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LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS TO WAR WORK FUND (Continued from Page Seven) Cowan, Geo 2 00 vi Crawford, Moses 5 00 w Crafton, Emma 5 00 Calhoun, John 5 00 t< Callaham, Martha 1 00 .v Col. Meth odist church .. 40 00 ., Col. Pres. Church 4 00 Dodson, Wiley 10 00 V Davis, J S 5 00 jr Davis, Square 2 00 Davis, Celee 2 00 Fisher, Will 1 00 p PncJor K'nrman . . . 1 00 I i* Fair, John 1 00 Fair, Aaron 1 00 d Fair, Marion 1 00 e, Fair. John 5 00 Griffin. Ed 1 00 Geter, Milton 1 00 ri Griffin, Luther 1 00 S( '' Garrett, Joe 10 00 , Gooden. David 1 00 _ p Haskell, Joel ' 3 00 w ujii a no , Holmes, S H ... 5 00 Hawthorne, John 1 00 P Hawthorne, Martha .... 2 00 d Hill, Jim ... 1 00 . Iker, Joe 2 00 Jackson, S H 1 00 b Jackson, Janie 1 00 sj Johnson, Martha 2 00 Jackson, John ... 50 Jackson, Jim 5 00 h Knox, Willie 1 00 h Kane, Lucious ... ... . 1 00 Lomax, Willie 2 00 S Lomax, George 3 00 Lomax, Sam 5 00 ? Mattison, Horace 5 00 . Moon. Fletcher 5 00 ti ' Maddox, WO 1 00 tl ATaHHnv Pot T S K 00 Mates""William ~.7." 50 t] Marshall, Tom 2 00 tl Morgan. Charlie 50 ^ . ' Miller, William 1 00 M . Mt. Calvary B. Chuch . 7 10 Mt. alvary Lodge 8372 .. 2 00 h Mattison, Henry 25 ^ . Mattison. Earl 25 Motes, William 25 ? Martin, G W 1 00. c Norman, Nathan 1 00 . . Oliver, Sam 1 00 ', Peterson* Will 50 a Posey, Henry 2 00 fl ? Posey, Geo 5 00 Patton. Levy 1 00 Romans, Will 1 00 t< - Rice, Hensr 2 50 D .Reynolfls 1 00 Roblnspn, Henry ...... 1 00 * ' Robinson, Ed 50 b .. Robinson, W H 2 00 jj Robinson, Abraham .... 1 00 Robinson, A li 5 00 a Robinson, Adam 5 00 v , Robinson, Jim 1 00 ' > Shines,.R E 1 00 d ". Smith, Jas 1 00 'flHvlrair T. V K (\l\ nvj p ^ UVV /Sanders, Will 1 00 Stewart. Naman 1 00 B ; -Smith, Ben 2 00 Thomson, Jane 2 00 J Thomson, Willie 5 00 Thomson, Sam 1 00 Turner,. Malaki 2 00 ? -Valentine, Ben 5 00 , Wall Lodge 7340 2 00 Williams, Dolph 1 00 - 8t * Williams, MS., 100 . Webbe, J D and wife .... 5 00 A . Wright, Willie 1 60 th Williams, Oscar 2 00 Wright, Jesse ........ 2 00 ;Ware, Ernest 3 00 D( Williams, Mack 5 00 ti| Ware, W. A 1 26 Washington, W B 1 00 f .Ware, J W 5 00 1* Ware, James 1 00 aE " White, Press 1 00 . ' Allen, Ernest 6 00 ..DuBose, Georgia 25 ? -Harper, James ... 5 00 pj Hunter, David 1 00 Harper," Harriet* ..... io fa Moore, Amanda 50 bo Prince, Alex 1 00 Robinson, Condee- 50 co i Wright, Butler 1 00 pl< k WMgkt, S ... ... ^ 25 th i " - : . pli NAVY IS SEEKING TO CONTROL sic WIRELESS; BIG FIGHT COMING H{ Washington, Dec. 6.?A big bat- $3 tie for navy control of wireless plants at in peace time is about to open. Hear- ga ings will start December 12 before Di the house merchant marine commit- pr tee on a bill to take over all stations. The fight lies largely between th the navy department and the Ameri- H< can Marconi company. to But, behind the American com- ei* pany apparently stands the British Marconi company?subsidized by the British government. The American ^ Marconi company has sold the navy its ship-to-shore stations, but re- ^3 Aains its grasp on four high powered stations. Two of these on the At- sa :tic have not been used, but ap- s "ently are part of a plan to ere- a ate a wireless link between England co and the United States so as to join Pe up with wireless to the far east. .Captain Todd, hea dof naval com- Wi 1 .jxwnication, who will conduct the t0 main fight for the navy, believes it P1 absolutely essential that the navy, ^ get control gf all the stations, in- .t eliding a dozen not under Marconi 01 control. Else, he maintains, the big merchant marine we are building will C: suffer, along with commercial busi- te ness, through the "static interfer- te ence" between competing, uncon- ai trolled stations. - Y, si ' . .. More than 4,000,000 knitted articles have been distributed among the B training camps in this country . by w the Red Cross. . , |61 ON GREENVILLE STREET. Something is happening on Greenlie Street all the time. Just now e are building the new sidewalk or >wards the High School, but that is of what we have in mind. We are linking now of real happenings. Je had one of these Thursday mornlg. It happened this way: Mrs. W. White has the flu, and so has the retty young lady of the house-hold, ttle Miss Edna White. Mrs. Gor on White, who has a sympathetic ar for neighborhood misfortunes, lought to soften things in the dining oom end of the afflicted house-hold.. r> she arose early and cooked a good| reakfast for the sick as well as the rell. Col. White, her husband, who n<? to some extent taken uncle Jim's lace as a mule trader, not to be outone in Christian works among the ick, volunteered to take the fine reakfast over and to see that the ick were properly taken core of. He ame out his front door with the eavy waiter, looking as graceful as 2 did twenty years 3go, before he ot fat. The steam was rising from the big eats" and you could tell across he street from the good smell that here was plenty in the land. Out tie front gate he came and down he street and into the yard of his rother he went, and everything was purty," as the negroes say, until is right toe hit a rock which young .en had thrown at the big rooster le evening before, and then hot bis uits and soft boiled eggs, milk Dast, country sausage, and other i ttractive things for sick people, ew in a hundred directions.' The Colonel got up, looked around > see who was looking, and we susect said, "Damn a mule," though re didn't hear him say it, and went ack to tell Mrs. White what had appened. We didn't inquire for ny further particulars. 9 I . ^ ISTJNGUISHED MEN LISTED AS GERMAN SYMPATHIZERS ielaski Produces Names of Professors?Says Bernstorff Asked Farors for Hearst Correspondent. Washington, Dec. 7?In telling his ; ory 'of German propaganda in \ merica, A. Bruce Bielaski, chief of le bureau of investigation of the jpartment of justice, yesterday laid ifore the senate committee inves? gating brewery and German propoinda cablegrams exchanged in : >16 by Count von BernstorfF, then : obassador here, and the Berlin 1 reign office. One of BernstorfTs messages urgl that special favor be shown Wilim Bayard Hale, an American aut to visit Berlin as a newspaper rrespondent, bfecauae he was emDyed by the Hearst organs which, e message said, had outspokenly iced themselves on the German le. Bielaski told the committee that lie was on the Hearst pay roil for 00 a week, and also was employed $15,000 a year by a publicity 'ornization formed in this country by Bearnard Bemhnrc. thp fiermnn opagandist. Suggesting on June 2, 1916, that e time was favorable "to get ;arst to sen da first rate journalist Berlin," Bernstorff told the for*n office that the man selected was lie, who he said had been a confimtial agent of the embassy since e beginning of the war, and was >und as such by contract to June !, 1918. "Hearst," the ambassador's mesge said, "is not aware that Hale our agent, but knows him only as Germanophile journalist who has ntributed leading articles to pairs." Hale, according to Mr. Bielaski, els paid by the German government vfarifc ' lfcftmania. And. if nnflilhlA.il 'event entrance of that nationsinto '? war. Mr. Hearst, Bielaski "iaid, Ss" ignorant of Hale's employment 1 the latter mission. Members of the American Red ross are members of a great frairnity and comradship which exnds all over the world?its cross is 1 emblem of Christianity itself."--* roodrow Wilson. Ten million people in occupied elgium and France are kept warm ith clothing gathered by the Am ican Red CroflB. . ... ] PEACE CONFERENCE w EARILY IN JANUARY " _ to Congress Scheduled to Meet First ^ Week of Month in New Year? tl President Wilson Advised of g< Maturing Plans. rr Paris, Dec. 7.?President Wilson , will be informed by wireless of the. plans for the assembling of the in-1 ter-allied conference and the meet-, ng of the peace congress. He will: also be advised concerning the re-, cent gathering of the supreme war council at London. In the meantime,! reports that the president had ap-' proved of anything done at the su-j preme council are premature, as / j the steps taken at that meeting will not be made known to him until today. The plans concerning the peace, neetings are the results of Col. E.J \T_ TTnusA's lone talk with Prpmipr Clemenceau, following a conference with Baron Sonnino, the Italian for-; eign minister, and the Earl of Derby,! the British ambassador to France. The inter-allied conference will re-1 assemble on December 16 or 17. The meetings will be at the foreign office in the Quai d'Osray, and not at Versailles. David Lloyd George, the British premier, and A. J. Balfour, the foreign minister, expect to come here at that time to meet President Wilson and attend the conference but the elections in Great Britain may not permit them to remain more than two or three days. , The opening of the peace congress is set for the first week in January. It was the desire of the Americans to begin at the earliest possible mo ment. Other delegations felt that a| later date would be necessary, owing' to the Christmas holidays $nd the official functions connected with the presence of President Wilson and King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, but the first week in January finally was phosen. The first meetings will be for the actual framing of the preliminaries of peacfc with the representatives of the enemy powers, who ? PROFESSIONAL Harris & Calvert Undertakers Sc Embelmers Out-of-town Calls Given Special Attention at all Hours. ABBEVILLE, S. CAROLINA. FOR C I __ . We ha today a b swell Sui Holiday ' newest si guarante' Come PARK I ill be present. ) The names of the French delegates 1 i the peace congress have not as yet : sen announced, but it is understood i ley will be three members of the 1 overnment and possibly a fourth Save Time an* Do Your winte HADDON n t r /? i Y ou will hnd of goods suital Useful Christmc G I FTS TABLE LINEN and NAPKINS TO MATCH WHITE BED SPREADS \ " ? BLANKETS < SILK HOSE COTTON HOSE KID GLOVES n HAND BAGS ?.1?1 ! ? SUIT CASES * " SWEATERS are a few of the many thii we hare to offer. In doing yc Christmas shopping, don't i to give us a call. Haddon * ' /SmsmS MEN'S CI HRISTMAS AND Tt HOLIDAYS. ve just received by exp] ig shipment of young m< ts for the Christmas j trade. These are the \ ;yles and fabrics, and ed to give satisfaction. in and look them over. i R & R \ member. The British delegates will De Premier Lloyd George, A. J. Balfour, foreign minister; Andrew Bonar Law, chancellor of the exchequer; George Nicoll Barnes, labor member of the war cabinet, and a fifth d Money?;r Shopping wit! WILSON C in our store a c hie for the comi " SPECIAL is called h IllUliy guu we have ii patrons Ready-to has been c --we are st _ ditions to i -Wason C gigg YOUNG LOTHINC j ress 7 ? I rery lljl | are J EESE I delegate not yet selected. It is anticipated that the peace deliberation! will last about four months and unless unforeseen obstacles arise, that final action will be reached toward the early part of May. 1 OMPANY hoice selection ng holidays V " 1 ATTPNTIAN aiiLiiuivii | ) a few of the I d things that I i store for our I -Wear Dep't I i great success I ill making ad- I his stack I V > mgm ompany I ^SSlI I