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Additional Locals Mrs. Lucie Cochran entertain* her pretty visitors with a moonligl picnic at Cold Springs Tuesday nigh * The trip out to the sprinsr was mac in the big auto truck which mac i j everyooay nave a guuu umc. mv. in the party were: Misses Mary ar Duella Oslin, Caroline Reese, Carr Cochran, Lavinia and Eugenia Col man, Amelia Anderson, Susan Jone ^ Hannah Cochran and Rebecca Jc-ne Messrs John Lomax, C. E. Willian son, Frank Harrison. Robert Col man, Sanford Howie, Francis Mabr; k Arthur Link, Ralph Syfan, Alle ' King, Herman Greene, and Fras< McDill. The merry crowd was chaperone y, by Mrs. E. V. Snipes and Mrs. C. 1 Cochran. EXCURSION TO CHARLESTON. The Southern Railway Compan will run an excursion from Abbevilh Alston and all intermediate point to Charleston and the Isle of Palrr on Thursday, July 8th. The train will leave Abbeville ? nine o'clock A. M. and will arrive i Columbia, at 1:35 p. m. A spech train will leave Columbia at 2:40 j m., arriving at Charleston at 7:10 i m. .passengers may ictum uw ??. regular train up- to. and includin morning trains leaving Charlestor July 13th, 1915. The round trip ticket from Abbe ville is $3.75. Ample coaches will b provided on all trains and a comforl able trip is promised. % This is a chance to spend four day pleasantly at the seashore at a mod erate price. The Southern will ai range for music, dancing, and 9the amusements for the visitors. Partie desiring to make the trip shoul "^write to Mr. W. E. McGee, Assistar Passenger Agent, Columbia, S. C., o Mr. W. R. Ta'oer, Traveling Passer ger Agent, Greenville, S. C. Famous Boys. Jack and Hugh Bradley and ou son Bill are famous boys now. Som weeks ago we published a short stor of how these three youngsters ha eaten all the "snake strawberries" o the back of Barnwell's lot and ho> our son Bill had missed the sicknes with which Jack and Hugh were ai flicted because he only ate the bei ries which had "fur" on them. Thi little article was published in Th New York Sun and Jack and Hug and our son Bill are now in the lime light. The people of New York ar taking life easy now too, as afte ythis they will know what kind o j;nake strawberries to eat, whic knowledge is well worth while to person living in a big city like Nei York. Buried Under Masonic Auspices. The following notice of the burif of Mi*. Fred Link was taken from Canada nanev. I "Yesterday afternoon the funerc of the late Mr. Frederick Link, \vh ^ was killed at Birmingham, Alabanu took place in this city and was largt ly attended. The obsequies wer under the auspices of the Masoni Society, of which deceased had bee a prominent member. At the res: dence of Mr. J. A. Goodsell, Isab< j street, services were held, conducte | by the Rev. W. G. Clarke, Pastor o j the Tabernacle Church, who also o1 liciated at the interment at Bellevill j cemetery. Bro. A. R. Walker cor ducted the Masonic burial servici I Many were in attendance to pay th last tribute of respect to a departe brother and friend. The bearei were members of the craft, namel; Geo. Lawrence, T. H. Horner, J. V Barlow, F. McLean and W. Taylor, The floral tributes were not onl numerous, but most beautiful in d< sign. Amongst the contributoi were the following: Wreath, D. J. Enbank and A. . Poole; Anchor, A. Z. Kinyon, H. 1 Plant, W. W. Shoemaker, H. Crame F. C. Stockwell, W. W. Payne, J. 1 Bissell, W. L. New, A. E. Hopkin Sheaf, Mr. and Mrs. R. Y. Simmon Wreath, J. J. Hanlin, J. R. Bissett B. of F. L. E. No. 66, Zamora Ten I pie, B. of L. E. No. 189, Wreath, D vision 498 B. of L. E.; Sickle, Si ^perintendants Office and Mechanic Employees; Sheaf, Miss Delia Wi son. We buy Burr clover seed. Rosenbe Warehouse Co. I * * ANTREVILLE ' >d it %%$:***%********* + *' Messrs. Jesse Bell and John Wake le , field visited Anderson Monday am >e attended the McLendon meeting. \ Prof. Charlie Crowther has re id , , . . turned home after.several years n ie the Phillippine Islands. His man; relatives and friends give him a cor dial welcome. Mr. and Mrs. Blakely, of Simpson iville. visited Rev. Robertson am family Tuesday. ^' Rev. Robertson and wife, Mr. ani Mrs. Blakely autoed to Abbeville o: Wednesday afternoon. Dr. Anderson attended the Medi id r cal Association at Anderson. Mr. J. T. Erwin and son, Thomas ? Mr. A. M. Erwin and Mr. Erwii Prince left Thursday in the auto fo Aiken, to visit Mrs. Eunice Erwii Holman. y s, 3- State of South Carolina IS COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. ^ Court or Common Pleas. n The Union Central Life Insnrance Com d pauy. Plaintiff, j. against Perry McKinney. (i. C. Mcintosh. Th F. S. Royster Guano Company, Ken y nier-Montgomery & ^)mpany, In [ corporated. Stephen Putney Sho ? ' Company, Carroll Adams & Com i, pany. Gershon Brothers Company King Hardware Company, Hix-Pal mer Company. Incorporated, Davi^ son-Dietrich Plow Company, Bf e Overall Company. Grain ling-Spald iug Company, John B. Daniel Standard Trunk & Bag Company Southern States Phosphate and Fer s tilizer Company. Jos. Rosenhein Shoe Company, W. B. Brigham, Sr ' and W. B. Brigham, Jr., partner doing business as W. B. Brigham 6 Son: Simon Michael and M. G. Mi r chael, ])artners, doing business a s ; Michael Brothers, Defendants. d ! Summons for Relief. it To the Defendants above named: r You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in tliii L" action, which is hlea in the omce ot th< Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for the said county, and to serve a cop] of your answer to the said complaint 01 the subscriber at his office at Abbevilli Court House, South Carolina, withii twenty days after the service hereof r exclusive of the day of such service e and if you fail to answer the complain v within'the time aforesaid, the plaintif * in this action will apply to the Cour d for the relief demanded in the coin n plaint. Dated the 26th day of June, 1015. v | D. H. HILL, ;s j Plaintiff's Attorney. r j Attest: >i <**> Xu a crip: a. c. s ] NOTICE. e To the defendants named in the abovi . entitled action: Please take notice tha the summons and complaint in tin above stated case, were filed in the of e fice of the Clerk of the Court of Com mon Pleas for Abbeville County, a r Abbeville Conrt House, S. C., on t.h< f 29th day of June, 11)15. , * D. HifrHILL, I Plaintifi's Attorney, a' : ,V ;The State of South Carolina COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. Probate Court?Citation for Letters of Ad 1 ministration. j By J. F. Miller, Esq., Judge of Probate. il 1 "Whereas. Mrs. Rosa B. Johnston am Mis.Gertrude B. Agnew hath made sui a t?? me, to errant A. Sej(li>n Kennedy Letter of Administration de bonis non of the Es tate and ellVetgof J. Donald Browideo, hit tl of Abbeville County, deceased. 1 These are therefore. to cite and admon isli all and Miifrnlar the kindred and ciedi i, tors of the said J. Donald Browideo, (te ceased, that they be and appear before liif i_ in the Court of Probate, to lie held at Abbe e ville Court Hou-t:, on Wednesday, the 1411 day of July. 1015, after publication hereol c at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to shov cause, if any they have, why the said Ad ministration should not he granted, i- i (liven under my band and seal of th . Court, this 2Sih day of June, ii the year of our Lord one thou (i (Soal) Sinn! uiiu* hundred ami fii'leei and in the year of Aineri if j ' can Independence. P ' Published on tin- 30th (lay of .Tunc. Wl; in the Abbeville Press and Hanner and 01 e the Court House door for the time require bylaw. .1. 1". MILLED, 1_ | Judge of Probate. if UV-VER-LAX :s! >' All the Effectiveness, No y j the Effect of Calomel. e- j j Liv-Ver-Lax is one of the most im i portant medical discoveries of recen T ! years. For a long time medical ex J" perts, realizing the harmful effects o ?. . calomel, have been striving to find ; liver cleanser that would be iust a ' : effective as calomel, and yet be abso jlutely harmless in its action. Recent s; ly this remedy was actually put fort] s. by L. K. Grigsby, in his Liv-Ver-La> ' I Liv-Ver-Lax is a harmless vegeta e> j ble compound, designed solely fo n- the treatment of liver complaints ,j_ j The immediate favor it has met wit' " ; in thousands of homes is proof posi a~ | tive of its real value. a! j If you feel worn out, tongue co&t [i i ed, and skin sallow, don't delay unti " | it becomes dangerous, nip the trou ble in the bud with Liv-Ver-Lax. In sist on the genuine, bearing the s;g j nature and likeness of L. K. Grigsbj which is guaranteed to give satisfac tion or money refunded. For sal :by any druggist. ^ _ _ : TRIP- TO CALIFORNI/ * * * (Continued from page five.) * went up in an aeroplane doing sev J eral stunts such as looping the loop diving, etc. Special events are arranged fo: 1 each month. The programs foi ^ July and August are the fullest. The weather in San Francisco ii such that at all seasons of the year warm wraps are necessary, especi ^ ally if a person comes from dowr south. From three o'clock in the after 1 noon until after midnighr the trad< winds coming directly from 1.h< ocean blow?beginning in Apr'l am continuing until October. Tu< '' mornings are delightfully pleasant. 1 I feel as if I could write a length.. r account of what we saw at the Expn 1 j sition but too much might prove tire J some to the readers. - On going to the Ferry Station t( make berth reservation we were in * formed that everything in the Stand ard Pullman was engaged for twc weeks ahead and our only chanc< was an upper berth In a Tourist car 1 | This we decided to take and leav< ! that afternoon (Sunday) at tw< e o'clock. We thought it was rea! . funny when we had to sleep in th( e. "Bureau" which was the name of oui car. The person who had engagec lower berth No. 3, didn't show up sc j we were able to get it. I was glac - for I don't like the "elevator service' I > on the sleeping cars, and this was tc ,1 be our home until we reached Cheyi enne on Tuesday. 'I There are 16 sections in a Tourisl s t car. The people who ride in these " cars usually carry their provisions along with them. There is a little heater in one end on which they car make their own coffee. One "wild - westerner" had a large suitcase full 8 of things to eat. He was making a a ' ! # t j four days trip and he didn't intend f | to spend any money on the dining I car' i| Leaving San Francisco from the Ferry Station over the Southern Paj cific it is necessary to go across the F Bay five miles to Oakland on a ferry * boat. In crossing the Sacramento River the whole train is carried over on a big ferry boat. This boat has a capacity for carrying as many as four long trains at one time. The scenery between San Francisco and Sacramento is fine, there e being numberless vineyards, fruit ort chards and some truck farms. We 3 I stopped for twenty minutes at Sacra mento which gave us an opportunity \ to walk around a little. Nevada. Forty miles of snow sheds and sev eral tunnels was what we passed through that night. When we woke ? up next morning we were in an entirely different looking country, in * Nevada with its snow covered mountains and dry sandy plains. All the j time the train was climbing the t mountains. At Sherman Hill we t reached the highest point, over 8,00C e feet above sea level. The altitude . didn't make me feel sick, only z " little hurting in my nose and a sen*, sation of shortness of breath jj Wherever there were grassy plains there would be lots of cattle anc [. sheep. No trees at all except in ir rigated places. ii At Battle Mountain, Nevada, w? stopped for ten minute?. Niine mile; from here the Kimberly Gold Mine ii >, situated. It seems that there i: jj plenty of gold there but no water tc mine it with. The Great Salt Lake. In crossing the Great Salt Lake w< were fortunate enough to see i' stormy. The wind was uiowmj very hard, making the \vaves rur A high. They even dashed so hare against the sides of the "fill" that th( salty water splashed over the can and against the windows, making ii difficult to see out. Thirty-om miles is the distance across. Th< - Great Lake is 81 miles long. ^ We had thirty minutes wait at Og a s den, Utah. This is a very prettj - place surrounded on all sides bj ? mountains. It was cold and rainy A circus had been tied up here foi - three days. On account of the bac * weather it couldn't fill its engage h ment. In Wyoming we saw more cattle sheep and horses and there wer< il more grassy plains and alfalfa hay. One of our new made friends, i perfectly charming young Swedisl r, woman, left us at Laramie. Sh< " said her next husband was going t< 0 be a North Carolinian. At Cheyenn* 1J ve left several other delightful friends. One young lady and a young man were going as far as Denver. We stayed at Cheyenne for nearly - three hours and in that time succeed, ed in seeing nearly all of the town. Here we had a. regular thunder r storm. This is one of the windiest r towns we ever saw. Denver. 5 We reached Denver Tuesday af, ternoon about dark. Our stay here - was very short, only one night. We 1 liked this city so much when we visited it in 1911. The streets are so - wide and well lighted at night. We ; saw a pretty good Burlesque show i which was 90 per cent girls at the 1 Tabor Grand. Denver is the suni shine city. They will guarantee you 325 days of sunshine a year. Of r course it was our ill luck to strike - one of the remaining forty days. We left Denver on Wednesday j morning over the Rock Island lines | ) on the Rocky Mountain Limited. At | - Limon, Colorado, we stopped a short - time. It was cold and raining and ) the wind was blowing something i fierce. We were glad that we . didn't live there. i One thing that particularly inter> ested me was the "tumble weed." It I is shaped like a ball and is light in i weight. When it matures the wind * breaks it off even with the ground I and carries it for miles over the > plains until it strike^ something. The I! fence along the railroad right-of-way ' | would be hanging full of the big ? weed balls. Another interesting sight was how the stock stood the T + wnimA/] +1ia 11 rV?a!A WOW I | VVCatllCl* 11 laill^U VYllViVi *? c* J ' into Chicago so we had lots of time | to notice the cattle. They would I wander on until they came to a fence then they would stop and hudi die up close together with their faces I from the wind. There were no i trees for them to fr.:d shelter under. l Most of the cattle have red hair and i white faces. ; j Through Kansas, Nebraska and | Iowa we saw real farming. One s field would be as large as Abbeville, and perfectly level. Some times r\r. i many as eight horses wou'd te r hitched to one plow?usually there i were six. The fields were absoluteI ly free from grass. Grain is the i most extensively raised Great i quantities of alfalfa is grown. Es- [ pecially in Nebraska and T -wa we noucea irom xne general ippeararce j n i of the homes that all the farmers ai e j rich. Their homes are Jarvfe 12 anil j ! 16 room houses, pai'ite I white with ! green blinds The 1 ir;X*.\-1 b:.rns r are three times as large as the d;\ elijing house. There wouul be two or j three smaller barns, a .gxrago, a wind mill and a silo. 'Jnc-.i a small I herd of cattle, horses, sheep and als ways a large drove or hogs, usually H red in color. The white leghorn i chicken is the most popular judging by the frequency with which we saw # them. ^ r We passed through Lincoln, Neb., ? the home of William Jenning.- Bryan, p I! In places the track was covered $ i with water, due to the heavy rains. ? i Sometime during Wednesday ni::ht ? - we went over 600 iter of trac'-: tiut p was under water. I was glad that r 5 I didn't know this until thi ne.\t ? 1 morning for i am sure I would Ivive p - been very nervous. The next Jay ^ i all trains were delayed on account # i of this place. We crossed the Mjss- j ; issippi River at Davenport, tho home A 5 of our townsman, Mr. D. A. Dewey. J ? j We reached Chicago late Thura- r 4 > (day afternoon. I thought 1 had ? ,seen crowded streets and blocked a crossings, but they didn't compare p ? with what I saw in Chicago. Here t the streets are narrow and the pave- J r ments rough, being broken in places, i i There are the subway trains; the sur- ? 1 face cars and the elevated cars. We ; went to a hotel on Michigan Avcn.ie 5 and of course got the full benef'*. o? res t the breezes. I had a time to keep fr( j from blowing away. We ?wnt a , ; half a day walking through Marshall ^ Field's Department Store. It covers - an entire square and is 17 stories j high. A small army of people are ca: j employed here. This is the home- Sp . town of Sears, Roebuck & Co. tal r Much to our disappointment, we an 1 had to shorten the remaining pavt of th< - our stay on account of tho heavy di< rains. m< i ,1 Saturday we spent in Ind &r.apolis, sai i which is said to be the cleanest town th< in the country from a civic staml- te< i point. One peculiar thirg vre no- w< i ticed here was everybody ( with very ep i ticed here was, everybody (with very mi > basket. They were doing their In ? marketing, also they were getting "W Q. SfWifTT^r BETTER C0( NO MORE DRI \TEW PERFEi Uookstoves ha\ ing easier an cleaner tor 2,000,Q0( No more drudgei wood-boxes, coal-scu pans. The NEW PERFEC instantly like gas, a high or low by mer< lowering the wick, all your cooking o\ PERFECTION?ju and twice as .conver your coal range. Ask your dealer to s ntptw prrffptto the new oven that b< less cooker merely 1 damper. Also the PE WATER HEATER, independent of your gives you plenty of water. Use Aladdin Sec or Diamond Wh to obtain the best re Stoves, Heaters an A PERpS onjlfoayn STANDARD OIL Washington, D. C. (New Jersey) Norfolk, Va. (BALTIMORE; Richmond, Va. PROLONG LIFE mmsirs u A Harmless Vegeta with no Idj uric DOES AWAY WITH the Grimsby's Liv-Ver-1 Recom mended by idy for "Decoration Da;." Quite Eeg; jquently we saw wc.meii carrying ?C0t skets that had onions, etc., in one . Yf If and lovely peonies a.i l other ( A tr wers in the other hr.If. Some takir L-ried^ two baskets. The great j up c eedway Races were scheduled to ' Loot ice place on the following Monday ! view d lots 01 VlSKUia wcic kvuuiig i? ? | i.iuw e city to be present. The Sol- for 1 jrs and Sailors Monument is the A 3st interesting sight of all. It is time id: "Universally admitted to be May e grandest achievement of Archi- Li :tural and Sculptural Art in the year >rld, designed to glorify the heroic gran och of the Republic and to com- motl emorate the valor and fortitude of that diana's Soldiers and Sailors in the we c ar of the Rebellion and other wars. If LJDGERY iiCTION Oil i; remade cook- 0 d kitchens. jffij. ) housewives. m > *y?no more '?; ttles, and ash- ft )TION lights I md regulates | dy raising or S You can do m i the NEW m st as cheaply ? * liently as on. m fi show you the Ij j N No. 7 with ra|j *comes a fire- B by pulling a M:f RFECTION 1;, It makes you M | coal range? || hot .running % urity Oil K jf life Oil iS j| suits in oil B d Lamps. ft yj . I $ S1 % %%%*%%%% 3^ BY USING f %' ble Compound: $ A &. ms Effects. i # ? ^ USE of CALOMEL f % if .rift; Sold aiul ^ All Druggists ^ t :n 1SS7, completed 1D01.. iv>-^t .oco. e spent Sunday in Chattar*w???. ip up Lookout Mountain is wsrcsv :g even in the rain. We- *r!:r.r; n the Incline Car. From P-t\z\i~ :out we could get a very gwJ. of the Vallev below wher:. is would separate long, eon&urji as to see down. fter stopping in Atlanta a s&nrr: we reached home the last d^x ttle Annie Hemphill, our tii-srsc? old baby, had spent sag?.:" abi id time at home with her grrirct? ler, and her cousins and-' aass she didn't seem to care wJuf/fcasr :ver came back. Grace Hemphill Rog?zr.?.