The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, November 12, 1918, Page THREE, Image 3
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V LOWNDESVILLE V
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School opened last Monday after
haveing been closed three weeks.!
Rev. G. A. Clotfelter is principal of
the school, Mrs. Gamewell Huckabee,
Mrs. J. B. Huckabee 2nd Miss
Lizzie Bell, assistants. The school
k has an enrollment of about one hundred
and twenty pupils.
The ginnery is running on full
time and is being kept very busy, j
From the amount of cotton that is j
being ginned, evidently there is no
great shortage of the fleecy staple
in fhi'c coct.inn. Verv little of the.
cotton is offered for sale, as farmers'
are expecting better prices, when war^
conditions become more settled.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Smith have tak- J
en charge of the hots!. Mrs. McGregor,
who has been conducting the!
business for the past year, has gone
to Columbia, where she will make
her home in the future.
Mrs W M Speer and Miss Kitty Kay!
have returned from a visit of several
weeks to relatives in Darlington and i
Blackstock. j
Mr. J. M. Baker, of Washington,!
D. C., is on a short visit to ms motner,,
Mrs. Mae Baker.
Mrs. E. F. Latimer and son, Marshall,
of Spartanburg, are visiting
tfri R. L. Smith.
$Miss Ruby Ficquette has gone to
jeesville, where she will teach this
winter.
Miss Minnie Lee Nickles has re-,
urned to her home at Greenwood,
fter a visit to her sister, Mrs. M. P.
IcCalla.
Miss Alpha Barnes, who is attend?g
school at Anderson, has return-1
i to her work.
Miss Veva Bonds if. employed at
le Bank during the rush of the
asy season.
n- 'f- 1 PUr.lr_
n Duni JLU 1UI. anu xtno. vn viumgHales,
Nov. 3rd, a son, Gordon
HHhornton.
Mrs. Emma Latimer has returned
Horn a visit to her sister, Mrs. Henry
^Hitimer, of Abbeville.
jMMrs. Dr. Kirkpatrick, daughter^
I WE Hav
I What
| it is Such
I Latest M<
Dress Go<
---T???.?r?i- ^ .. i _ !
LADIES'. ANE
Never before h?
of fashionable cos
$10.C
i Mil
; We are making
of our Millinery
all the latest sha]
rr.'ngs for you to i
a: e consistent wit
ic.-s. This depart
VVV IIITM All T
HUgjBg U?iiiiiiiiici, \
BHffl ^serve you in any \
HH Biack, White and
GLOVES
Kid and Silk
Lucille, Mrs. Dr. Speer, daughter,
Frances, and Mr. D. L. Barnes were
visitors to Anderson last week.
The following young ladies have
gone to resume their school worksince
the quarantine has been lifted:
Miss Cornelia Tennant, Abbeville,
Miss Ruby Anderson, Laurens, Miss
Mattie Lee Cooley, Gaffney, Misses
Kathleen and Corinne Anderson,
Bamberg.
Mr. D. L. Barnes has bought a
part of the Kay lands from The An->rson
Real Estate and Investmenl
Co., also Mr. J. W. McCalla has purchased
a part of the "Baker Quarsr"
lands from Mr. Jas. Baker. Bott
of these farms brought a good price
15 real estate goes high in this section.
QUIT MEAT WHEN
INTO BOTHER
Take a glass of Salts before breakfast
if your Back hurts or Bladder
is troubling you.
No mail or woman who eats meat regularly
can make a mistake by flushing the
kidneys occasionally, says a well-known
authority. Meat forms uric acid which
excites the kidneys, they become overworked
from the strain, get sluggish and
fail to filter the waste and poisons from
the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all
rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble,
nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and
urinary disorders come from sluggish
kidneys.
The moment you feel a dull ache in the
kidneys or your back hurts or if the
urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment,
irregular of passage or attended by
a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat
and get about four ounces of Jad
Salts from any pharmacy; take a
tablespoonful in a glass of water before
breakfast and in a few days your kidneys
will act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon juice,
oombined with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flush and stimulate
the kidneys, also to neutralize the acidf
in urine so it no longer causes irritation,
thus ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannoi
injure; makes a delightful effervescenl
lithia-water drink which everyone
should take now and then to keep th<
kidneys clean and active and the blooc
pure, thereby avoiding serious kidnej
?nmr>lipa+ir?T>o
Subscribe to The Press and Banner
wmmmmmsmmm
e Prosperity
More Colli
Unusual Va
xles of hash
xls! :
> MISSES' COATS.
ive we had such an arra>
its to offer our patrons.
0 to $40.00.
JLINERY
' a specialty this seasor
Department, and have
pes, designs, and trim
select from. Our price
h the quality and mater
;ment is m charge 01 ai
vho will be pleased t<
vay.
Tan.
1 PH
llll!IIIIIEIllllllillliililliSI8illMIIMIIllBillll!l
j STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, \
County of Abbeville.
PROBATE COURT.
j Citation for Letters of Administration.
! By J. F. MILLER, Esq., Judge of
Probate:
Whereas, C. J. Hampton hath
made suit to me, to grant him Letters
of Administration with will annexed,
of the Estate and effects of
Claudius Robinson, late of Abbe;
ville County, deceased.
I These are therefore, to cite and;
I admonish all and singular the kindtl
red and creditors of the said Claudi|
us Robinson, deceased, that they be
! and appear before me, in the Court
j of Probate, to be held at Abbeville
j Court House, on Thursday, the 21st
I day of November, 1918, after pubI
lication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the
I- i -v? oriTT
i iorenoon, 10 snow cauac,, u
! they have, why the said Adminis|
tration should not be granted.
Given under my hand and seal of
the Court, this 7th day of November,
in the year of our Lord one
j thousand nine hundred and eighteen,
j and the 143rd year of American Inj
dependence.
Published on the 12th day of Nov.
I 1918, in The Press and Banner, and
? on Court House door for the
time required by law.
J. F. MILLER,
ll-12-3t. Judge of Probate.
!
! CORN PRODUCTION
ALSO FELL BEHIND
i
, Tobacco Seem* Only Crop Which is
Abo^e Average This Year.
, j Washington, Nov. 9.?Corn pro.
i duction for 1918 was 2,749,198,000
j ! bushels ,the department of agricul!
ture announced today This figure
| | is approximatly 410,000,000 bushels
i 1 less than the 1917 crop but approxij
-nately the same as the four year avi
' erage ending 1916.
I [ The potato crop fell to 390,101,J
j 000, fifty million less than in 1917.
1 j An increase of 70,000,000 pounds
! j is shown in the report on the tobacco
.crop. The production was 1,266,.
686,000 pounds.
IliiiiWK
and Peace i
d a People 1
nc \\tcx di
jai^c ao vv ou
ionable W eai
mt tm*
I LADIE5
In all the latest
colors; exceptional
- $20.00 I
i SHOES?SH<
Our line of Shoes
3 durability and wor'
I in Brown. Grey, Ta
and Military Heels.
$2.50 t
1LSON
iilillllBIBillllllllllillllllHIfJIIIISIilCI
5
4
The crop reporting board said the
| potato yield had confirmed earlier
estimates of a decreased production
due to droughts. The crop is now
estimated at 11 per cent below last
year. The quality is poor.
An increase in the per acre yield
of tobacco is shown. The tobacco
p.creage was not materially larger
than last year.
| Columbia, S. C., Nov. 9.?The
biggest work and greatest oppor|
tunities of the United War Work
Agencies in France lie before and
not behind him. This statement was
j made by Doctor Noland R. Best, well
j known editor of The Continent, who
! has just returned from six months
service as a Y. M. C. A. worker with
the American ' expeditionary forces
in France.
j "Britain and France, said Dr.
, Best, "have been practically stripped
j-of their able bodied men in order to
I maintain their armies at full
j strength. On the other hand the
j manpower of the United States has
in comparison only been touched.
, This means the British and Frencfl
j must demobilize first in order to
j free the Tommies and Poilous for
, the great task of reconstruction.
"The American forces during this
period will have to do garrison dutj
over all Europe. In other words foi
almost a year the Yanks will b(
needed as international police. Ir
addition to this, it must be remem
bered that eighteen months hav<
i been required to get our boys t(
France. Their transportation wai
i accomplished under pressure. It i:
| inconceivable . that they can b<
j brought home in less than two years
j "During all this period the Unitec
iWar Work Agencies will be indis
' pensable. A soldier hit it right witl
i.a new definition of war when h<
ij said, 'war is damn dull, damn dirt]
and damn dangerous.'
"Americans at home, who are ac
! customed to having the gloriou:
side of war played up to them, mus
. not forget that prehaps the worst o:
i'the three evils mentioned by th<
j soldier is dullness. Fighting bring
joy to the American heart but wait
! ing periods are all but unbearable,
i
naaaan
?
s Within Si?
\sk For??U
nrf nvmnf u
LC VyilCliilg li
ring Apparel
?' SUITS.
patterns, styles and {
i
values, ;
to $50.00. |
3ES?SHOES !
j
; show class, style,
kmanship. They are
,n and Black; French
o $10.00.
& H E I
MpMMIIIII IIII1IINi
i
/
t
\
1.7
!
I Cascarets Work
j While You Sleep
i
I No headache, biliousness, upset
stomach or constipation
tomorrow
i
j > 7
| Spent 10 cents?feel grand! T
| night take Cascarets to liven yoi
| liver and clean your bowels. St<
J the headaches, bilious spells, sou
^ ness, gases, coated tongue, dj
i breath, sallowness and constipate
j ?Take Cascarcts and enjoy the ni
: est, gentlest, "inside cleansing" y<
I
ever experienced. Wake up feelii
fine. Cascarets is best cathartic f
i children. Taste like candy. I
' disappointment! Thirty million bo
es of this harmless, famous catharl
>, are sold each year now.?Adv.
I
: Not Only Thi
1 " '
But at the present p
J' GRANITE is the CHE
f?nnstrrif>.firvn nf IVATjTjS
! NEYS and UNDERPI1
J| or on the Farm.
We can furinsli prom
J class of work drilled anc
i two men can handle.
J
'! Carload Si
WRITE ]
i OGLESBY (
; ELBERTO
TELEPHO
iinMMHni
?"WT
fRI^f
<ht? * * 1
>
nless fcim
ithe x
and
j DRESS '
Complete line of ?
f and Broadcloth, in all
1 patterns at prices wb
' rave you money.
j NOTIONS AND
You don't have to 1
j tain your entire outfil
I plete line of everythii
i' completion of your o
pie are at your seme
Ti
VI R Y |
FEW FOLKS HAVE
GRAYJAIR NOW
Druggist Says Ladies are Using
Recipe of Sage Tea and
Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and lustre,
or when it fades, turns gray, dull and
lifeless, !s caused by a lack of sulphur
?" In the hair. Our grandmother made
up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur
ir to keep her locks dark and beautiful,
and thousands of women and men who
value that even color, that beautiful
,p dark shade of hair which Is so at- ,
tractive, use only this old-time recipe,
r- Nowadays we get this famous mixture
improved by the addition of other
j ingredients by asking at any drug
store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage
and Sulphur Compound," which dark)n
ens the hair so naturally, so evenly,
that nobody can possibly tell It has
c- hppn nnrtllAri. Tnii 1iir+ /Iftmntin a.
sponge or soft brush with it and draw
>u this through your hair, taking one
small strand at a time. By morning
the gray hair disappears; but what
delights the ladles with Wyeth's Sage
__ and Sulphur Compound Is that, besides
beautifully darkening the hair
j after a few applications, it also brings
back the gloss and lustre and gives it
an appearance of abundance.
x" Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound
Is a delightful toilet requisite
<l? to impart color and a youthful appearance
to the hair. It is not intended
for the cure, mitigation or prevention
of disease.
t Most Durable
>rice of building materials
IAPEST yon can use in the
3, FOUNDATIONS, CHIMsTNING
for Houses in Town ptly
stone suitable for this
I broken in sizes that one and
foments Only
FOR PRICES.
1RANITE CO.
N, GEORGIA
NES 2602?208.
Bffl
M j i
\ i I
1 1 :-i I I fes .
I > /
|i &' 'V!^::*>.i^'Vf?iri,:iJ| / sii
1 llSlliSPlfefV
I m
\ 1 m
W v$m i
, jp |\j I
GOODS. 1
Silks, Serges, Poplin,
. the new weaves and
rich we feel sure will
- ? - .wv n-f.twr r1 1 'it-'. ~~~
(31
ACCESSORIES. ?
leave our store to obL
We have a com- jgj
fig necessary for the
nt.fit. Our salesneo- m
lomson Glove Fitting jj
CORSETS |
For All Builds. jH
llllliiliiiiiiilil!