University of South Carolina Libraries
Office No. 61. ?t M Residence, No.lT./Jg Wednesday, Aug. 30 LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Mr. Jp.ir.es C. Kennerly is spend in? a few days at home. Miss Isol?e Shaffer of Columbia is visiting Mrs. Allen T. Samuel. Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Day, Jr., . spent Sunday here under the pa rental roof-tree. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Day made a short visit to Ed ge field Saturday in their handsome new car. Miss Nannie Gunter, the sweet singer of Batesbnrsr, is the guest of her cousin. Mrs. 13 B. Jones. Rev. E. C. Bailey will preach in the Presbyterian church Sunday morning at 11:15 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Allen and Miss Mary Lewis were among the visitors in Edgsfield Monday. Mr. Benjamin Greneker has ar rived to spend some time visiting: her mother, Mrs. Hallie Greneker. Miss Annette Pearlman of Augus ta spent the past week in Edgetield visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. Ruben stein. Mr. George Harris of Henderson, N. C., is here visiting his daughters, Mesdames J. R. Tompkins and W. C. Lynch. Mrs. E. J. Mundy has to the de light of her many friends returned from the hospital in Augusta great ly improved. Mr. VV. H. Dorn spent last Wed nesday with his pareuts, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Dorn near Celestia, Sa luda county. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wise came up from Trenton in their Reo Sun day afternoon to visit Mr. and Mrs. Walter Adams. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Cooper pass ed through Edgelield Saturday in their car en route to Ninety Six to visit Mr. S. M. Cooper. Mr. J. Davis May has returned from a vacation of several weeks and is now at his post at the store of Smith-Marsh Company. Calhoun Mays, Esq., assistant United States district attorney, spent the week-end at the home of his father, Col. S. B. Mays. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Logan re turned Saturday from their wed ding journey to Washington, New York and other northern points. Misses Ellen, Nora and Dorothy Prescott and Messrs. James and Manning Prescott of Modoc are guests in the home of Mrs. L. H. Prescott. Mrs. R. A. Marsh and Miss Vir ginia Addison have joined the Edgetield colony in Hendersonville, N. C., for the remainder of the heated term. The improvements on the store on the corner next door to the Farm ers Bank are almost completed and the new stock of Mr. Deitz is al ready arriviug. Mr. L. T. May enjoyed the hos pitality of a good country home Sunday, spending the day out with Mr. Roger Hill. Mrs. May is still with her mother at Ora. Mr. P. B. Day, Sr., will leave to-morrow for a western tour of two months. He will spend most of the time in California. He expects to return about the first of Novem ber. We will give the farmers of Edgelield county an opportunity Monday next to see the Meadows grist mill and the Titan oil engine in actual operation at our store. Stewart & Kernaghan. Edgelield sent a large delegation to the annual meeting of the Woman's Missionary Union at Gilgal yesterday. The loyal mission ary workers went in spite of the threatening weather. One candidate who has waxed fat during the campaign said seyeral days ago that he regrets that the end has come. During the summer he has been living on the fat of the land and now he must adjust him self to every-day fare. Mr. B. T. Rainsford was among the recent visitors in Edgetield. Ile is now a prominent young banker of Greenwood and is very highly esteemed in the home of his adop tion. Edgetield would like to see him return to "his own, ' is native land." Miss Bessie Parker die Mims arc* visitin d Reynolds at her home near Long ini res. Miss Sonhie Mims left this morn ing for New York to enter the Bellevue hospital to study to he a trained nurse. Come to Edgefield next Monday and see the d?monstration of the Meadows grist mill and Titan oil engines that will be made by ex perts from the factory. Rend what Messrs. Stewart & Keinaghan say of the demonstration in their ad vertisement this week. Brine a half-bushel of corn to Edgefield Monday and have iL (?round into meal free of cost on a Meadows grist mill. Experts from I the factory will demonstrate the merits of these mills and Titan oil I engines at our store Monday next. Stewart <fc Kernaghan. Mr. .T. T. Crews, of Laurens, a brother of Mr. E. H. Crews of The Advertiser, spent Friday in Edge? field on a visit to his brother. Mr. Crews spent a week in Edgefield last summer and made many warm personal friends while here, all of whom greeted him very cordially. We wish his visits were monthly instead of once a year. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Prince Mr and Mrs. M. B. Hamilton spent a day early last week with Rev. H. B. White at Saluda, making the trip in Mr. Hamilton's handsome Buick. I Mr. Prince brought back a speci I men of Mr. White's fine long staple cotton. One limb uf the stalk had four larger bolls, much larger than one usually finds on long staple cotton. Next Monday has been selected by Prof. T. J. Lyon as clean up day for the school grounds. All patrons of the school are requested to give their co-operation by send ing a hand. Be sure that the hand is supplied with some implement for work. In this clean up campaign Prof. Lyon should receive the as sistance of all patrons of the school. Put your shoulder to the wheel by sending a hand. New Heating Plant for School If not by the opening of school, certainly before cold weather, the high school building will be equip ped with a new heating plant. It will be modern in every particular and guaranteed to heat the first and second floors of the building, in eluding the auditorium. The con tract has been let to an Augusta firm which guarantees to give en tire satisfaction. Card of Thanks. I take this means of thanking the people of Edgefield for the hand some lead they gave me in the first primary, and solicit their support in the coming election. I feel that my experience and my desire to serve the people will enable me to make them a better servant for the next term than I have been in the past. Thanking you one and all for your support. Respectfully, A. A. Edmunds. Charming Social Gathering. The doors of the hospital country home of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Strother were thrown wide Friday evening to more than a hundred young people, Miss Charlotte Strother being the hostess. She entertained very beautifully in honor of her friend and guest, Miss Wal lace of Columbia. Progressive con versation was the leading form of diversion, and at the close of the l ist period ice cream and cake were served. The occasion will be pleas antly remembered by those who were honored with invitations. STOP THE FIRST COLD A cold does not get well of it sal f. The process of wearing out a cold wears you out, and your cough becomes serious if neglected. Hack ing coughs drain the energy and sap the vitality. For 47 years the happy combination of soothing an tiseptic balsams in Dr. Kint's New Discovery has healed coughs and relieved congestion. Young and old can testify to the effectiveness of Dr. King's New Discovery for coughs and colds. Buy a bottle to day at your Druggist, 50c. 1 Fresh Turnip Seed. Let us supply you with turnip seed. We have just received our first shipment of ruta baga and all the popular varieties of turnip seed di rect from the celebrated Buist farm. They are the kind that always ger minate and give entire satisfaction. Penn & Holstein. "Our Mother." Yes, she is gone, hut not forgot ten. Oh! how we miss her sweet smiling face and kind .vords But let us think o!" One whe careth for all; and think of the bright and never ending future of oin d' )?* sainted mother, whose spirit h-. passed away but for a brief period, whose soul only waits in heaven to bail the loved ones from whom she lias been parted. Oh! how we loved her, but God loved her best, ami 0:1 June 22, 1910 Ile took her ever to be wi: h tiitn in Glory. May it bc the high est aim and earnest prayer of each jue of us to meet her there. A.S the silent s'.iadesof evening Gather 'round u= o'er our souls, Domes a longing for the face, We shall never on earth in hold. She has gone beyond earth's sorrows, All life's cares for her are passed; But we know that we shall meet her, In a brighter world at last. Dh, the silent shades of evening. From that far oil' mystic shore, Brings to us some tender message, From our mother gone before. Tidings of the love she bore us, How our coming she awaits; How she'll welcome us in heaven, When we reach the pearly gates. Oh, ye evening shades enfold us, Soothe our minds with grief op pressed, From our hearts dispel! all sorrow, Let our weary spirits rest. Gently let us sink in slumber, Angels guard us through the gloom; Till at last in that fair morning, We shall meet beyond the tomb. Oh, what joy shall be our port;on, When at last thro' wonderous grace, All the shadows disappearing, We shall see our .MOTHER'S face. Letha, Olive, John and Annie Belle Jackson. Horn's Creek News. We bad a nice rain Sunday night md we all felt refreshed the next morning. The Horn's Creek 1 neighborhood ill joined and gave a free barbecue Thursday of last week, inviting a few friends. We were glad to have with us on that occasion Mr. John Swearingen and his charming little bride of Columbia. Also Mrs. So phie Swindell and Mrs. Alice Bunch :>f the same city, Mr. Wallace Wise ind daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moss and children, Mr. aud Mrs. Roper Moss, Mrs. Susie Miller, Mr. P. B. Day and Miss Moore, all of Trenton. Miss Mamie Cheatham ind brother and Mr. W. A. Collett >f your town were present. The Jay was spent very pleasantly in conversation, every one deporting ihemselves beautifully. We are so Droud that we can speak words of Draise for our little community. The friends and neighbors of VIrs. Sam Miller are grieved to earn that she is not doing so well. >he was carried to the home of Mrs. Susie Miller last week, where she ?ould be more conveniently located 0 medical treatment. We are pained to learn of the ickness in the home of Mr. Pierse ilyan, his two sons and grand laughter being sick. We hope for heir speedy recovery, as they are all greatly missed in our Sunday school. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nicholson ?f Pleasant Lane paid Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Fair a flying: visit last week. Our dear old friend George Swear ngen is having quite a bouse party 0 be an old bachelor. The party onsists of Mr. and Mrs. John iwearincen, Mrs. Sophie Swindell, ire. Alice Bunch of Columbia. Mrrs. P. B. Lanham and ber son, *reston, dined with Mr. and Mrs. L A. Wells Sunday. Mr. S. L. Roper returned home lunday from Meriwether, where e visited his daughter, Mrs. John IcKie. Mrs. Jessie Crafton and daughter nd Miss Anna Roper worshipped t Mt. Zion Sunday, which was the etrinning of a series of meetings at bat place. Wc wish to congratu ite the Mt. Zion people upon the rection of such a nice new house f worship, and upon such a cheap .asia. L. Y. Bryan has a sister visiting im from Alabama. Miss Anna Roper left Thursday 0 visit friends at Monetta. If the weather permits Mrs. Jes ie Crafton will leare Saturday to isit relatives at Clark's Hill. W. E. Ou/.ts' sister came down rom Greenwood and spent Sunday 1 his home, making the trip in her ar. Miss Marion Miller and Miss jena Wells of Colliers are visiting beir aunt, Mrs. Wallace Miller. Horn's Creek. E. J. NORRIS Licensed agent for four good li ensed Fire companies-one of them he largest represented in Edgefield. Best service with appreciation of ll patronage. A colored minister down south was conducting a revival without much sr.e.c*iss. At h's', however, he awakened his congregation by ask ing: Does yo' know what eternity is? Well, bredern, I tell yo'. If one of dem li l sp.wows what yo'see raun1 yo'-gnrden bushes was to din Iiis bill in ?I.- :Linti(; ocean an' take one hop a day an' hop across the oountryan' put dat drop of water into de 'Ci?ic ocean, an' den hop back io de 'Lantie ocean-just ono hop a day-an1 ii he keeps dat hop pin' np 'twell de 'Ii .mic ocean wu/. Irv ;is :; bone, it wouldn't be break D' day in eternity 'Dar, now, said one of the breth ren, yo' see fob. yo'self how long eternity is. "- Every body's. RESULTS TELL. There Can be no Doubt About Results in Edgefield. Result." tell the tale. All doubt is removed. The testimony ot Edgefield citi zen Can be easily investigated. What better can be had? T J Paul, propiietor of garage, Jeter street, Edgefield, says: "Kid ney trouble in my case was brought on by being on my feet continually. I had dull pain in my back and I tired easily. When I was on my feet for any length of time, my back got sore and stiff. My rest was brok en at night, as the kidney secretions were too frequent in passage, caus ing me to get up a number of times. Three boxes of D jan's kidney pills, procured at Penn & Holstein's drug store, cured the backache and other symptoms of kidney trouble." Price 50c at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's kidney pills-the same that Mr. Paul had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. How To Give Quinine To Children. FEBRILINE ls the trade-mark name given to an improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleas ant to take and does not disturb the stomach. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try It the nest time you need Quinine for any pur pose. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The mme FEBRILINE is blown in botUe. 25 cento. Experts fr store Monda: the Meadow's The mill will 1 see what it w Bring half will grind it f Ladies as v? Stewa I Gained 15 Pounds j In ?0 Da vs OD Tanlac. _ ! MRS. TALLANT WAS ? QU?CKLY RESTORED TO GOOD HEALTH, SHE SAYS. i FRIEN D3 TALK ( ) F CAS E. She Declares "Tanlac Almost Worked a Miracle Fer Me I And Deserves Highest Praise." To cain fifteen (is) pounds on one and a half (l^) bottles of Tan lac in ten days treatment and to be restored to good health is in itself a truly wonderful endorse ment of the merits of this "master medicine." That is exactly what Tanlac one and half bottles of it, did for Mrs. Annie Tallant, of No. Sixth St., Greenville, S. C., she said in her statement endorsing Tanlac and telling" of the remarkable way it re lieved her troubles. While Mrs. Tallant told of the results Tanlac gave her, two of her sisters and her husband were present. Her state ment, one of the most remarkable ever given Tanlac, follows: "My system was badly run down, and either that caused rae to suffer with a lot of other ailments or the other ailments caused my health to become bad," said Mrs. Tallant. "I could not sleep at all at night and I would roll and toss in bed for hours each night. I never did sleep soundly. "No one knows how much I suf ferred. I had headaches all the time and sometimes I thought I could not stand this pain and I thought they would kill me. My nerves were in bad shape, too, and I would jump at the least noise. I had no energy, and I was very weak. Really I had to force myself to do my housework, abd I just had to drag myself around all the time. "I never did feel well, and most of the time I was very miserab'p. Anyone who has not suffered as I have can not realize what I did go om the factory wi y, September 4, to Grist Mill and Titai be in actual operatic ill do. bushel of corn witt ree of charge. rell as men are invito ,rt & Kerns th rough with. I was sick all over, and it seemed as if I could not get well. I suffered a lot with pains across ray stomach, too, and with indigestion. My sisters and mv busband told mel looked sickly and weak before I took Tanlac, and they did not know what would be come of me. "The testimonials of Tanlac that were printed in the papers convinc ed me it would help rae, and so I began taking it. I weighed when I began taking Tanlac, and when I had taken one and a half (li) bot tles I had gained fifteen (lo)pounds. I stopped Tanlac then, for as sure as I live I was then a well woman, and I did not have an ache nor a pain. That was two mouths ago, and ? feel even better now than I did wiien I quit Tanlac, for I have more strength and energy. "Tanlac gave me a wonderfal appetite, though 1 could not eat anything hardly before I began Tan lac and neither did I want to eat, my stomach was in such bad shape. I can eat anything now, though, and I never have indigestion. I feel fine and hearty and strong now, and I think it is just wonderful the way Tanlac broke up my troubles. I am not sickly now, and I do not look nor feel that way. I guess if I had continued to take Tanlac I would have gotten so heavy I would be clumsy by this time. "Everybody around in my neigh borhood is talking about the good Tanlac did me, and we think it al most worked a miracle for me. Sure enough, now, it does not yeera that any medicine could have done as much for anyone as Tanlac did for me. but Tanlac is the only medi cine I took and I know it is due all the credit. "I am glad to recommend it, and Tanlac deserves the highest praise I can give it. I had been planning to write you and tell you how much good it did me an'-1 how wonderful I think it is, but I could not find the time, it seemed, and so I am glad you came to see me." Penn & Holstein, Edgefield; Johnston Drug Co., Johnston; J. W. Bracknell & Son, Plum Branch; E. P. Winn & Bro., Plum Braanch, R. F. D. 6; G. W. Wise, Trenton; Robertson & Co., Pp-rksville. ill be at our demonstrate i Oil Engines. )n so you can L you and we id. ighan