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SCHOOL NEWS NOTES OF LAURENS COUNTY The Schools, Teachers and Pupils. MIhh Melle Bolt baa gone to her school near Spartanburg. MIhh Matth! C. Tarrant Of Votings Bchool is in the city hospital, Columbia B. Ci tor treatment. Miss Willou tlruy of I.uurens Is teaching during the absence of Miss Tarrant. MIhh Bula Wlnn, teacher of the Byrds school, has placed an order for books to enlarge the school library. This Is the first school lo order hooks under the prize feature which appear ed In The Advertiser two weeks ago. Inez Myers won tin- prize, having con tributed to the library fund Tim prize will I ? sent out to her at once Prof. L. I). Rlledgo of the Rkom pchool ate Thanksgiving turkey with Vit and Mrs. Mm Wham. Miss Sue Bluckwell ol the Sardis school bus place?! and order lor die enlargement of the school library This school is the second to come un der the prize oiler. Itelow are the names of the pupils who contributed end the amount: Chortle Cleland, .!">c Ruth Cleland. in< . Mice Copeland, B?c Leun C'#ooland, 50c Goo. Copeland, 25c, Leisel Copeland. .",uc Bin ford Copeland. lOc. Mattie Bll Copeland jOc, Davit Copeland. 0f?C, l.ois Mc.Mil lun, $1.21, William McMillan, inc. Jo die McMillan. 17c. Pascal Pitts, I'.c. Luobelle Pitts. GOc, Roy Pitts, <10c, I laine- Ray. 01c, Maty Ray. me. Dor Ca? Hay, 25c, Fannie Hay, uOe, Louise Taylor, line, Ralston Wolr. "0c. it will be seen that Lois McMillan con tributed the largest amo int. The prize offered by the county sunerin tendent will bo forwarded to her at onee. All the schools in the county closed for Thanksgiving The box party at Keudcrsnnvllle LChool hoime on last Friday night was Quite f<. ?uccess. Miss Maude Bhurpe hua V.o support of her trus tees ami patrons in anything she un dertakes. About S30.00 was taken in which will go lor the Improvement of the school. Prof T. c. Cork, principal of the Princeton school, was in town Friday. Miss Hertha Durham, teacher in the Shlloh high school, was called hume a few days ago on account of her lather's death. Miss Durham will re sume her work at Shiloh Tuesday. Mr. Boyoo Wolff is tilling her place as teacher during her ab.-ence. Miss Ida Mae Taylor of the Mein.". ?ich. ol will give in entertainment "t the home of Mr. W. F. Medlock on Friday night Dec. loth. Songs, reel latlons, tnbleaus, ami drills will be ttie order of the evening. The school children will have boxe-; tilled with all kinds of good things to eat for sale The c'.lildren are going to ra'se enough money to Increase the library ami give the school house a new coat of white, a g.ood time ,s promised lo all. and It Is hoped that the people will go o i an?! encourage.children and teacher in the g.iod work. The following teachers wore on the Greets of Laurens Saturday: Mr. M. B. Self, S. .I. .Martin tl P. Pcden MIvh Ida Mae Taylor. Mary Alice Stoke;. Rlla Helle Copeland. Ni/.a Sullivan. Alma Wallace. Rucla Wolff, and Maclo McCarley. The following schools were vlsltea by Supt. Pitts during the past two Wfoks: Mt. Pleasant, Miss Myrtle Culbertson, teacher; New Prospect, B. V. CtllbortSOII; Long View. Miss Ida Turner; Pine Bluff, Miss Rthel Mc Danlel; pine C.rove. Miss Nellie Beacham; Wade, Mrs. Annie Atchl son; Cross Hill graded ami high schools. <i. p. Parrolt, Supt., Miss Pearl West, Miss Mzzle Griffin, Miss Blanche Plnson, Miss Rlennor Despor teH; Copeland, Miss .lessle Trotter; Center Point, Miss Mari? Howie; Ree dyQrove, Dr, J. o. Martin; Behtlehem, Miss IaiCy Mcllwalne; Mt. Olive. C W. Jones; Mt. Gallagher, Miss Ltltlo Young; Rkoni. L. I). R|ledge. Dairy Figur??. The dairy population of the Culled States Is about 21,000.000. or one cow to every five people. The average yield, according to official figures. Is only about 3,300 pounds a year, or. roughly, five quarts u duy on the aver age. It Is figured thut each person In the country eats about twenty pounds of butter euch year. Very little butter la Imported. Ill Health Is More Expensive Than an) Cure. This country is now filled with peo ple who migrate across the continent in all directions seeking that which gold cannot buy. Nine-tenths of them are Buffering from throat and lung trouble or chronic catarrh resulting from neglected colds, and spending fortunes vnluly trying to regain lost health. Could every sufferer but undo the past and cure that first neglected cold, all this lOrrOW, pain, anxiety and expense could huve been avoided. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Is fa mous for its cures of colds, and can always be depended upon. Cse it and the most Hwrlous dlseusea may be avoided. For sale by Laurens Drug Co. AID FOR FARMERS' WIVES. Und? 8am'a Extension of Institute Idea ? Help For Women. Extension of the farmers' Institute Idea to Include the farmers' wives Is the latest development of the policy of paternal solicitude for the great American agriculturist as pursued t?y the department of agriculture. The betterment of the home surroundings of the farmer, with particular regard for the advantages of good housekeep ing, wholesome cooking, the observ ance of the laws of sanitation, the beautifying of the home Inside ami our. the economical administration or the women's side of the business of farming, pure water, ventilation and an endless variety of minor Items which will tend to make the life of the farmer's wife and daughters more attractive are the purpose of this new division of the department*. Professor John Hamilton, formerly state secretary of agriculture of Penn sylvania, Is at the head of the division of farmers' Institutes. The work of the women's Institutes is perhaps broader In its scope than that for the men. It Is certainly more varied. In twenty-one states of the Union they have begun the work al ready, und within a year or so every agricultural state in the Union will have organized institutes for the wom en folk. The department of agriculture has just Issued Its first pamphlet on tin* subject of the farmers' institute for women, it Is hoped that (his will be but a forerunner of much more along the name lines. It Is the hope of the department authorities that they will be able to put In circulation a compre hensive series of bulletins, similar to those in regular circulation on general farm subjects, which will prove ol real interest and great value to the farm women of America?really worth while treatises on the art ami science of living and being happy amid ideal furm surrounding" NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA If Van Have it, head This Letter. I.aureus Drug (e. 4'uarrautces Mho* mi. "I was taken last August with a se vere Stomach trouble. The dor-tor said it was lierVOUSS dyspepsia. He gave me medicine for that. I took his treatment four weeks, didn't feel any better at the (>ud of four weeks than I did when I commenced taking his medicine. I took everything I heard of. The Hist day of December. I'.tos. | not a box of Mi- o-na tablets. I took them that af ternoon and the next tiny, and haven't had one bit of pain in my stomach since the 2nd of December. I look five boxes. Peel Well now. sleep good ?that is something I haven't done in a number of yensr." Mrs. M. K. Maxfleld, lt. F. D. u. Avouch, N. Y. June II, 19011. .Mi-o-na in the form of a table) is the best prescription for indigestion ever writ ten. It relieves after dinner distress, beb hing of gas. foul breath, heartburn etc.. in live minutes. it is Ruarranteed by Laurens Drug Co to permanently cure indigestion. acute or chronic, or any disease of the stomach, or money back. Mi-o-na is sold by leading druggists everywheie. and in Laurens by Lau. rens Drug Co. at fiO cents a large box. Test sample free from P.ooth's .Mi-o na. Huffalo. N. V. ? I (ntWUNClD HieH-O M?) H Cares catarrh or money back. Just breathe It in, Conipleto outfit, including lnluilcr$l. Extra bottles GOo. Druggists. LAND SALE The Stale of South Carolina, Count) of I.aureus. IN COUNT OP COMMON PI.PAS. Till-: HANK OP LAIJIUCNS, Plaintiff, vs. ANDTIKW c. OAKY, Defendant. Pursuant to a degree of Court in the above stated ease. I will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder, at Lau rens. C. IL, S. C. on Salesday in De. cember next, being Monday the Gill day of the month, during the legal hours for such sales, the following described properly to wit: All that lot or parcel lam!, lying and being in l.aurens County, stale of South Carolina, containing one ami one half acres of land, more or less, at Cold Point on which is a live room cottage and out-buildings, bounded by lamb, of M. I!. Smith on North and Kast, and on South by M. .Madden BttSl by c. and \V. c. It. It, Also all that tract or parcel of land lying and being in Laurens county South Caro lina containing one acre, more or less, bounded by lands of M. It. Smith on the north, east by c. & W. c. H. U? south and west by .Mr. Hunter, on which Is a three room house. Terms of Sale: cash. Purchaser to pay for papers, if the terms of sale are not complied with, the land to be resold on same or some subse quent Salesday on same terms, at risk of former purchaser. JOHN P. HOLT. c. c. c P. & (1. S.. Laurens, ?. c. Dated this Nov. iL'th, 1009. GHICHESTER SPILLS DIAMOND ^Sjg^ BRAND 1.ADIKS t ^V-*. . A.V ,o,.r l>ru?sl,| for Cni-CIIK '> DIAMOND IlkANI) PlU.fl In Rp.O Ooi.n metallic l.oin, soiled with Hltil>on. Tais NO omftn. Bur of ?rxBBlil ?ad a.k for C II I 1 If I h I [ .. DIAMOND II II A NO PII.I.M, for t w<ntT-fi VO years regarded at ht ?t. Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS TKI?D EVERYWHERE REMARKABLE FARMS. Natural Hot Water Products Near th? Arctic Circle. What la perhaps the most remarka ble farm In the world Is located In Alaska on a small tributary of (be Tauana river, only 125 milt s south "f the arctic circle. It is owned ami managed by J. P. Karsbner. Kurshuer a few years ago was engaged In hunt ing gold when he came across some thing which astonished him very much. It was a little stream of bol water. lie traced the stream to a spring, which was likewise hot. and It presently became Obvious that a considerable area was underlaid by such springs. Promptly deciding that this was a discovery more profitable than a gold mine, Karsbner gave up prospecting, obtained a quantity ol vegetable seeds of various kinds and , started in to raise garden truck. The temperature in that region sometimes falls to 05 degrees below zero In winter, but a natural system of hot water heating, free of cost, was Just the thing for truck gardening near the arctic circle, where potatoes have a market value of LT, cents a pound and other vegetables bring prices In proportion. The Karsbner farm occupies a fiat area with a convenient slant toward the south. Hot water oozing out of tin' .ground forms three small streams, which empty into the nearby river. The warm spring extends over a dis tance of about a mile. and. as the owner says, "the heat In the ground has to be felt to lie believed." lie adds: "I have never seen vegetables grow as they do here. The place has ] a climate of Its own. Often there Is no frost when it Is freezing every where else." The hot water farmer has seventy hens. lie has also six tine pigs. His crop of potatoes this year will be loo tons, at 350 bushels to the acre. To bacco has made a great growth. To matoes are a success. Squashes of several kinds are grown, some of them weighing as much as fifty-three pounds. Karsbner gets $1 apiece for his muskmelous. This hut water market garden must be a wonder in its way. but it Is doubt ful whether Its owner deserves as much credit as belongs to Crunk I.. Howard, United States commissioner at Co Id foot, Alaska, sixty miles north of the arctic circle, who in the raising of potatoes and other vegetables for market gets over the difficulty of tin.' climate by starting them in tin cans in the house. When the weather be comes warm enough he transplants them to the open. Mr. Howard's market garden Is the most successful to be found north of the arctic circle. lie protects his young cabbages from frost on cold nights by covering them with beer bot ties, the bottoms and necks of which ' have, been knocked oil'. In these "jack OtS," as he calls them, they llourish, and by June 10. when they have grown 6Ufflcicntly to till the bottles, they arc uncovered, in the (it'St week of Sep tember they are harvested. In central Florida pineapples are largely grown nowadays under sheds of lattice. The e sheds, elevated on posts at a height of about seven feet from the ground usually, in some In stances cover us much as ten acres of land. Their main object is to protect the growing fruit against frost, though it la claimed dial pineapples raised under them are more delicate in tex ture ami of superior IIa vor. In market gardens near Boston inel- j ons are grown in slings so that they ! will ripen evenly. Muskmelous are grown on arbors, each fruit being sup- ' ported by a piece of board about a ? foot square, on which it is turned ev< ery day or two. Strawberries are grown in pots in greenhouses, the ? ins tors of fruit being supported by wires. BO that they shall not touch the earth. WANTED All kind of furs, Mink, Musk rat and others. The highest market price will he paid. S. Poliakoff Next door P. O. Laurens, S. The Banking by Mail System of The Germania Savings Bank of Charleston, S. C. j^ives llieii depositors careful service. \\'i ile Them Resources over $2,900,000.00 38 Broad Street l\ < >. !'.ox-8.>7 Charleston, 5. C. You will fllld the largest and hfti I line of Art Squares und Pugs, in dlf fcrcnt designs, colors and sizes at prices that you cannot duplicate, at any other place I S M. & E H. Wllkea & Co William Solomon When buying a Watch or any piece of Jewelry it is well to know that you buy of a party that knows what he is selling to you; my LS years experience gives me the advantage to know just what I am buy ing, and therefore 1 buy only the liest and you can be sure when buying a piece of Jewelry at my store it Is absolutely re liable. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry repairing done properly and guaranteed. W. Solomon Expert Wateli Maker ami Graduate Optician, Nexl to Cray.-. Hotel Kyos Examined Prcc l.aureus, 5. C. I)U. CLIFTON JON KS Dentist Office in Simmons building Phone: Office No. NO; Residence 219. \ The Best *Vlan Who Ever Lived used to say that it was wotuans time and strength the sight of pieced bed clothing annoyed him, because in the countless stitches Liken, it represented so much of womans strength and vitality, and with the demands upon her, in the care <>:' home, the bringing into the world and the rearing of children, he claimed that her time would have been better employed had she been only resting. 1 wonder how many ft' us are awake to the fact that there i^ so called economy which is reckless extravagance, and th.it lavish expenditure in some particulars, means close economy in more important ones. The woman whose kitchen is supplied with the latest and best labor savers which is our Klectric Cooking .Stoves, Water Heaters, Klectric Lights. No lamps to fill and clean every day, no unokc absolute cleanliness from the begin ing to the ending, also our Klectric Irons and Fans are the more faithful exponent of economy than is she who drudges along in the old way making her one pair of hands do all the work, which our convenient Electric fHeating d< vices and our small Klectric Motors can be used for Sewing Machines, Churns and Washers atul for other purposes also. A woman is something more than a ^ machine, but if she use only this it would pay to take ^ good cave of her, because her life and usefulness would ^ thus be prolonged and home made far happier. ? See us for Klectric Lighting, Motor Work, electric supplies and all kind of electric repair work, also pipe iit ^ ting and plumbing work, a new line of fixtures on hand ^ both electric and plumbing. See us before you buy. I J. H. Boyd & Co. ^ Contractors and I iealers in Klectric and Plumbing Supplies. $ Laurents. C. Phone, 240 X X o tfjr Buijltc Having sold my entire interest it the /.umher. Buggy and Wagon business of II. E. drug & Son to the Jirm of drag A: Easterby, and having retired, I wish to thanh the people of I.aureus county for the patronage (hey gave me in that business. I appreciate the confidence reposed in me, and thank the people for their business. In retiring I wish to bespeak for the firm of Gray & Easterby the continued confidence and patronage of my friends, assuring them that the new Jinn will con tinue along the sann- lines, though greatly enlarged, and will offer the people the very best to be hud. drag & Easterby will conduct the business in the future and I urge my friends to give (hem u trial. Again thanking my friends, one and all, I m, Yours ven/ Iruli/, II. i^iUAY. H. ?. Gray Son and > H. Douglas Gray & Company We have purchased the entire business formerly conducted by H. E. Gray & Son and the business of H. Douglas dray & Company. Our line consists of the best in Lumber, Doors, Sash and Blinds Buggies, Wagons and Harness Call to see us al (he old Gray Lumbei Yards on South Harper Street. OUR PRICES CANNOT BE BEAT ^>ooooooooo<><