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HONOR ROLL OF THE ABBEVILLE CITY SCHOOLS^ Grade I.?Miss Mabry, Teacher.? Ruth Eakin, Elizabeth Ferguson, Ovelle Gilliam, Jane Harrison, Annie Rogers, Sarah Tiddy, Thomas Gaston, Myers Poliakoff. Grade I.?Miss Phillips, Teacher. David Simmons, Edwin Ramey, Margaret Culbreth,-Norma Flynn, Helen Gambrell, Lunell Sutherland., Grade II.?Mrs. Riser, Teacher.? Sarah Smith, Sarah Thomson, Char "Bayer Cross" on^.Tablets. American Owned, Entirely! HEADACHE ciincc InULu RIGHT AWAY "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Offer Relief?with Safety"! For Headache Colds Neuralgia Grippe ! Toothache Influenzal Colds Earache Achy Joints Rheumatism Neuritis . Lumbago Pain! Pain! Adults?Take one or two ''Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufaci' ture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid \ Buy the Bayer packages only. 20-cent package?Also larger, sizes. I Life I j| Was a II Misery I | Mrs. P. M. Jones, ol I S Palmer, Okla., writes: | IN "From the time I en- raj J tered into womanhood HF'J SI ra 1 looked with dread ?j |j< I from one month to the I next I suffered with my H $ back and bearing-down H 8 pain, until life to me was J j Jj , a misery. 1 would think I I I could not endure the I I pain any longer, and I 1 gradually got worse. lUTy Nothing seemed to help | me until, One day, ... I I Kdecided .to . ' ^ - take " ^ The Woman's Tonic H."l took four,bottles," I Mrs. Jones goes on to jg] j > say, "and was not only Pjj greatly relieved, but can y truthfully say that 1 have Ej p " It has now been two If I orktPiJrHl!! 9 H ij? and I am still in good health. . . I would ad- B a vise any woman or girl B | to use Cardui who is a k S|J sufferer from any female 11 Is If you suffer pain caused I I jgf from womanly trouble, or I I |j if you feel the need of a 1 ^ I good strengthening tonic S I J to build up your run-down iJi | system, take the advice I | oHftrs. Jones.- Try Car- I | dui. It helped her. We k V believe it will help you. I I All Druggists 11 f 11 COMING!!' www www 1 vwv THE WW I WW WW VWV FIFTH WW WW WW ww WAR ww ww ww ww LOAN ww WW vwv WW WW VWV WW vwv vwv www WW \ w PREPARE lotte Reese, Mary Chalmers, Harry Stalnaker. Grade II?Miss Timmons, Teacher, j Emily Morse, William Thomson, Jack Sutherland, Henry Power, Oscar' Clark. , ' Grade 111.?Miss Kortjonn, reacn-j I er.?Mabel Bradley, Martha Calvert j Susan Minshall. Grade III?^liss Robertson, Teach- ; er.?Josephine .Barnwell, Estelle Ly j on, Mary Norwood Perrin, Minnie ** \ J Ella- Swetenburg, Joe Finley, William; i McComb. Grade IV.?Miss Adams, Teacher Pat Howie, Frances Jones, Mary Hill Ferguson. Grade IV.?Miss Carter, Teacher * * ** TTTil TT^l * jjonn Harrison, nomer yyiisuii, jcjiizbi beth Corley, Margaret Flynn, Anna Jones, Marie Langley, Grace Roche, Grace Smith. Grade V.?Ellen Nabers, Mark Hawthorne, Eugene Hix. Grade VI.?Sara; Edwards, Judith Hill, Foster Barnwell, Ellis Poliakoff, Jack Thomson. 1 Grade VII.?Caroline Chalmers, f... 'r Mary Shaw Gilliam, Deby Owens,' Annie Mabry, Elizabeth Lyon, Willie' Bowie, Ray Swetenfcurg. Grade VIII.?Maria Neuffer, Elizabeth Thomson..'* ... v. Grade IX.:?Elizabeth Gambrell, Carrie Hawthorne,' Florence Neuffer.1 Grade X.?Ralph Lyon, Gwen Bris-! tow, Mary Greene. , Grade XI?Nina Bauknight, Al-j jpha Graves, Helen Haigler, Maryj Reed Moore, Margaret Cox. TO CARE FOR VISITORS . | TO AUTO SHOW, The War Camp Community Service' is preparing to help house the many people who will come to Columbia for the Automobile Show, March 25-! 28, or to welcome their relatives from overseas who may come to Camp Jackson for demobilzation. The War Camp Community Service Room Registry, Room No. 16, Arcade Building, 1332 Main Street, is listing hundreds of private homes willing to accommodate visitors at reason aDie rates, as tney nave Deen xaKing in the relatives of soldiers for the past year and a half. Calling at the office of the War Camp Community Service may simplify your problem of finding a room in Columbia at the time when the hotels are likely to be filled, i 4 : : i I Quit Laxatives, Purges; Try NR NR Tonight?Tomorrow Fee! Right j J It is a mistake to continually dose ] yourself with so-called laxative pills, calomel, oil, purges and cathartics ! end force bowel action. It weakens the bowels and liver ajid makes constant dosing necessary. "Why don't j*ou begin right today to overcome your constipation and'get your system in such shape that daily purging will bo unnecessary? You con do so if you get a 25c box of ; Nature's Remedy (KR Tablets)- and j take one each, right for a v.*eek or so. i NR Tablets do much more the:' .j merely cause pleasant eaty bowel ac- j tion. This medicine nets u;:on the digestive as v.-eil as eliminative organs ?promotes good digestion, causes the body lo get the nourishment from all the fool you cat, gives you a good, hearty appetite, strengthens the live:*, jvercymes biilousncsr. res-nates kidney and )jov>'::1 action ard gives the v. c body a thorough cleaning out. This accomplished you "will not have to u?ke medicine every day. An occasional NR tablet will keep your body in condii!on and you can nIways feci your best. Try Nature's Remedy (XU Tablet.;) I and prove this. It is the best bowl I III'JIUVIIIU UiUl >UU tail ll??U UIIU ! only 2cc per box, rontainin^ enouKh to i last twenty-five days. Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) is sold, guaranteed I and recotnmendcd by your druggist. McMurray Drug Co. 6;Vei?Bk? ? 3m4?"**"'.?'i'* ; L_ .. ? j>fr-"ifci.v t ,.rf _ . THE PURE BRED DAIRY SIRE. How Valuable.?Pedigree Plus Indmdna'ihr. Clemson College.?"It is a common saying that the sire is 'half the herd.' As a matter of fact, in most cases, he is of even greater value," says Thos. W. Moseley,-Dairy Specialist of the Extension Service. A Common Practice. Yet many farmers do not appreciate the above statement and year after year are content to use any bull that will make, their cows come fresh. The result of the use of inferior or scrub sires is that the calves are nearly always inferior to their dams, and after awhile the farmer complains that his stock has "run out." One farmer who owned a scrub bull bred him to his cow, which had produced 146.8 pounds of butterfat in one year and their daughter when she came into milk produced only 126.3 pounds of butterfat. This heifer was bred back to the scrub bull and a heifer from this mating produced only 99.7 nounds of butterfat. of 47.1 pounds; less than her grandmother. At 50c. j per pound for butterfat this would! mean an annual loss of $23.55. j. An Investment That Paid. Another farmer who. had become j discouraged with scrub sires decided j to buy the best he could afford. Hei mated him with his cows, which were I just "ordinary," and the first six heifers produced an average of 93.8 pounds of butterfat more than their dams. With butterfat at 50c per pound this would mean an increased yearly income of $281.40. These heifers were retained for five years and in that time brought in $1,407.00 more than their dams. In other words, through the use of a good pure-bred sire for only o"ne year he realized $1,407.00. Only Pure-Bred Bulls Are Good Bulls. But you. can't expeQt these results by using a scrub bull. The scrub bull has no individuality. He is the result of years of careless, indiacrim- < inate, haphazard breeding. -In his blood runs the inferiority ot many antagonistic breeds,*.. The scrub bull is' a mixlure and almost without exception the bad far out weighs the good. The scl*ub bull chokes instead of promoting improvement in the herd. And you can't expect these results from a grade bull, no matter if he is the son of a high-producing cow. The grade bull has no lines of good blood back of him." He is more apt to transmit the weakness of his make-up than his strong points. But you can expect these results by using a good bull. A good bull must be a pure-bred btrtl. He must be more. He piust be .a good pure-bred bull. Use Only Bred-For^Productlon Sires. A good bull must have back of him a family of high producers, because he can transmit to his offspring only what he has received from his ancestry. His mother must be a family of high producers, because he can transmit to his offspring only what he has received from his ancestry. His mother must be a high producer, and his sire must come from a high producing dam. His sire must have sired bigh-'producing daughters., If his family for two or three generations back has a record of uniformly high production, there is little doubt that he will be able to traiysmit that quality to his offspring. And such a bull can earn for the dairyman many times his cost. , . But Pedigree Is Not Everything. Many an animal has a fine pedigree but is a very poor individual. The right dairy sire should be a good individual as well as have a good pedigree. He should be fairly typical of his breed and show Masculinity, Capacity, Size and Quality. The real value of a dairy sire to any herd is told when his daughters freshen. Then we are able to tell whether he is improving the herd. If his daughters are better producers than ...their dams -were at the sairc age. then we are on the right trac'- i A sire which does not improve rhr f herd and whose daughters are not} better than their dams should be sole! at once. , ... If you caught a man running off with $100.00 worth of your propertv. would you sit back in your chair ai'd let him do it? Well, then, why be so partial to the scrub or grade bull? He is robbing you of $100.00 every time he breeds one of your rows?' He is breeding your herd down and not up. HOW TO PREVENT COTTON ANTHRACNOSE. Cotton anthracnose. the fungus boll rot of cotton, is carried in the seed. The fungus lives over from one year to the next in the boll. To prevent this troublesome and destructive disease it is necessary to practice a ro tation, and to secure seed for planting purposes from flolds where there was no-disease last year. Seed may also come in contact with the disease at the gin, and thus *carry the trouble into'the field. Cotton seed^hree years old will be free from digje^se even.^ |?opgh Jthey from "fiSfds"wfiere the -disease was present, ?void this disease hv observing these nrecau tlons." \ Even when they appear clean, datry ! utens:h may harbor large numbers of | bacteria. Sterilize thoroughly. LIFT CORNS OR CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers Don't suffer! A tiny bottle of Freezone c?sts but a few cents at any drug store. Apply a few drops oh the corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bottom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezone removes corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, t^e skin beneath is ft pink and healthy and never sore tender or irritated?Adv. Statement of the Condition of The Bank of Donalds, Located at Donalds, S. C., at the Close of Business March 4, 1919. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts $123,352.24 Overdrafts 1,419.26 Bonds and Stocks owned by the Bank 4,000.00 Furniture and Fixtures _ 1,516.62; Banking House 1,094.99! Other Real Estate Owned 2,546.37 i Due from Banks and Bankers 11,8^2.701 Currency j 534.00 Gold - 20.00 Silver and Other Minor Coin ,-r._r._?598.29 Checks and Cash.Items. 1,424.64! Other Resources, viz. col- j lections . 188?00TOTAL $148,527.111 , LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Paid in $ 25,000.00 Surplus Fund 7,000.00 ! Undivided profits, less current expenses and Taxes paid 3,753.71 Due to Banks & Bankers 1,991.91 Dividends Unpaid 18.00 Individual Deposits subject to check 51,610.61 Demand Certificates of deposit 33,287.80 Time Certifi' cates of dep. 15,062.82 Cashiers Chk.__ 766.92 100,728.15 Bills payable, including certificates for money * ! borrowed 10,000.00 Reserve Fund Carried on , ji General Indivdual or Savings Ledger 35.34 TOTAL $148,527.11 STATE IF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Abbeville, ss. Before me came B. H. SMITH, Cashier of the above named bank, who, being dnly sworn, says that the; above and foregoing statement is a: true condition of said bank, as shown by the books of said bank. B. H. SMITH. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 10th day of March, 1919. L. J. DAVIS, Notary Public. Correct Attest: ' 4 A W. R. DUNN, J. C. McDILL, B. H. CARLTON, Directors. ' > ; Statement of the Condition of j The Operatives Trust! . Company. ' I orated at Abbeville, S. C., at the! Close of Business, March 1919. . RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts $6,960.92 Due from Banks and Bank ers 24,892.12 Currency 1,300.00 Silver and other Minor Coin 40.00" Checks and Cash Items . 6.621 Lierty Bond 50.00 Savings Stamps _4 42.30' TOTAL _'___$33,201.96; LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Paid in $2,775.00: Undivided Profits, less current expenses and Taxes paid 337.05Savings deposits_30,179.91 30,179.9l| . * >. TOTAL $33,291.96 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, | County of Abbeville, ss. Before me came J. F. BARN-1 WFT.T, Pncliior " nf fVio ahnuo nomnrl bank, who, being duly sworn, says! that the above and foregoing statement is a true condition of said bank, as shown by thefttxjoks of said. bank. ore me this 12th day of March, 1919. J. C. THOMSON, Notary Public. J. F. BARNWELL, Cashier. Correct Attest W. M. LANGLEY, J. F. BARNWELL, G. B.-HAMBY, Directors. \ PIEDMONT COLORED RACE CONFERENCE Come to Greenwood and attend the Piedmont Race Confernce at Mt. I Pisgah A. M. E. Church and Morris Chapel Baptist Church. (They are close together.) The colored citizens of Greenwood think this is the best time to entertain the conference on account of farming interests. Notify people in lodges, churches and Sunday Schools about this great Conference. Gov. R. A. Cooper deliver the first address March 25th, at 10 A. M. It is worth walking one hundred miles to hear Mr. Woods, who speaks Pure Ice I Manufactured Under SOFT, DRINKS Sofl CIGARETTES TOBACCOS . CANDIES VAJI FRUITS We a CIGARS the mos | | licit you Abbeville Ca STOCK? FURNITl AT PUBLIC On March 15th, at 1:00 o and fixtures of the Dargan be sold at auction to the h about $4,000.00. For furtb THE FARM or R. L. E FARR Make Moi NEVER before, in the, history will reap the benefit in bigg ducts brought such high pri the Crop, the greater will your pr you make each acre of land produ cotton, corn, truck?use Planters corn?1 to 2 bales of cotton pe through use of this reputable Fer PLANTERS f DOUBLES Y Ror many years Planters Fertilize South's most successful farmers, to produce bigger, better crops. M GET RESULTS THAT WILL PL for Free Advice, Information an TODAY. It means dollars to y< Planters Fertilizer MANUFAC CHARLESTON - - Such Wom Have to "Man may work from si VVUii^ 13 lltvtl \uwuv,. J overworked, nervous, all and can " hardly drag ar hearty appetite, strengthei induccs sound sleep, invig this natural manner create Narrajjanselt Pier, R.I. "I was all run-down, back ached, and tired all the time. I keep house for my husband and four children and i could hardly keep around. Finally I tried Vinol and it haa restored my ] I.;:.!*1: and helped me wonderfully, so i I I recommor.d it to others who arc in ! I this condition.'' Mvs.HannahEanda1.!. 1 I For all rnn-tlr.Tm, nervous, rtnnorolc rrntli J feeble old people ami uclic:ilo Ciiil?ln P. B SPEE1 And Druggists / on the first day. Dr. B. D. Gray of Atlanta, Ga., , will spend 'both days at the Conference. The first day will be devoted- to the discussion of Grievances erf the Negro, Race Relations, Race Adjust-, ment. The second day will be devoted to Evangelism. .Colored and white speakers are as good as can be found in America. Railroad accommodations in and out of Greenwood are good. If you are going, write Rev. Hemingway, Chr. or C. R. Stuart, Chr., Greenwood, S. C. Richard Carroll, Columbia, S. C. " Pres.^S. C. Race Conference. Cream? V Sanitary Conditions t Drinks and '3. ' *. 73 lfections re prepared to serve you in t courteous manner and soir patronage. * nrlir AH I _ ? I ^ ~~ j URE?FIXTURES ? : OUTCRY #j 'clock, the stock, furniture / t -King Hardware Co.,^ will ighest bidder.' Inventory ier particulars inquire of ERS BANK >ARGAN ?--4 _ " ! 'fWm 4ERS reMoney 1 of the country, have farm, proper profits! Naturally the larger ' 1 ces. And the successful farmer . ofit be; hence it is essential that 1 ce its utmost. For prize crops of i Fertilizer. 90 to 95 bushels of r acre are records established tilizer on Southern farms. UTILIZERS OUR YIELD r has been the preference of the because it has made it possible . jm ake every acre count this year? I^HI EASE YOU. Consult our'Agent d Prices?or writers direct? & Phosphate Co< TURERS F^H SOyTH CAROLINA. I "HE HBMVHmBannnHHMnnMHB ""????? ^ ten Just fl "Give Up" js in to sun, but woman's fBm rhat's why women are JH run down, no appetite, H| ound." Vinol creates a is the digestive organs, JIH orates the nerves, and in s working strength. ^ Jacksonville, 111. "I keep house for my little family, MB but got into a weak, nervous, run- I ,^H| down condition, tired all the time and no ambition. J.ly doctor told me to try Vinol, and in a week I felt like a row person. I cm now strong again, Icok after my baby, and do all my ' housework."?Mrs. G. H. Lamson. . ' itions weak women, overworked men, on. tl~zre is no rciuody Illco Vinol. Inn D, Druggist jH ?Everywhere