at Mr. W. A. Hagen's. Born?to Mr. and Mrs. A. B. New ell, Oct. 23, 1918, a daughter. Mrs. C. P. McMahan successfullj "underwent two operations at Dr Pryor's Hospital last week, and is getting on nicely at this writing. Born?to Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Cul hreth, Oct. 25th, 1918, a daughter. Messrs. Roy McCombs and Marvir King spent Sunday with Mr. Erskine Haeen. Mrs. F. E. Hagen and family spenl Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Stroud. Miss Mattie Cochran is spending some time with Mr. and Mrs. R. S Culbreth. MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEYTROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers?Meat forms uric acid. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts ' occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become Bluggish and weaken/ then you Buffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; ' take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate slupgish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids . in urine, bo it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure, and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. X MM HOT WAT IE IF TOO Dlilll A R0S7 COMFLEIE0M Says we can't help but look l better and feel better after an inside bath. N I ? 1 To look one's best and feel one's best Is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken cach day leave in the alimentary organs a ccrtain amount of indigestible materia!, which if not c!i's?natc?/ form toxins xtn?l poisons Vk'o'i are then sucked into ihe blood through, the very ducts which are into suck in only nourislimertt to sustain iue oC'J?.-' If you want to see the gfcr/ P* healthy biooui in your cheeks, to s<?*. your skin get clearer and clearer, you are tolU to drink every morning upon 'arising, *a glass of hoi water with a tenspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of washings the waste matcual and toxins I'wsvm +V?/\ elnmoMi Hl'ftr Iri/lnftVA "51 1!M tivnxi tAJV OLUItlUVU, ill v?t w bowels, thus cloansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food into the stomach. Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this pliosphated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. A quarter pound of limestone plios1 - phate costs very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens tho skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly more important than outside cleanliness, because tho skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. Engraved Cards and Invitaions? I The Fress and Banner Co. BHsSkj , HOME DEMONSTRATION 01 SHOLARSHIPS AWARDED bi si The ladies who attended the Win- w , throp short course in June, and oth- a: er members of the Home Demonstra- b r tion Clubs who were instrumental in a; raising money for two sholarships for Canning and Poultry Club mem- b > berfe, will be interested in learning j tl . to whom these scholarships were E awarded. S r Miss Catherine Jenkins, Edisto y Island, Charleston County, was awarded the "Parrott-Johnson Chain " Scholarship"; and Miss Ella N. ^ I Boulware, Richburg, Chester Coun- ^ ty, was awarded the Dora Dee Walk-J ^ ' er 4H Scholarship. Miss Jenkins;0 j is a member of the Sophmore Class,] ^ ^and Miss Boulware is a member of j * j the Junior Class. These girls arej^" eligible for the scholarships in ac-j | cordance with the rules outlined by I " j the Delegates and these awards j j were made after carfully considering,^ 1 j every eligible student, including j ^ : | those already in college and those | ! coming as Freshmen. The girls ap- ^ ' | preciate the scholarships very much, j11 | and the fact that both of them were j e going to have Dining Room Scholar- j r' ' ships this year in order to pay their j u expenses shows that they are worthy of the Home Demonstration Scholar- a ships. ^ Each scholarship is worth $149,' which is the cost of a year at Win- j ^ 1 j throp, not including uniform, and jwith free tuition. The "Johnson-'t. j Parrott Chain Scholarship" was rais- i g I ed by the women and girls attending j the Winthrop short course. The a- n j mount raised was $156, which is on c ! deposit at the National Union Bank l ... c I oi kock mil. mis win support tne I scholarship for this year and leave a balance of $7. The delegates ex-J^ ! pressed the hope that the women and ^ girls who come to the Short Course J each year will raise the necessary Q I amount to keep up the scholarship ^ j from year to year. If this fund is e j kept up each year, -the delegates de-! ? I cided that the scholarship should be jy I given to one girl for two years and _ I Cl so on. { "The Dora Dee Walker 4H Schol- C] I arship was raised by the Home i j Demonstration Club members thru- ^ I Helps HI Sick K I Women 0* Cardui, the woman's w tonic, helped Mrs. Wil- Rg&I liam Eversole, of Hazel Ergl al Patch, Ky. Read what ; she writes: "I had a Efci general breaking-down of my health. I was in ^3 ^ bed for weeks, unable to klra St get up. I had such a B&T* weakness and dizziness, fepfe. N .. . and the pains were j very severe. A friend J?|j told me I had tried every- m n thing else, why not Cardui ? ... 1 did, and soon saw it was helping cr me ... After 12 bottles, Jffia I am strong and well." ft TAKE The Woman's Tonic ^ ? til gyspx Do you feel weak, diz- mm >0 z^' worn*?u^ *s y?ur tv| lack of good health caused \&J| aCl g&|( from any of the com- \?jji V. plaints so common to women? Then why not give Cardui a trial? It should surely do for you 1 what it has done for so many thousands of other j^l^l women who suffered?it gOG t;. should help you back to tol ar by^? Ask some lady friend rn who has taken Cardui. EroB of EtefiP She will tell you how it or helped her. Try Cardui. All Draggists ?0 at the State. The amount in the ank at present is $166, which will lpport the scholarship for one year ith a balance of $17. If this scholrship is continued by the Club memers, the same rules apply to it that pply to the scholarship above. The omen and girls who attended the egan this scholarship fund and said lat they felt sure that the Home lemonstration members thruout the tate would like to keep it up from ear to year. Both of these scholarships had to e given to girls who had been memers of the Canning and Poultry Hubs. They must also be entitled > free tuition, according to the rules f the State Board of Charities and orrections. ABOR SHORTAGE HURTS OIL MILLS Horace L. Tilghman, director of ie federal employment bureau in olumbia, Tuesday addressed letters > all chairmen of community labor oards, in which he suggested that lass meetings of business men and mployers be called to discuss labor elief measures, where field men are nable to help the situation. Relief 0 the oil mills is the first considertion, Mr. Tilghman emphasizes, and : is suggested that women be used 1 i-' - - L1 - T_ 1L. 7nerever pracucauxe. m uxe xenei 0 the community board chairmen, Ir. Tilghman says: "If your board, with the aid of he field man, can not relieve the ituation, I would suggest that you all a meeting of the leading busiess men and employers of youi ommunity and see if some relief annot be provided. The different mployers should give up one or lore men to this service, according t> the number of men employed by hem." The cottonseed crushing business f the State is in a deplorable con ition, according to reports from evry section. Indicative of the gener1 situation is the letter from the larion Cotton Oil Company, ex erpts from which follow: "We have to date not averaged rushing to one-half our capacity nd have not been able to work uf> le first green seed purchased, which re consequently heating and being imaged. We are unable to buy ore seed until we get the bad ones orked up, and the large stock which le surrounding ginneries have in orage will heat and damage beluse the oil mills can not handle lem in reasonable time. The prodits made from these damaged seed e considerably below prime in .lality, especially in oil, which iows hi^h loss in refininsr and oilier ise off." It is suggested by the Marion .mill ithorities that the question of furughing negro registrants now in imp be asked of the war authorfes until relief is brought.?The ;ate. EW EXPRESS RATE WILL BE ENFORCED BY COMPANY SOON Washington, Oct. 26.?New ex ess rates involving average incases of about 10 per cent, applied ainly on short hauls, will be initial T? o i 1 ny Express company with the apoval of Director General McAdoo, raise $24,000,000 added revenue, .If of which will go to the express mpany to meet contemplated wage Ivances for transporting express atter. The interstate commerce commissi today approved the methods of plying higher rates, proposed by e express company, but suggested me plan should be worked out be'een the company and the railroad ministration to give all the added venue to the company, instead of aiding it with the railroads acrding to terms of the existing conact. Director General Mc.Adoo tonight mounced, however, that the sugistion would not be followed on e ground that the railroads are en;led lo a proportionate share of iy new revenue on account of the glicr co>t of hauling express. The ilroads now receive 50 1-4 per cent every dollar received by the ex ess company for transportation. Consequently, the express comsny will not proceed immediately raise charges, but these rates will ; subject to review by the interate commerce commission on comaint of shippers. The new rates would be a maxi-( = ?? ? J mum of 17 cents per hundred pounds ' higher on first-class shipments, and 12 cents on second class, in so called first zones, or short hauls, generally I less than 100 miles. For longer 1 hauls, first and second class rates would be advanced 12 and 8 cents a ' ! hundred pounds, respectfvely, as I maxima. In addition 10 cents per l , hundred pounds, regardless of dis' tance, would be added to commodity ! rates. The express company has estimated that of the $23,679,000 which the j proposed rates should produce, $17,j 037,000, or more than two-thirds, would come from transportation in ' the first zone. The entire $11,780,000 which the express company would receive from the increased revenue is to go to pay higher wages to employes who did not share in the previous wage J advances. 1 ?Buy W. S. S.? I. ! '| ?Buy W. S. S.? j LADIES! DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR 'i 1 Use Grandma's Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody > will Know. ; ~ The use off Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to Its natural j 1 color dates back to grandmother's1 t time. She used it to keep her hair j l beauUfully 'dark, glossy and attrac-, , tive. Whenever her hair took on that j .1 dull, faded or streaked appearance,; this simple mixture was applied with; : wonderful effect But brewing at home is mussy ana: ' out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at. .any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth'a Sage and Sulphur Compound," you ' will get this famous old preparation,1 i improved by the addition of other ingredients, which can be depended up- j I on to restore natural color and beauty , to th9 hair. I A well-known downtown drugglsl; says it darkens the hair so naturally, ' and evenly that nobody can tell it has '.been applied. You simply dampen a; . sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one; ' strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, it becomes I beautifully dark and glossy. f Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite; for those who desire a more youthful | appearance. It Is not intended foi the cure, mitigation or prevention olj disease. 1' || Beginning a 1 I Will J 1 the His is p? Peavine He arid Oaf. i ? .-"i U" l! Househoh [J DONALDS, BSBIM rHE MOUNTAIN COMES TO MAX Max couldn't come to the East Side?so the East Side came to Max. It came in the shape of a copy of a Yiddish newspaper that made its way to the very front trench. Max read it through the glass of a gasmask, amid the thunder of shells; he read it through three times, dwelling on every little advertisement and paragraph that was reminiscent of home. Then Max wrote a letter and asked the Jewish Welfare Board to send Yiddish papers to the boys up front. "It is such a great pleasure to receive them," he wrote, "that we cannot hope to be able to thank you till we all come home." $300,000 DAMAGE DONE IN SOUTH CAROLINA'S FLOOD Greenville, S. C., Oct. 26.?With streams in this section at almost normal levels today, sufferers from the Is Your Blooi If it is, Yo Anaemic, run-down, nerve result from poor or thin formula of Vinol, printed that it contains the very make good blood. It soc tite, improves digestion,< benefit from your daily fc Drewcville, N. H. ..... * t-j.? 2_ U-J " My aaugoter woa euitteuiiu, uou poor blood and suffered from indigestion and bilious attacks. As Vinol helped my eon, I gava it to my daughter ? she soon improved in health, and it has built her up and restored her health."?Mrs.N.curnell. For all rnn-down, nervooa, anaemic coi feeble old people and delicate chili IwliraBB P. B. SPEED, And Druggists f ^ 110 A. M., No 5ell at Public Ou cl-\Qof Ri rl r] nv TnTT JL CONSISTING OF iy, Stover, Fodc straw, Farm hnt Cattle i and Kitchen 1 WBamBBBmMmm flood that followed an unprecedented rainfall Wednesday and Thursdaywere endeavoring late today to form an estimate of their losses, which it is believed will exceed $300,000. There were no lives lost, according to the best available information, although unconfirmed reports are that several negroes were drowned when their houses were swept away. HIGH PRICES ARE PAID FOR PICKING SOUTH'S COTTON Washington, D. C., Oct. 26.?The high cost of cotton picking is revealed in figures of the department of agriculture recording average prices paid in all the southern states for gathering the crop. The statistics show that Georgia cotton pickers received $1.05 per 100 pounds, Alabama has the lowest average, 92 cents, while Florida farmers paid about $1.34. ?Buy W. S. S.? i Poor? u Need Vinol >us, devitalized conditions I blood. A glance at the I I on the label, will show I ' ingredients necessary to I >n creates a healthy appe- I md helps you to get full H >od, and builds you up. H Bradford, Pa. . B9 "I have used Vinol for impover* I ished blood. I was broken out with I a rash and run down bo it was hard H for me to keep about my work. H Other medicines aid nogood, but Vinol H enriched my blood ana improved my H condition very rapidly.' '-Rose Lasky. H iditlons, weak women, overworked men, H iren, there Is no remedy like VinoL H DRUGGIST Everywhere BBKBHBH SALE j I ^ 19, '18 I ler, Wheat |l dements, ill 7urniture ill