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! . - ? 7 ' No. $394 .Report of the Condition of the Fee k the State of South Carolina, at the C L RESO Loans and discounts (except those Overdrafts, unsecured ^ U. S Bonds deposited to secure circu Liberty Loan Bonds: Liberty Loan Bons, 3 1-2, 4 and secure State or other deposits of billa Total bonds, securities, etc., other tha Stock of federal reserve bank (50 per {Value of banking hous? Furniture and fixtures Real estate owned other than banking Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Cash in vault and net amounts due Checks on other banks in the same bank (other than Item 17) Total of items 14, 15, 16, 17 and Checks on banks located outside of bank and other cash items Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer War Savings Certificates, Thrift Sta Total LIABI Capital stock paid in Surplus fund i Undivided profits X.ess current expenses, intrest, and Circulating notes outstanding ! Net amounts due to National banks Total of items 2-2 and 33 Individual deposits subject to check. Cashier's checks outstanding Dividends unpaid Total of demand deposits (other than Reserve, items 34, 35, 36, 37. 38 Other time deposits Total of time deposits subject to 45 'Bills payable with Federal Reserve nVk+oi A VWH State of South County of N \r L. W. Bedenbaugh, cashier of ?wear that the above statement is belief. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 10 day of Sept., 1918. A. B. Wise, Notary Public. CHANGE >0TI0> ABOUT CALOMEL v >'ew Tariety Called Calotabs is Per\ fectly .Safe and Delightful. With all of the liver cleansing and system purifying qualities of the old style calomel, but robbed of its sick- , ening, griping and dangerous effects, Calotabs is destined to become the most popular of all home remedies, as It lias already foe come the favorite 01 air physicians. . The new style calomel, called Calotafos, is perfectly delightful in effect.' One tablet at Ibed time, with a swallow of water,?that's all. No nausea, no griping. Next morning you awaks feeling fine, your liver active, your rsystem purified and "with a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what you please, there is no restriction of habit >or diet. Genuine Ca1nfabs are never sold in I bulk. Ask for the original, sealed package, price thirty-five cents. Your -druggist recommends and guarantees r^lnto'ho ?( AHvt 1 i V/aiv/v-wwu. . ?v \ i food ' AH Wmiiahl m. \jr v T * A ^' ; This Range makes < Will sell them chea; Better get your goo They will probably i / ' a ( ^f-jf* *jj*pfr ^ * *^~' i3HSlflSSBS8i8K &BBB2 (pie's National Bank, at Prosperrry. tr lose of Business August 81st, 1918. ?URCES. showe in b and c) $326,680.37 ... 5.479.4C :ation (par value 6.250.0C . 4 1-2 per cent, pledged to ; payable $30,000.00 n U. S 30.00n 0{ 'cent of subscription) 1,050.0( 1,639.61 1,789.48 ; louse 7,500.0( i Bank 14,911.02 due from national bansk.. 15,897.5? city or town as reporting 91.5C .18 $21,012.25 city or town of reporting 431.6? 1 and due from U. S. Treas. 312.5C /NTTTTIO^ 8S4 or r mps duuanj ? $412,885.10 LITIBS. $ 25,000.0( 12,500.00 $5,620.73 taxes paid 1,013.15? -4,607.55 A C%~ A Af 0,<SDV.V i 1, 57.82 ....$1,657.82 '. S6,100.81 S3.4C . 56.0C l bank deposits) subject to 139, 40 and 41... .$96,242.21 236,627.5? Reserve, items 42, 43, 44, $236,627.35 Ean 30,000>" .. ; $412,885.10 'ewberry. (ss) thp pibove named bank, do solemnly true to the best of my knowledge and L. W. Bedenbaugh, Cashier > Correct- Attest: J. A. C. Kibler, T. A Dominick, R L. Luther, Directors. s U. S. Food Administration. Or Squire 'Tater 'low he soin' to be mighty nigh king er de roos* 'mong garden sass folks. We alls kin eat him as a 'tater boiled, baked, fried, stewed, cooked wid cheese en dey gettin' so dey make im inter flour; so's we kin "substi-tute" him fo' wheat flour. He's de "suhstitutenest" of all de vittles, he sez. De udder garden sass folks lak Inguns, tomatues, cabbage en turnips en squash don't need to git peeved, 'cause dey's goin' to be room in de pot fo' de whole tribe. Ev'y las' one on 'em can he'p save wheat en fpr de bovs dat's doin' de ftgrhN in' over yander. . A NATION'S STRENGTH IS IN ITS FOOD SUPPLY Eat Less ?Tftfoste codling Create a Reserve ~ /wjw|ro?8\ AMERICA MUST FEED W?1F 100,000, 000AIIJE5 BHBBWnUHnHMM eceived I t Iron Ranges I cooking a pleasure. | p as any one. S >d wife one now. ? be hard to get soon. I X _? 9 f* %j J I ENGINEER GAINS 68 i POUNDS; TOOK TANLAC. i i ??? lost Health Completely and Had to tr; Lay Off 15 Months?Almost Lost at > Hope?Now Back on Regular Ron. ) Says Tanlac is Only Remedy Ever S? Helped Him. : be "My name is J. B. Watson and my , home is in iMobile, Ala. I am thirty- te ) th?ee years old and by profession am a railroad engineer. I have a regular fr< ; ri*n on the work train between Selma fo ) and Mobile. i "Up to only a few months ago? 10 '' -Li T i ~ J 4-^lr ' t licit 15, up 10 me tune 1 siai icu Larking Tanlac?my health was broken 1: I down completely. When I commenced taking Tanlac I only weighed one 10 hundred and three pounds and had ; rot ^een able to work for 15 months. 2: I iNow, nfter taking only three and a I h~If boftles of Tanlac, I weigh one hundred and seventy-one pounds and ; have actually gained sixty-eight y pounds and never felt better in my j life. I suffered for several years with J the worst kind of stomach trouble and constipation. I kept dropping down , in weight and losing strength, and nf j finally I broke down completely. I y - ? 11 ( had. several attacKs or waai was wn-, ed acute poisoning of the stomach and *n nobody knows how I suffered. I took o* treatment at the Marine Hospital at ( Algiere, La., and at Toulane Hospital, ti< IXew Orleans. I also took treatment T1 at Hot Springs Ark., and at Lookout pi Mountain. To tell you the truth, I P? J tried everything I could think of and spent hundreds of dollars, but I ju3t M ~ * ? 3 ? J ififfaori ^ Kepi gomg aown mn, aim iui whole months I was unable to run my , engine or to do any other kind of work. Of course, I was awfully dis, couraged about myself, as I could see , (but little hope of ever 'beins: again. While I was sick and unable* to work, brakeman gave me a half si (bottle of Tanlac. I took it and began 0_ to feel better right away. My stomach felt better and I got so I could eat and- enjov my meals. When this wa3 a I gone I bought another bottle and after or finishing it I felt so much better .i . went back to work on a switch engine i I con.ld just feel myself gaining in to (weight and getting stronger every ; day, and after taking my second bot. tie I went back to running an engine 1 on the main line . ' I '"'Now, since taking three and a half ? . bottle of Tanlac, I am working reg: ular, running a work train betweea ^Mobile and iSalem, the swampiest : country in this section of the state. j Now, what I have told you is the ar j truth, and hundreds of people who er know me and know how I looked be! foi'e I took Tanlac will tell you the ! same thing. Another thing, you can w ?-* ? 1 T I J i see irom my picture, wmcn i nau ! taken while I was sick, how much 'stronger and healthier I look now than I did then. They can say what ^ they please about Tanlac and patent j medicines, hut I can truthfully say ^ j.that Tanlac is the only medicine that p] j ever did me any good, and I want g | everybody to know about it. If people i do net believe you, just tell them to nc i.come and look at me now and then <Xu j look at my picture, which was taken cr i while I was sick, I will show them -nickly what Tanlac has done ,for me." >c< Gilder & Weeks, Newtaray, S. C., 1 Prosperity Drusr Co., Prosperity, Lit- p. ' M/? Ht.iirr Pa MATIT1 - I . tic iUUUUlUiU JL/l XXfy W., UAWWAV j tain. S. C., W. C. Holloway, Chap[ pells, S. C., Whitmire Pharmacy, i ' Whitmire, S. C. I Jk Reasons! k j N, Why you should use ||^ 1 i Cardui, the woman's i tonic, for your troubles, ! Kx ] have been shown in . ' ^ thousands of letters from f ! ^ actual users of this medi- . ^ j k i cine, who speak from gk J ; personal experience. If | the results obtained by 1 Bk'S other women tor so many EX i . years have been so uni- WTt ^5$ forraly good, why not (L feu j give Cardui a trial? Take "~ L His Woman's Tonfc .^| *' . k >| Mrs. Mary J. Irvin, cf j il Cullen, Va., writes: | 4 : "About 11 years ago, I | &jjj suffered untold misery ^ I ^ with female trouble, bear- ^ ; kjl ing-down pains, headi ache, numbness ... I |^| ; ^ n! would go for three weeks I almost bent double ... | My husband went to Dr. j for Cardui . . . i j Aijcr taking about two 8 ^ } k J bellies I be^an going ek ar nnd and when I took N|r i k^I three bottles I could do |\ * aJlmywoik." E-80 tejfc 1'iite^TOCv_ Books of Registration ' * The members of the board of regisaiion will be at the following places the following dates: Little Mountain, Tuesday, 10th of >ptember, from 10 to 1:30 o'clock. Pomaria, Tuesday, 10th of Septem- . r, from 2 to 5 o'clock. Chappells, Wednesday, 11th of Sepmber, from 3:30 to 6:30 o'clock. Prosperity, Thursday, September 12, om 10:30 to 6:00. Will have books , r 8, 9 and 10 townships. I Silverstreet, 13th SeDtember, from to 1:00 o'clock. I Longsnore, lata iseptemDer, irom 30 to 5:00 o'clock. Glymphville, 16th September, from : 00 to 1:00 o'clock. Mt. Bethel, 16th September, from 30 to 5:00 o'clock. R. C. Sligh, , Member of Board. ' , EW REGISTRATION THIS TEAK. i- A- efnno fho ifiis is lan Leutu oiu? ?ople registered for voting, and a >w registration must be made this >ar. The registration boons will be open the store of R C. Sligh. under the jera house, from July 1st to August aft, both inclusive, for the registra- < Dn of voters in accordance with law. ^e law requires that every man shall 1 -esent himself for registration in 1 srson. R. C. SLIGH, ember of the County Board of RegIcf-raHnn 6-21 td t 668 cures Bilious Fever. 8-1, if : . i LITTLETON COLLEGEHas just closed one of the mo3t iccessfnl years in its history. The th annual session will begin Sept < th. ' Write for new illustrated catalogua ; so and QUICKLY fur particulars ] incernins onr special or."r to a few r1 s w' o frn not pay onr catalogue ! ite. Address J. M: Rhodes, Little , ' n. X. C. MTERS3TY OP SOUTH CAROLINA ' Columbia, S. 0. 1 PEXING OF .SESSION POSTPONED TO SEPTEMBER 25. Students in University Students' , rmy Training Corps will be furnish- j I lodging, .board, uniforms, tuition ! id $30.00 a month pay hy the gov- i nment. Students under eighteen will have ' ? privilege of military training j ithout commutation. ^ W. iS. Curreil, , President. j J OTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. 1 I will make a. final settlement of , e estate of David L. Shealy in the ( rotate Court for 'Newberry county, ? jC., on Friday the 4th day of Octo- ' >r, 1918, at 1-0 o'clock in the fore>on and will immediately .thereter ask for my discharge as guardi- , l of said estate. Jas. L. Ruff, j Guardian. i syberry, iS. C., Sept. 5th, 1918. i H * i __________ 1 Wood's Seeds t1 PwmtAAn riftirnv ullllldUU WUYCI i Increases crop production, improves the land ] and makes an excellent * grazing and forage crop. J HOOD'S FALL CATALOG .j Just Issued Tells All About Crimson Clover, ? \lfalfa, Fulghum Oats, ] \bbruzzi Rye and ail other t n in 1 farm ana uaraenaeeas ; FOR FALL SOWING. \ Catalog mailed free. Write for T it, and prices of any Seeds re- ' quired. ______ r. W. WOOD & SONS, " Seedsmen - Richmond, Va. ? J b t: I r * J MORE FRUIT and LESS SUGAK * 0 r * s How? * e More Lest + n Canned Fruit Jam * Dried Fruit Jelly + Fruit Butter Preserves * Fresh Fruit Sweet Pickles * 1 * I 666 cures by removing tne eajse. v 8-5 tf c 1 HK Hii'h \LD AND XP Vfc QNK s-i. K XL;., * ISA'S HON ' CKJIEH MANY INQUIRIES CONCERN- 1 ING ORIGIN OF THAT CITY'S NAME , ! FACT OF HISTORY BRIEFLY TOLI Reunion Visitors In September Wit Be Surprised and Entertained By Historic Surroundings of the City. Tulsa, Okla., Aug.?In view of th< , fact that people all over the south ar? beginning to talk about Tulsa, and th? Confederate reunion, it is not surpria ing that interest is attached to the name and that people of an investig&t Ing turn of mind should make inquiriet about it. Some years ago Dr. Fred S. Clintoi niihlishpH n nonn this snhifiO and a copy of it has been preserved in the public library. From this pam phlet it apears that the word "Tulsa* is not descriptive of man or beast. I: means nothing in itself. It is simpl3 the name of a former clan of th? Creek Indians. Dr. Clinton says: "Anciently, clans, or secret societies existed among the Creek Indians out | of which, in the march of progress, 8 constitutional form of government wa*1 framed, and these clans sent their rep ' resentatives to the councils of th? Creeks. There was a time when this, oligarchic government wa? verj j strongly established among thi Creeks, or Muscogees, because th | members of the clans were not allow- j on/? vanrfleflnfoflvfil cu lu iiiici uiaxi j auu x^yji vouutubi ? v? were hereditary. One of these clana was known by the name of Tulsa, and In this manner the settlement took ita ame." The first settler within the present i limits of the city of Tulsa was Archie Yahola, a fullblooded Creek Indian. , He was a man of fine physique and possessed a superior mind. He came here from Georgia in 1836. and was selected town chief of the Tulsa Lochapokas. His followers idolized him, and when he died, in 1850, he was Muriel in fho snnthprn narf r>f thp rifv near the ampitbeatre erected by tbe tfan for the practive of their religious | rites. Tulsa's growth has been very rapid' af recent years. It is now a modern 2ity with an estimated population of 30,000. It has bank deposits of $53,000,000, with total resources of 560,000,000. The monthly bank clearings are approximately $50,000,000. rhe greater part of this wealth comes from the oil industry, total daily shipments of oil from the city being 300,)00 barrels.' It may be of interest to ?a - -M i.i? p?i. m..i4-V. ? [Iiatte uuie Ui LUC isci luai luisa :o iuo center of the Mid-Continent Oil belt Prom which the nation is receiving a targe per cent of the oil necessary to the prosecution of the European war. Tulsa is also a patriotic city. At the ?ose of the drive for the third Liberty Loan, the community had inest3d $18,607,900 in various war funds. Every demand on the community for tvar purposes has been promptly met. rulsa's quota of the third Liberty Loan was subscribed in less than a cveek. ; The community will redeem its pledge to the ex-Confederates like it reUCKlliS <111 Ul ito uuiifiQuuuo auu neets its responsibilities. That the eunion here Sept. 24-27 inclusive will le one of the best in the history of; :he United Confederate Veterans' as-! sociation, is assured. It -is believed! ;hat the attendance will reach 100,000! md arrangements are being perfected i: ;o entertain that large number of peo-j i ?le. ! > - - 1 1 JL UiSa IlctS ail lUiciCDWii^ Hioi' i fi Dack ground. A corner of. the Chero- : iee, Creek and Osage nations was with- 1 n a few hundred yards of the center i )f the business section of the city. 1 rhe Albert Pike highway, and the his-. oric Ozark trail cross each other < ] lere. Washington Irving stopped < lere in 1832 while making his Ameri- 1 ;an tour. Sam Houston, the celebrat>d warrior-statesman left records of . lis wanderings around the city. - - -Li- - -i j >ome or iue om nuuuw iui m mm u^ired conspicuously in the early hisory of the southwest, were located tear the present site of the city and heir remains are yet to be seen. All :Iong the Arkansas river, there are ioints of historic interest that visitors o the reunion will see with pleasure ,nd profit. But it is modern Tulsa that will inerest the visitor most, because it is a aarvel of enterprise and thrift. The iew portion of the city rivals in eauty and magnificance anything on he continent. The most modern sky?MnoTa woat nf tho Mississirmi river V/iftyvic ?? vww r<r re to be seen in Tulsa, and its skyine is ever changing. Development of f the oil industry has made it postble for these modern buildings to be rected. Vast fortunes have been iade in this one industry. Yet, there re a variety of industries here that enerously repay thoee who have their loney invested In them. Reunion visitors will find the suroundings at Tulsa entirely different rom any .place where reunions have ieen held in the past. It will be a. new i-orlc to many. Oklahoma is a won- * c of the country, and its 1 i.r of late years has been '^nrfon visitors will be : t t'*e powtb of Tulsa and 1 ' ;snt of the oil industry 1 ,-r : 6. * "MID IAHD" OEMO IRVING GREAT ENGLISH WRITER MADE GLOWING PREDICTION ; HIS L0N6 SINGE FULFILLED Reunion Visitors In September at Till* sa Wil! See Monument To Irving Who Visited the Spot in 1832. Tulsa, Okla., August?In the early thirties, the renowned Washington Irving came over from England and made a tour of parts of the United States. His tour to the southwest included a stop among the Indians at the present location of the city of Tulsa. Local history has it that he paused on an eminence aooui a mue aurmwwi. of the center of the present business district of Tulsa, and took a comprehensive view of the valley of the Arkansas spread cut before him. The following description of the landscape, and prophecy of the future wealth of the community, appears in his sketches of the American tour: " i nis seems 10 me to ue mc jrxwu*ised Land, flowing with milk and honey. On the rich herbage of the prairies will be fed herds of cattle as innumerable as the sands upon the seashore. And the flowers that bedeck the prairies will be a paradise for a nectar-loving being." This was written October 13, 1332, about the time of year that the 28th ' annual reunion of the Confederate Veterans' Association will be held this year at Tulsa. The dates of the reunion are September .24-27 inclusive, or some ten days earlier in the fall *1 irr'h?/?h TTTHtI V txid.il LUC UdLCb upuu nu.v^u m t?MO wrote his appreciation of the valley of the Arkansas. Visitors to the reunion will have an opportunity to enjoy the same river panorama, made more beautiful and promising by modern enterprise and a city of 80,000 people. The greatest agricultural coition nf nviflhoma is alone: the Ar kansas, above and below the city of Tulsa, a land ndw flowing with milk and hcney, fulfilling the Irving prophecy if not discounting it. One of the- beauty spots around Tulsa is Irving Circle, on the crest of a ridge north of the city now beautitified by handsome residences. A monument has ben erected there commemorating the visit and prophecy of Washington Irving made more than eighty years ago. The idea "was originated and carried out by W. Tate Brady, chairman of the General Committee of the Confederate reunion organization. In the meantime, the prophecy of the great English writer has been, discounted many times. The comparatively ancient settlements of the Indians around Tulsa and throughout the state are full of interest. The footprints of the Indian have been obliterated by the march of modern progress, but his name ling ers. Where he formerly had his tented villages, or wigwam abodes, cities have been built and towns laid out. His hunting grounds on the Arkansas have been converted into rich and productive farms. Alfalfa has taken the place of prairie grass, and domestic cattle graze in former haunts of the wild beast. All over Oklahoma prosperous towns and cities have been built. They are laid cut along modern lines of city building, and their people are enternTvciricr and natrfotifi. Tulsa holds first place among Oklahoma cities for enterprise and progress. The city has grown more in the past ten years than any other city in the great southwest. It is amply able to care for a lirge number of visitors, such as attend the annual reunions of the Confederate soldiers. Had it not possessed all of the facilities for caring for the reunion, the Confederates would not have been urged to come here with their 1918 meeting. All who come to the reunion will be cared for in most satisfactory manner. U. C. V. HONORS TULSA GIRL Miss Juliette Hunt, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, who is Maid of Honor of th? leadquarters Department, Sons of Confederate Veterans and who will ake a prominent part in the annual eunion at Tulsa, September 24-27. 4 They are going to "shoot" an oil >vell Tulsa, Oklahoma, this year as i compliment to the visitors to the Sonxederate reunion. " 3 '