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/ > > ANTREVILLE V V >\>\>>>>>>>\\> Miss Zula Suber spent last week end in Abbeville with Misses Mary and Prude Mann. Misses Hazel and Erin Crowhc-r have returned from the summer school at Winthrop College. Protracted services are being held at Bell's church this week. Rev. C. E. Peele of Abbeville is assisting Rev. Mr. Martin. Mrs. Wyatt Marion and children 1 of Branchville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McCarter. Mr9. H. C. Mullikin, of Birmingham, Ala., is spending several days 'with her father, Mr. Charlie G. Kay. *jr:? Voatnn left Wednes -BJLU& TV UiWM day for Newberry where she will visit Mrs. T. E. Bullock. Mr. A. M. Erwin is spending several days in Baltimore. Mrs. D. S. Knox entertained the Methodist Missionary Society Saturday afternoon. An interesting program was rendered, after which delicious cream and cake were served. The following attended the Bible Society at Due West from Antreville: Mr. W. M. Patterson and daughter, Miss Bertha, Mr. George Calvert, Mr. and Mrs. John Murdock, Mrs. A. M. Erwin and son, Albert, Mr. R. A. Eeaton and daughters, Misses ^"inton and Althea, and Miss Hattie Lou Haddon. The exercises were greatly enjoyed, also the splendid dinner which was served on the campus of the Woman's College. The next Bible Society meeting will be held at Shiloh church, Antreville. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Jones and family of Anderson spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Keatoiu Mrs. Brown Pennell and daughter, Helen of Belton, are visiting f Mrs. W. J. Bowen. Miss Mary Knox and little brother Roscoe, Jr., of Atlanta are visiting their grandparents, Mrs. C. G. Kay "7~ \ II in^j 1} ^>AN you ir k day, with p ^ ing to do? Was ^ most like a holi r a day of drudg ^ do your washi I Easy Naptholei J Just soak yoi r night; shave V: ? Easy into 4 lA g J let it dissolve; b 9 utes; rinse th f waters; blue ar f air and the w fc No tired, achin k' hands orskinne< f feel just as fres J first began yoi i rr< B Follow directions I \ IqH on inaid* of I \ f wrapper ^ I * *" t and Mrs. D. S. Knox. Most of our families have finishled "laying by" their crops and en-j .'joy sitting in the shade eating fruits and watermelons. | Mrs. Norris Wakefield and Mrs. J. T. Erwin spent Thursday with 'Miss Olivia Branyon. \vvvvvkvvvv\vvv\I IV s ! V SANTUC \ kvvvvvvvvvv Mrs. Johnson is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. L. Kellar. Miss Idealia Etnridge spent Saturday night with Miss Ruby Richardson. ^ Clarence Kay spent Sunday with George Morrison. Mrs. T. S. Palmer has returned home from a visit to relatives in Rock Hill. I / Mr. and Mrs. John Morrison and Miss Rosa Lee Bass and Mr. W. E. Morrison and family spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. James Haddon. ! Alvin Ethridge and Leroy Mar-(' tin spent Saturday night with(( Claude and James Richardson. Mr. Miles Morrison spent Sunday iwth Mr. Roy Kay. Miss Sudie Kellar left Saturday 1 for Langston, where she will teach J this session. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Richardson ' and children spent Sunday with 1 Mrs. E. J. Botts. i Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Richey spent 1 | Saturday night withtheir daughter, ] Mrs. James Haddon. j Miss Ruby Richardson spent Sunday with Miss Idealia and Alvin , Ethridge.. I I CONFESSED SENDING WIFE POISONED CANDY ' i' Nashville, July 28.?City detec- i tives today made public a confession i accredited to George Litrual, a 1 young Sumner county farmer, who J is charged with sending the poison- i ed candy to his wife, Mrs. Susie 1 e Offlimi nagine a wash Clean Eas] ractically noth- chased at an) ;hday seems al- One bar will c iday, instead of weeks' washi ery, when you an average W( ng mth Clean fQr on, a fe ,ne Wash Soap. ten minutes til ar clothes over- does not hurt : bar of Clean lt to ^' a allonsof water; have no rooi ^.*1 facViinnoH cnrti UU 1U1 ICll 111111- tMWiHvuvu VJW1 U ru two clean __ . id dry in open Notice how ashing's done. Easy looks fr g back, no red Ask for Clear i knuckles. You at your grocei h as when you is the only soaj or day's work, do this work. Louisville Food Products Co., I Louisville, Ky. sanet fSSiS Litrual, an inmate in the Middle Tennessee hospital for the insane, which resulted in the death of Mrs. Lizzie Brooks, another inmate, and the serious illness of Mrs. Litrual, and two attendants. Litrual was , arrested Saturday night by the Nashville police department on two warrants sworn out by H. J. Matthews, Litrual's brother-inlaw, one warrant charging murder and the other attempt to commit murder. The confession accredited to Litrual went into details regarding the purchase of the candy and the poison and the mailing of the package. Litrual is quoted as telling the officers that he had informed a young woman neighbor, of what he planned to do. They were to be married, he said, but no date was fixed. COMPARATIVELY UNKNOWN ' PORTRAIT OF WASHINGTON DEPOSITED WITH SOCIETY New York, July 29.?A rare and comparatively unknown portrait of George .Washington, painted in oils on a marble slab, by Archibald Robertson has been deposited in the New York Historical Society by Tarrant Putnam, a lineal descendant of the artist, it was announced today. A notation by the artist on the backboard filling indicates the portrait was painted in Philadelphia in December, 1791. The artist had written that when the painting was made Washington did not wear his false teeth. URGES UNITED STATES TO PREVENT FIGHT IN MEXICO IF POSSIBLE Calexico, Cal., July 29.?United States Consul Boyle announced tonight he had sent a lengthy telegram to the State Department at Washington urging that the United States offer its good offices in an effort to prevent hostilities between troops of the Mexican provisional he 1 WB ties! j| y may be pur- 1 N r grocery store. lo two ordinary J H ng?Just think, J ffi eek's wash done J H j w cents and in J H me. Clean Easy J H the fabric. Try J V pour house will lH m for the old- a B ViKifinr KnorH . H k/Miiig uvcu ^ different Clean 4 B , om other soaps. 4 B i Easy by name 4 B 's. Clean Easy 4 B 3 made that will 4 B ay ]l SAVES < THE RUB < B ^ ? I \ j 7he I, illilllli One in do< . from The Use of a T | Improves the One discing before is as good as two a after the crop is up weeds germinate at a gree of heat and disc a large portion of th< surface and destroys the start. I Discing more than operation insures a j bed. And yet, goo is often neglected, h slighted and a chan that the crop will m x out it. With the "plow pan broken up, and the the only way to do this get over your fields w; "harrow more often t horses, and guar ante | i seed bed in record t 8 ' If dim vj drawn a " Unwertt j Bowie I ' J J* | j-- ?vy* ! H PLOWING I ! [t . cj6?i-~. .wijumwa federal government and those of ha ^ /N^ T Anror PolifrtV- 1^. UUVCMlUi V>aill/U, Ui Juvnti wuiixvi jjj, nia .which might result from the 'ag invasion of Lower California re- j0f ported under way by Mexican fed- tri eral soldiers. = HOW OLD DOES A DOG HAVE TO BE, TO BE A DOG? HERE IT IS Tulsa, Ola., July 29.?When does a pup become "of age?" P. L. Long ,the city's chief sanitary inspector, under whose direction the dog catcher operates, has handed down a decision which, in the future, will govern in all instances where controversy arises over the owner of a canine claiming exemption of the dog tax, alleging the dog still to be a "pup." At hi-wpplflv conference of I the mayor and city commissioners, [the subject was brought up and Long appealed for an official interjpretation of the period when a pup j'becomes "of age." They decided it |was four months. Hereafter, pups in | Tulsa are pups until they are four 'months old?then they automatically become dogs. 'disorders continue in LOWER JAPANESE HOUSE i Tokio, July 29.?Disorder in the ;house of representatives yesterday jwas repeated tolay when the alle'giar.ce that Baron Takahasi, mini!ster of finance and other ministers IOLI :tor is Univer; Dnca 38 acres a day tan with one tf 58 all field wor plowing to hai Here is what < factor Universal Tractoi Soil day:~ . ^ How 7 to 9 acrm \ PlaI1?ng Din 27 ocm wit ilfitrofiAno fM - . uurauvuo UIC JO OCTIt VR >, because Harrow70acreei lower de- Cultivate from 13 , . Cultivator rng bnngs Drill 35 acre* wii SIQ to the Harvest 40 acre* them at . Haroett to acre* Mow 25 acre* wit Rake 40 acre* uri any other good seed Moline-Un d discing guarantees more j lurried or horses, but adds I] ice taken value of yQur Ian ake with- t0 y?uIt solves the "properly Hundred, of owi tractor is 'aving of?ne and >, you can *or3es- by usm? ith a disc Tractor:han with A demonstrate e a good cheerftilly arrange ime. guaranteed?satis instantly, i id you can oh the "drag behind" or hoi 7iplement* yoa now hav* with the Molir 21 the tame as with other type* of tracto t * i IT1. 3ros. Auto and l ract ^"cultivating l-A-fi d improperly used their offices by n lulling in stock gambling were s1 ain discussed. Several members the opposition rushed to the rosnm, followed by governmental 1 R*>HweYour Rheumatism For 25c. r,72 Today?Rel There are three vital processes of human existence,?the digestion of food, the extraction of nourishment from It and the elimination ot the waste. Let anything interfere with thoso processes,?let fiem be interrupted or improperly carried on, and sicknesa^^^B of some kind follows. Poor digestion and asslmlla-M ? ! tlon means failure to derive full nourishment from food and IcT ji that in turn often mcan3 im- ^ | poverlshed blood, "weakness, anemia, etc. Poor elimination ^^^^9 means an accumulation of waste matter 'which poisons the body, lowers vitality, decreases the power of resistance to disease and leads to the development of many serious Ills. Rheumatism,?due to some interference with the process of elimination, failure to get rid of certain body poisons,?cannot be expected to yield to any medicine that falls to correct the condition responsible for it Could any reasonable person expect to rid himself of rheumatic pain as long as The McMurray I Mr"' -M NE 3 'actor I i K I rvest I >ne man and a Moline- I r can do in a ten-hoor I ^ h m V Tandtm Due Harrow h a JO' Di?e Harrow with a 20* P*g Tooth Harrom to 20 acr? with a two w> \h a 10* Grain Drill . i with a I0y Grain flfiWir with a Corn BintUr < r tha8' Mowor th a 12y Rakm iversal Tractor not only < acreage; saves men and ! a> to j>i:> pcracretotnc k td. We can prove this . I farm help problem. I icrs report an average r one-third men and five fa the Moline-Univereal B ' on on your own land 1 t ;d, immediate deliveries i factory service available ' 1 , or Co.- . l . . H i- . M ^ ! HARVESTING f ' ' i r | II I ' lembers and fist fighting was tarted. Legal Blanks for Sale Here.? 'he Press and Banner Company. NR does it by improving digestion, assimilation and elimination ? the logical way. II ief or No Pay rheumatic poison la allowed to main in the body. Think of this. It explains the sue* cess of Nature's Remedy (NR. Tab* lets) in so many cases where other medicines have failed. Thousands ara using NR Tablets every day and get^tingr relief. Why pay five or ten! times as much' for uncertain things? A 25c box of Nature's B m Remedy (NR Tablets), con* S-M taining enough to last twentyp fl five days,?must help yon, must I Wglve you prompt relief and satisfactory benefit or cost you nothing. . And Nature'* Remedy 1J not only for the relief of rheumatism. It improves digestion, tones the liver, regulates kidney and bowel action, improves the blood and cleanses the whole system. You'll feel like a new person wnen you ve xajten ink xauieui a week. You've tried the expensiva medicines and doctors, now make the real test. Tou'il get results this time. Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) is sold, guaranteed and recommended by your druggist Drug Company