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NEW TAX BILL SLIGHTS NO ONE Washington, Feb. 6.?The world's greatest revenue bill bits every man with a living salary. The married man drawing $3,000 a year will pay a $60 tax unless he has children. And the single man with the same income will have to donate $120 to his Uncle Sam. 1 At $4,000 the rate jumps to 12 per cent, and the surtaxes begin to pile on at $5,000 until they reach 65 per cent, on incomes over $1,000,000. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Abbeville. In Probate Court. Complaint to S^ll Lands to Pay Debts WADE SLOAN, JR., and as Administrator of the estate of Wade ' Sloan, Sr., Plaintiff, against CARRIE SLAPPY, JAMES SLOAN, WILLIE SLOAN, MAMIE JOHNSON, DOCK THOMAS, and WILL SLOAN, Defendants. In pursuant to an order of the probate court, I will sell at Public Outcry at Abbeville Court House, \ South Carolina, on Salesday in March 1919 next, for the payment of debts, the following described real estate, - beldncring to the estate of Wade Sloan, Sr., deceased, situate in the city of Abbeville, South Carolina, to wit: All that tract or parcel of land, known as the Wade Sloan, Jr., place containing Five Acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of J. Allen Smith, W. S. Cothran, Seaboard Air Line Railroad and Will Scott. There is Idfcated on the premises two houses; said premises may be| divided into one or more suitable tracts and sold separately, or may be1 sold separately and as a whole and he bid or bids that show the best re-! turns, accepted; all of this to be in tWe discretion of the judge of the probate court. L TERMS?CASH. Purchasers to pay for papers and stamps. . . H-! . ' J. F. MILLER, -Judge of Probate Court ! 2-7-3t.lt weekly. j ^ womenl It should Beip. |/j ^ . "I was taken tick, t/1 seemed to be . . . t/J / writes Mrs. Mary E.Veste, L^J / of Madison Heights, Va. 1/1 ^ "I got down so weak, / could hardly walk . . . / just staggered around. Ki ^ ... I read of Cardul, lyi ^ and after taking one bot- 1^ y tie, or before taking quite 1/ y all, 1 felt much better. ! IV y took 3 or 4 bottles at y that time, and was able to V do my work. I take it in rnrltirr when n in ? ^ Uie Opiillg K UVt* mmmmm y down. 1 had no appetite, / / and I commenced eating. / / It is the best tonic I ever < / saw." yCardui. 1/ ^ Ail Druggists ? ||For ^ 0 Weak ^ W m Women X) Inuseforover40y~ |/| Thousands of volu ^ 1^1 letters from women, /^Ij ^1 !?M 4Ua r?/n/\y1 PorHlll W' ifl i 1/ '"S WC guuu VWW|> y has done them. This is y* ^ the best proof of the value ^ y ofCardui. It proves that ^ / Cardui is a good medicine / y for women. , / /a There are no harmful or /J y habit-forming drugs in v / Cardui. It is composed / j / only of mild, medicinal / I O ingredients, with noted y y after-effects. y " TAKE ^ CARDUI : The Woman's Tonic mym ' You can rely on Cardui. myt r/4 Surely it will do for you, what it has done for so Wyjj L/f many thousands of other Lq ; ENORMOUS AMOUNT 1 OF SUPPLIES SENT i BYJ. M. C. *. ' 0*it of 8weets and 8mokee for One I % Month Reaehes Staggering Pigure?Armiatleo Dldnt Cud ! Smoking on Any Front i New York. Jan. ...?Almost $4,000,009 worth of smokes, sweets, bporting 1 goods, oh owing gum and other commodities waa shipped to Franco daring i the month qf November by tho Amy and Navy Y. M. O. A., for tho use { of tho American Expeditionary Foroes. I A statement to wis effect haa Just j boon Issued by tho National War I Council and tends to demonstrate that j the demand for supplies of this oharj acter has opt been reduced by tho fact j that hostilities hare oeased. I In exact figures tho value of the 1 supplies shipped to France was $8,1 895,908 and each month's <iuota will api proximate this total until the forces I overseas have been materially reduced I hv itAmAhl'ilmtlnn. The demand for tobacco, cigars and ; cigarettes has not diminished sine? the armistice was signed, as witness the fact that $1,351,0*0 ef the total amount went for the purchase of the ! weed la some form. In the shipj menu were 464,911 pounds of tobacco, 198,085,380 cigarettes and 99,700 cigars. As for confectionery, there were ! 113,800 pounds of hard candy, 175,918 pounds ef choool|tes and 329,280 packages of oough drops, not to mention 537,600 tins of jams and 6,541,800 pounds of sugar. The chewing gam oonlgnments totaled 6,100,000 packages ?enough to load every slot In the United States. i "UNCLE SAM" AND THE HOME GARDEN WeH Known Civic Leader Shows How a Vegetable Garden Will Cut The ' Family 8tore Bill In Half a Atlanta, Ga.?(Special.)?"Few people realize the actual money-saving power of the home vegetable garden and what it can be made to contrib ate in the way of food for the family table," says President H. 0. Hastings, of the Georgia State Chamber of Commerce, and the Southeastern Fair, in discussing the matter of food supply for the South in 1919. "Uncle Sam, through the United States Department of Agriculture," said Mr. Hastings, "estimated the ' alue of the vegetables produced last[ year in home gardens of the UnitedI States at three hundred and fifty all-; lion of dollars. This means that much actually saved by the garden makers from their store bills. "Whenever there is lack of food or money to buy food, no matter whether it be due to world-wide food scarcity, boll weevil damage or other cause, the first worfl 'Uncle Sam' passes out to the sufferer is to make a food big home garden. Why? Because the right kind of a home garden is the QU1CK6SI, CIlCclpt?i5L ctliu aucok ouutw v* food supply there is. "The great trouble here in the South is that our people don't take the heme garden seriously enough, or give it the attention that its importance as a food producer and money-saver justifies. It is mostly made with a 'lick and a promise' and the cultivation and replanting it gets during -the growing season is mostly of the unfulfilled promise kind. ' "With the present and certain-to-becontinued high food prices on the one hand, and the very great uncertainty as to the price that cotton or other cash crops will sell for next fall. It Is a time above all others to play safe. "This is no time to gambit on ootton. None of us can tell within 15 cents a pound what it will tell for next fall. The farmer who makes few or no store debts for food, producing his own and family needs on home acres, is safe regardless of cotton [ prices, and he is the only one who is Bafe. "The right kind of a home garden maintained all through the season and given a square deal in the way of cultivation, Is the greatest storo-biltcut, ter on record. A quarter to half an acre garden for the average family I ... ?* a, *?in hulf" Will out IUO DI.UIO u... ? HELP INSURE * THE FRUITS ^ or VICTORY ~ * I I I BUY w. s. s. Mr. J. ,C. Hemphill, architect, ha engaged the office formerly occupiei y>rr Summer & Hemnhill in the Na il tional. Bank building and will ope: for business next Monday. Mr. J. E Summer, who is manager of th Newberry Lumber Company at Ne\* berry, will not move back to Greer wood.?Greenwood Index-Journal. ' c | Pet Up the Old Car?Like t Humans, It Will Respond c to Attention J ' \ The right battery means \ a new lease of life \ YOU can't afford to throw i away that car just because 1 a sluggish battery won't let it deliver the good miles that . are still in it. Not this year. i The right battery ?the Eve* < ready Storage Battery ?will J ? ?-"1 lira /vf I pruiuug iuc aauaiaviui y uaw v& * your old car?not only this 1 year, but 'till you have secured the full milage it was built to give. '' ' Come in and read the Eveready Storage Battery Guarantee?a year and a half?and we're here to make good. CITY GARAGE Official Eveready Service Station Free Testing ?Courteous Service and Guaranteed Repairs on all standard makes of Storage Batteries. BSSaMBHHSBBSm^BaHHBi^M TL. 11 me n Sale Clos< / ' i.. -I ii Rpmemher 1 IIVIIIVIHWV* SALE ON LAD 98c. Ladies' Voile Ws $1.25 Ladies' Voile ^ .$1.48 Ladies' Waists, Big Lot Crepe-de-Cl Waists Jus $3.48 Georgette ai Waists, going at. :$4i95 Georgette ar ; Waists, going at. '$6.00 Georgette a: Waists, sizes froir going at ' 36 in. Marquisette Cu Q Zn trnimcr in fViifi snip U UVj g 111 VlAAky 200 yds. Flannelette 30c, going in this. j 300 yds. Cloth in sho Flaxons, Voils an sold for 20c, going 1 100 Pairs Men's Shoe $3.00, going at ... 25c. Apron Gingham; i at | ? ; 25c. White Homespui _ j_ at Don't Miss 1 Much Red i .! 3 i ; i 1 Mr. Robert G. Hagen was in the :ity on Thursday. He infromed us hat he had received a telegram the lay before telling him that his son, fames, who was wounded in the serere fighting in the Argonne Forest, lad arrived in New York, and was n u hospital there. He expects to >e transferred to a camp in this itate very shortly. Renwick Bradley, one of the bad >oys of Wardlaw street, has accepted ;he position of devil in this office, ind fills it to perfection. He also lelivers the papers on the nights of jublication. He was out delivering ;he papers in the hard rain Monday light, but 'he said that rain didn't jother the devil. Hastings' 1919 Seed Catalog Free It's ready now. One hundred hand somely illustrated pages with brilliant cover in natural colors. It's both i beautiful and helpful and all that is necessary to g?t It Is a postal card request. You will find our 1919 catalogue a well worth while book. Hastings Seeds are sold direct by nail. You will nevetf" find them on 5~le in the stores. We have some' ive hundred thousand customers who juy from us by mail. We please and satisfy them, and we can please and satisfy you in 1919. Plantiug Hastings' Seeds In your jarden or in your fields insures "good luck" so far as results can be deternined by the seed planted. For <50 pears Hastings Seeds have been the standard of seed excellence and putty in the South. Only varieties idapted to the South are listed. Qua!ty of the best and prices often less :han those you pay at home. Write .'or free copy of this splendid catalogue now. H. G. HASTINGS CO., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Ga.?Advt. lot Huj va Qri 4-llV/l 01 79 tjaiui ua< j AT TEN His Sale Last IES' WAISTS. lists, at 65c. foists, at 98c. new styles, at. .$1.25 line and Gorgette t Arrived. * id Crepe-de-Chine :..$2.98 id Crepe-de-Chine 4.25 nd Crepe-de-Chine i 42 to 52, all colors, 5.50 rtain Goods, sold for special at ....15c, yd. all colors, sold for sale at..; 15c. yd. ? i i rt lengths, such as ^ T nnmn ir? flnlrVVC - I U JJAWllO in v/uiv/iu) ; in this sale at 10c yd s, sold for $2.50 and $1.50 pr. s, going in this sale 20c. yd. l, 40 in. wide, going 20c. yd. fhis Opportunll luced Price. Si February 8th, HU< D. A. R, MEETING. / At an interesting meeting of the D. A.-R.'s in the chapter rooms'last Wednesday afternoon, it was decided by the members to mark the old Fort on Magazine Hill at an early / Run=Down P Vinol is Wl Weak, run-down nervou Vinol because it contains structive tonics in an agi form: ? Beef and Cod Manganese Peptonates ai We guarantee there is HERE If Detroit, Mich. "I got into a weak, rtm-down con dition, no appeute, urea an me ume . and headaches ? but had to keep around and do my housework. I read about Vinol and tried it?within two weeks I commenced to improve, and now have a splendid appetite and feel Btronger and better in everyway."? Mrs. John F. Watson. Far all rnu-dowj, nervou*, anaemic 001 feeble old people and dcllcato chtl KfnSCI P. B. SPEE t11. And Druggist stler K \ f Night, F? O'CLOCK s Just One We 500 Prs. MEN'S SO< All colors, going foi , 25c. Men's Heavy G UNDERW 75c. Undershirts, g 98c. Undershirts, g( $1.25 Undershirts, ? $1.25 Union Suits, j Big Sale on Blai Big Sale on Lad Big Sale on Lad d? SILK 36 in. Silk Poplin, s this sale for All other Silks redu ENAMELWARE, WARE ANI ^ ^ 1*^1 AtAirtA* zoc. articles, gvmg 50c. articles, priced 75c. articles, priced $1.00 articles, price :y to Get Mer ale Closes Satu - < a _ _i_ at lu ua?,iock iTLER R date. Mrs. R. S. Link, who has been regent for sometime, resigned and ' Miss Nettie Russell was appointed to ' take her place. Mrs. J. L. Martin was welcomed at this meeting as a new member. 5 eople hat You Need s men and women need ; the most famous recon eeable and easily digested Liver Peptones, Iron and ad Glycerophosphates, no tonic equal to VinoL I PROOF Texarkana, Texas. \ "I keep house and I was weak, nm* flown ana nervous, back ached a good deal of the time, so it was hard to take care of mv chickens and do my work?Ytool has restored my strength, and mv nervousness has gone, so I can do my work as well as ever. Every run-aown woman should take Vinol."?Mrs. EmmaBritt. ldJtlona, weak women, overworked men, . dren, there i? no remedy like VlnoL I: ID, Druggist is Everywhere "" . > Jacket sbruary 8 : \| ek Longer .. ? CKS, ALL COLORED * 10c. Pr. rey Socks, at ..18c. Pr. EAR SALE. oing for 50c. )mg for ydc. roing for 90c. ?oing for 90c. nkets. * [ lies' Suits. ies' Coats. SALE. old for $1.25, going in 98c. ced in same proportion | TINWARE,. GLASS) CROCKERY. for 15c. at 38c. at 50c. d at 75c. \ 1 -1*_- _J. _ cnanaise ai a. relay Night ACKET