University of South Carolina Libraries
ESTATE OF MRS ALICE E. POORE Notice of Settlement and Application for Final Diacharge. Teke Notice that on the 7th day of j April, 1919, I will render a final account of my accounts and doing asj Administrator of the Estate of Mrs. | Alice E. Poore, deceased, in the of-j fice of Judge of Probate for Abbeville County at 10 o'clock a. m., and on the same day will apply for a< final discharge from my trust as' such Administrator. All persons having aemanus a j gainst said estate will present thcn^ for payment on or before that dayy proven and authenticated or be for-J ever barred. JNO. T. POORE, 3-2o-3t. ~~ i I Was a 11 Misery j I Mrs. F. M. Jones, of I Palmar, Okla., writes: - II "From the time I en- I I If . tared into womanhood U ... I looked with dread I B from one month to the I I next. I suffered with my I back and bearing-down fff I pain, until life to me was I | ij a misery. I would think I I I could not endure the J I pain any longer, and I I I gradually got worae. . nJJS) Nothing ywrwd to lil|p I me unta, one day, . V I I 1 decided to . - .< # f, .... TAKE iyit.' 1 c.m vt* ' ? eMMII! vniiwij The Woman'* T?uc j I I "1 took foot bottle*," Mis. Jones goes m Is 19 my, "and was sot only HHJ grcafiy reliered, M ess wU truthfully say that I bars III 11 It has now btea tws II . years since I tookCsriM, flVJ| Mi I am stifl fat food fjTjl health. . . IwtuMai- yfl I tise any woman sr girl RHjl to ubo Cardui who is a ft Hi I sufferer from say tfwifci JISHJ If you suffer pais earned H firsts womanly trouble, or jg 8 I yea feel the seed of a E Ea yood sfroagthestaft tonic RjRr tsksil4 up your run-down HmrI system, take to advice RH m Mrs. Jones, Try Or- flH ML It hoipsA har- wo Kit Witofo it wffl kelp yes. |J AID^J If. I , 1 ? Pllre Ice Manufactured Under ; JOFT DRINKS i Sof CIGARETTES TOBACCOS Pn. CANDIES V>U1 roi TITC nr. t ,,w"" n? < CIGARS the mo: licit 701 Abbeville Ca l_ ?. . i_- _. , ...in FERTU I represent the Works, of Charlesto hand a good stock, hard to get a little la in supplying your ne< ROBT: . . NOTHING TO DO. Nothing to do. said a plant one day; Nothing to do to make life gay, | But the golden sunbeam gently ?aid, I'll raise your droopy head. , Nothing to do, said a little boy, But play and have lots of joy, But his kind mother said, 'Hurry son'j For^t's time to get your day's' work done. Nothing to do, said the tiny girl, Just run around and play with the squirrel; Hurry my dear, or we will be late, School takes "in at half past eighL. i Nothing to do, said the loafer one day, Along came a soldier happy and gay, "Move on slacker, you aren't fit to 'live, But all the call of my country, my life I'll give." Nothing to do, said the lazy man, But sit around with folded hand; By and by came a worker his way, Reaping wha? he had. sown in a three fold way. Nothing to do, said the cheat, But sit around, and dead beat, Time will bring me what I need, But no one noticed his plead. Nothing to do, said the student one day, But ait around, talk and be gay, When his report caught his eye Several zeroes and I wonder why? Nothing to do, said the fanner with ioy, I'll sit down and leave the work to my borjr, Along came a pretty maid? And the boy has left his trade. Nothing to do, says many a friend, -But no success to him will attend. For those who work, are the one's why try To do their duty until they die. Nothing to do, at the close of day, But to thank God and pray, That we do our part in the history of life, Proving a hero in the strife. ?A. M. K. . RIVALING THE FORD. London, March 18.?An English firm is nlinnincr to outrival Henry t ertmzers may ue ter on, so don't delay eds. ' , S. LINK. Ford's plan for putting a $250 automobile apon the market. The new machines are described as being "strong nad durable." Hardly any wood will be used in! the construction of them and the] part* will be made of a composition of slag, clinkerg and sawdust with a' coating of metal, i - i ? REMEMBERING CLEVELAND New York, March 18.?The eighty-j ?*#on<j anniversary of the birth of, Grover Cleveland was celebrated here: today with publie exereises at which Major General Leonard Weod, commanding the Central Departseot of tto Amy, wae a speaker. Cream? Sanitary Conditions t Drinks and ifections..... ire prepared to serve you ia it courteous manner and tour patronage. ndy Kitchen JZERS Ashepoe Fertilizer n, S. C., and have on *" i I RUSSIANS BOAST MILLIONS IN GOLD Ready to Spend It in United States. American Representative of Steel Works in Moscow Says He is Acting for Soviet. New York, March 21.?As the first steps toward obtaining recognition, by the United States the Russian! soviet government is prepared to de-' posit $200,000,000 ip gold with Am-; erican and European banks for the. purchase of supplies needed in reconstruction work, according to a formal statement issued here last night byj L. C. A. K. Martens, American rep resentative of the Demodoff Iron Steel Works in Mscow, through thef "bureau of representatives of the i Russian Socialist federal soviet re-! publica." | ' Asserting that he had received his^ appointment this week as official rep-; j resentative of the soviet government j in the United States, Mr. Martins, j said he had forwarded his credentials! to the statJB department and mean-, while had opened temporary .head-! quarters in this city. With the cre-j dentials, he said, he had sent a report j on conditions in Russia and an expression of his government's desire: to reestablish normal relatipns between the, two countries. -Hat B{g Plans. Mr. Martens said that in addition ' to the $200,000,000 to be deposited, to defray the cost of initial purchas-j es, the Boviet government ' was pre-j pared to submit various propositions! I which he said he hoped would prove | acceptable to American manufacturers *and exporters, looking toward establishment of credit for additional government purchases. Martens said he intended soon to establish permanent headquarters in this city on *'scale commensurate with the purchases he intended to make. Hie plans, he added, cailed for appointment of a "Commercial 1 attache" and organization of a "board of trade of soviet Rtissia." According to MartenB, who asserted that despite "silly" reports concerning the soviet government, it had "laid fim the foundation of "a' II J 1 J 1 i 'm XV wen oraerea development 01 tneir, society," he was "empowered to j state" that his government "is sin-| cerely anxious to haVe1 hostilities cease in Russia and to enter into agreements with the American gov' ernment for the peaceable withdraw' al of American troops from Russia. No Obstacle* Exist. "On the part of the Russian federal soviet republic," he said, "there thus exists no obstacles to the estab- [ lishment of proper relations with other countries, especially with the[ United States. The soviet govern-! ment of Russia is willing to open its doors to citizens of other countries for peaceful purposes of opportunity, and it invites any scrutiny and inves-J tigation of its conditions which inves- j tigntion eertainly will prove that peace-and prosperity in Russia will, follow on the cessation of the present allied policy of non-intercourse with oriet Russia, and by establishment of material and intellectual intercourse." | Mr. Martens asserted that his gov-, ! eramsnt tu prepared to purchase in ; this eeuntry great quantities of such1 j soenmodities railroad applies,- ag! ricaltural implsmsnts and machinery, factory machinery, tools, mining machinery and supplies, slscfaflcal supplies, printing machinery, textile mpn and canned meats, rubber goods, typewriters and office supplies, automobiles and trucks, chemicals and i : medical suppliss. Russia, he said, was prepared to sell flax, hemp, hides, bristles, furs,! lumber, grain, platinum, metals and minerals. - ' A SPRING DAY. Sunday was a beautiful Spring i day? The roads are drying up and |'many automobiles were out with I . _ _ iL. i pleasant partiec enjoying ?uuflhiB*: in iinmi iimniti'nimmiiilBWW?WN?KWNWWIM??nww???wm?mmii'ii"i >' 0 I| PROFESSIONAL [I j ?"1 r? IT? T?-j| 11 Harris & Calvert if ? , Undertaker* & Embalmers | !| Out-of-town Calls Given Spe- j if cial Attention at all Hours, jj |I ABBEVILLE, S. CAROLINA, jj | IIIHIII??niiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiifi?iliiniiini THE SLEEPING SICKNESS. ! * \ '!' * The sleeping sickness, known tot the medical profession as encephali-; tis lethargica or epidemic coma, has! appeared in England in the last.six months, in New York, Chicago, and, possibly, kocky Mount,' North Carolina. In the last week there have been the first two deaths from it in' New York." That city's health com-( missioner, Dr. R. S. Copeland, has issued a warning concerning it. The | malady is not always fatal, yet no fl successful method of treating it is IS known. The symptoms are sore throat, 9 headache, a drowsy feeling, dizziness, 9 aching and drooping of the eyelids 9 and great difficulty in keeping awake j| a'ter having the disease ten hour.;. In addition, the patient appears to lose all strength, is sometimes unable to make any voluntary movement, and is "as expressionless as a wnx figure." I According to Dr. Copeland. there are two forms of "attack, one possibly hem? a seauel of influenza..while the <=> * - I otVer, the true icrm, does not lew influenza. There are p'.ssibly forty ;a* ; in. New York, but there have been but( two deaths. OuJt of one hundred and, u./ty-four cases re )?>rtcil in England, since last fall there were thirty-eight deaths. One death, ascribed to this, disease, has just occurred" in Kocky. Mount, North Carolina.' This malady is not the African; sleeping slickness which is limited to; tropical Afr ca and* communicated | by the tsetse fly.. It first appeared j. in the latter part of the seventeenth century in Germany. It appeared in Italy and Hungary, in 1890 and in parts of Europe and the United States in 1895. The first case in England was in 1918 when five persons vera stricken.?Greenville Piedmont. EATINGWltH THE DEMOCRATS, j . (Wayerosa Herald-Jorirnal.) [ Anyhow, President Wilson settled j one question on, his trip back home ?namely, how to^eat a drumstick. [ At the luncheon for ifti'e Democratic, National Committee at the White [ House he decided in the 'Missouri way," and ate it with his fingers. | rep; J Our r % equipped 3 every ne 3 chanic in I Genu I Our i tion, wor I J! E. F. - j I GOODJarewell ALL SEATS, 55c.?Set in advance at the Your Last Chance to Se Misrhtv Snec O 9 1 OPERA I ? ?MATINEE and Wednesday, M Matinee 3:00 p. m. THE Vhi v'ERSAL CAR UR GARA epair department u now and ready to take care of id. We have ail expert For charge?wing only i ine Ford f (hop is second to none in thi king exclusively on Ford C ARNO imimimflmtfHIHinm lUBUMMimMMUtt MlltHtmRttWMMM MPl WWBfflMiltiWB MHKMn>PR0BI BYE Tour. cure your tickets box office. ebTwT Griffith^ tacle 3 .v 99B M' EH 10USE I NIGHT I I AR. 2611 Night 8;15 p. m. -J WM IB n n GE I I d m?- j ! I art8 j,i is sec- jj', ai*s. m LD