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MMaMMHiiHHiMMiMiaiiiimiiBJiMmuMtmnnuiiuiiiujiiiiiuiiHniuNmiiiiitiiiiHtiiiMiuJuiH GENERA e i??w?mwiniiiiimi?hi mi niiinni mini mi ii i mi i rnmi The new packing plant at Tifton spent about $50,000 for hogs in two days. Between 400 and 500 hogs are killed every afternoon. Douglass, Ga., has a twin epidemic. Four sets have been born in that city recently. { The firemen and hostlers have asked for an increase in1 pay. A minimum of $3.50 a day is asked. Ten American engineers were taken prisoners by the Germans according to information received through the Red Cross. Their names were given. The waters at Cincinnati 'of the Ohio, were rising at the rate of two feet an hour and all freight movements yere delayed. Camden had one case of Meningitis. A colored boy who had been working at Camp Jackson went home to visit 'his home people, - and died while there. V; . . , The Germans tell of capture of American soldiers near Xivary. This gives the information as to the exact whereabouts of the American forces at the front.1 Capt. Perrin Cothran, formerly of Greenwood, but now of Greenville, has been made major of the National Guard and placed in command of the first battalion of the regiment. \ The British War office will raise food for the British army behind the lines in France Surgeon General Brainstead of the navy, was reappointed Monday for another term. News has been^tt?4Vei>'"'of the death of Robert Wagener, of Huntsville, Ala., in an aviation accident in France. Wager enlisted in the aviation service last summer. $ '" . Minister Sulzer, of Switzerland, has advised the State Department that hereafter all travelers entering the country must hold a passport bearing the vise of the Swiss legation or a Swiss consulate. Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 11.?More than 115 men applied to the local branch of the State Council of Defense today in response to an appeal for a nation-wide registration of 250,000 men for ship building workers, it was announced tonight. p.; . r ^ Food hoarders in England have been given a chance to surrender the foods to the government. If they 9 possess more than their share or enough to last a city family of five more than a week or a country family more than two weeks they are termed hoarders. They can turn over their surplus to the government without of fear of punishment this week. The last word in trains is the hospital trains that are to be sent to France in the next few weeks. They are equipped with shower bath, bath / tubs, refrigerators and a place for cases of cantagious disease and for gassed patients. Four nurses and four doctors will go with each train ? and they will have private staterooms, dining rooms and bath rooms. V ;V. The board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce adopted resolutions to be conveyed to the Wash ington authorities by Senator Tillman, soundly scoring the senators who have been investigating and allowing words of criticism to reverberate through the National Capitol. At the same time the administration was assured the hearty support of the people of. Rock'Hill. ...... Gen. Pershing informed the State Department that |0^il^^d[;men in his forces are candidate'for West Point. The president has authority by law to appoint^an<0ce^|{jjlJed a roster of 180 enlisted men at the academy. > ' s * 1- .. . .v. . - j " t'. ! WMmWIIUtMMnmmilMIHIIHMIIIIUMniMtlHmHHIIIlimiimilllMllirMHtMlllltlWIIMIMtl'WnHIIHIUIIII lL NEWS nilllUlllimillUIUMIIIMUHIHIIIHnUHUIIIIIMIIBllNltlillllUlinNttllHUIinHimimiMrimillNUNIIlMNRI The horse racing season is ove on the New Orleans track. The new ruling of the Food At ministration is that mixed floui containing less than 50 per cent, c wheat flour may be sold without a< companying substitutes. A drive for slackers in Canad has been started. Men of militar age who cannot show good reason for not being in the army, will b taken up. This is the first time in man years that the General Assembly ha adjourned before the full forty daj have been taken up. Death sentence has been aske for Bolo Pasha, who has been o trial for treason and all the othe 'affairs" at the French Court. All c the evidence has been taken an prosecutor in his address will urg the maximum penalty. Abd-ul-Hamid, former Sultan c * Turkey, is dead. He was once rule of over a hundred million subject For 33 years he was ruler and con mander in chief of the Moslem ai my. Shorn of power he d&d a prii oner, pitied if not despised. There is in operation at Cam Jackson, a machine which sterilize a hundred soldiers' garments at on time. It is used to disinfect th clothes of the men who have bee sick, or for cleanliness. In Newberry County four mule and a cow were the victims of a ma dog. . V J. H. Turner has been electe mayor of Gaffney. Camp Green soldiers are to go i Camp Wadsworth. General Carlto is to command the skeletonized Ne' England troops. r~ The President's message w? praised by the press of England* ] was compared with the words of th Kaiser, who would rule the worl with arms. It was reported from Berlin thj the Kaiser is very ill. He has bee ordered by the court physicians t go to Belgium to take the cure. Lufbury is the first United State airmail to master the falling lea stunt. In doing the falling lea stunt the aviator lets his machin tumble 'downward exactly as a lea drops from a tree. It combines a the other forms of aerial acrobatic except the nose spin. The first keel for a fleet of fort ships was laid at Hog Island Tue: day. George Baldwin of the Amer can International Shipbuilding Co] poration says they are ahead of th time and will keep the contract wit the Emergency Fleet Corporation. Camp Greene at Charlotte, wi be abandoned as a camp site on ac count of the grounds on which it i erected;, according to a statemen from Secretary Baker. The lack c drainage is the reason. There i no danger to the troops now stj tioned there until summer and b ^ ?"11 Knnn TMAim/ luat Lime vncjr wm URTC UWVU U*V? A delegation of men from Charlott went to Washington to confer wit Sec. Baker. The site was selecte on recommendations from Maj. Gei Wood. A negro was burned to death b a mob in Tennessee. He had she and killed two men and fatal! wounded another. Two more soldiers have been ad< ed to the list of dead from the Tui cania. Their bodies were washe ashore on the mainland of Scotlan< This hrine-a the total ud to 163 dea< Timothy Shea, acting president c the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fir< men said that they had the law bi they couldn't get it complied witl A number of the men are seekin employment in other industries b< cause of the higher pay and short* hours. I. A port terminal will be built at Charleston, which will cost $10,000 For the many new projects that were reported by the Senate Military Committee $268,650,000 will be needed to carry out the work. The treaty of peace between Ger>r many and the New Ukraine Republic with the withdrawal of Bolsheviki may not prove so helpful to 1- Germany as was first thought, s lf Secretary of War Baker will not be examined further' in regard to war efficiency and organization. The controversy in the Senate is taking a form. A full statement of informay tion regarding tonnage available is and prospects of securing allied tone nage will be submitted. Charles Foster, a native of Sparer tanburg County, murdered his 22 a year old wife. It is said that jeal rg ou8y causea tne act. He had been married before and she hacl also been married before. d n A fire which broke out in the dint ing room of Vassar College, in if Poughkeepsie, N. Y., threatened to d destroy the entire building. A come pany of guardsmen from New York arrived and guarded the entrance to the campus. None of # the students ?f were injured. m sr 9. VV VV VV VVV VV VVVVV 1- V V r- V FRANK CARWILE WRITES V s_ V Ar.AIN W vvvwvivvvvvvvvvv p is The last few days have been pleasie ant like summer weather. Let us all ie be thankful for this weather. It is n a long lane that has no turning and every cloud no matter how dark it may appear, has its silver lining. *s * ' Mrs. Frank Carwile was able to attend preaching at Shiloh Sunday for the first time since her recent ^ illness. Her friends were glad to see her able to be out oncemore. W. B. Mann and wife were to see ;o us Tuesday for the first time since n the woods were burnt?some of w them. Rev. Martin preached on the text "Whatsoever ye do, do it to the ts glory of God." If we had done so [t we would not have so many troubles ie constantly with us and the great d world-wide war would not be raging in all of its fury. There is a day coming when all this will have to be it accounted for and manjr will be n found wanting. In all we do let us o try to emulate the example laid down bv the ereat apostle. In the death of Mrs. M. C. Gary is Abbeville county loses one of her f most noble ladies. She raised a f family of sons of which any mother , e might be proud for well have they worn the ermine and adorned the " bench of our beloved State. As a :s shock of corn she has been gathered in her season, after having lived more than the alloted time to man. V y A gentleman told ua every German in America should be put in a 1_ pen and kept there until the war is r" over. We agree with him about e three thirds of the way. Some scoun1. drel who should be in Satan's clutches posted the low-down cut throat, II incendiary outraging, dirt eating , child murdering, scamps about the . approach of the Tuscania in which t some of our noble soldiers went to ^ a watery grave. Young man, shoul!q der your gun and go to the protec I tion of our country, our woman and children and everything that is dear j to America. The liberties of our e nation are hanging in the balance ^ and it is going to take man power to ^ crush the old scoundrel of a Kaiser 1 and German militarism but it will be done and don't you forget it, for civilization! is sure to triumph in the y j end. Don't be a Blease, a L&Fol,Jlette or a Stone. Have you forgoty ten the speeches made by Mr. Blease at Pomaria, Filbert, and Chapin last year? If so, refersh your memory. J. Yet they say (we doubt it) that he 3- is going to ask you to send him to id the United States Senate instead of j. Mr. Tillman, who is upholding Mr. j. Wilson. Choose ye this day whom ye will esrve. Arecyou a patriot or >f a traitor? Time alone will tell, but e- if you are the latter it will take you it 100vyears to outlive the disgrace h. and don't get it into your cranium g that you are going to be a second e- Methuselah. Be an honor to your ;r God, your family and your country. Thii was is going to revolutionize / , -i '*" **. .vt-.r . > the world in every respect religious- I lv, socially and politically. It is go- / ing to make us humble and feel more dependent upon our Creator. The rule of one family is going to be crushed and no one man will say ^ to a nation, g:o to wa* at his commnd. The soldiers when they return are goini; to be the future rulers of this country. There will be a president who will spring from this ^ war and office:}, from governor down to coroner will be held by the boys who went to the front and never wavered when their country's honor was at stake. If we are gone remember what we told you in 1918. Don't forget the poor unfortunate girl, Claudia Knight. Missions are at our doorsteps, you do not have to go to China to find them. It is never too late. Remember the thief oxi the cross. "Rescue the perishing, lift up the fallen, Tell them of Jesus the mighty to save." Pratice wha-; you preach, for this is pure and undefiled religion. Convinced of Tanlac By Aiicl Given Wife HUSBAND SAYS SHE ADDED FIFTEEN POUNDS ON FOUR BOTTLES. Cases in which two or more people in the same family have been so greatly benefited by Tanlac that they have offered a double endorsement of this famous Master Medicine are common. Whon you see a person relieved of wittering and made f stiong again, it is the most natural thing in the world for you to want the same benefits. This is how Charles E. Whitmore, of 103 Bradford St, Albany, N. Y., happened to : tal:e Tanlac. i 'My wife, who had been all run tfovn and nervous and getting weaker right along, began to take Tanlac," Mr. Whitns.ore explained. "Well of course, I watched the results, and it was wonderful to see the way it burlt her up. On four bottles she ^ gained fifteen pounds. I had' been doubtful about Tanlac, but that settled me. When I started Tanlac I could hardly eat one good meal in a whole week. Prom suffering with a bad stomdch I had become nervous and restless at night and all rur. down. InsUead of digesting, my food would just lie like lead on my stomach and sour and ferment and form gas. Because I had sour stomach?acid stomach?so long, my mouth -had gotten sore. I could not sleep restfully, but would wake up every hour or two and would roll and toss. I was tire^ in the morn- 1 ing, and by mid-afternoon I was so tired out it seemed I couldn't get +ViT?f?iitrV> flip Hnv. I had lost all am-| bition, and I did "not care. Seeing what Tanlac had done for my wife encouraged me to take it, and I was not surprised when . it began to brace me up right away. It did as much for me as it did for her. I slept right through the night, woke up rested, with a good appetite, and was able to enjoy my meals. My food digested and the gas, bloating and sour stomach disappeared. I felt like a new man, and the old tireil, worn-out feeling went with the rest of my troubles." v , ^Tien Mr. Whitmores stomach became weak, his system probably began to clog with waste matter. What he needed was a good system purifier, stomach to:nic and reconstructive, and Tanlac; did the work for l:? J 1? !< fny Vila wife. mm aim lie aaw 10 , and as it has clone for countless thousands. Tnnlac, the master medicine, ia sold exclusively by P. B. Speed, Abbeville; A. S. tCade, Bordeaux; J. T. Blac'i, Calhoun Falls; J. H. Bell & Sons, Due West; Cooley & Speer, Lowndesville; R. M. Fuller & Co., McCormick; J. W. Morrah & Son, Mount Carmel; Cov?n & LeRoy, WillingrtDn. Price, $1 per bottle straight. -?Acv. "TWINBEDS.'MXJMJNG MARCH 8 Oi all the columns of praise award ed by the New York and London press to "Tw;in IJeds"', none is more appreciated "by Salisbuiy Field and Margaret Ma.yo ?-,nd A. S. Stern and Company, respectively authors and producers of the comedy, than the statement of the New York pres* that it is. "the funniest play ever written.": Twin Beth*', ran for one solid yr/ar in New York, six months in Australia.' and is already in its second, year of popul prity in London. fed Cross Memb ForC / iat of Members Secured During the Christmas Membership Drive in the City. (Continued from last issue) ommittee No. 4.?J. S. Bowie and Jas. S. Cochran. P. S. Hill R. L. Mabry , ^ D. Hall y.:, W. D. Barksdale Mrs. Gussie Corley Miss Sadie Hammond ! ,, jChas. McKenzie j. . Steve Parthemos v ; i t Sam A. Morris }* , I \ Miss Hannah Cochran Jas. A. Hill Wm. E. Hill 'I ' R. E. McKenzie R. 0. Hunter * T. M. Miller r 1 1 Alex Bowie > ' A. B. Morse Mrs. A. B. Morse t Emily Morse A. B. Morse, Jr. J. S. Morse C. C. Featherstone, Greenwood. G. A. McCantey E. M. Anderson James Jenkins * Westoji Richey "1 TW. J. Finley Carrie Houston ' J. L. Roche ''p- vJ. D. Miller T f j, Ely Hunter T Jim Dixon J '"7; Louis Miles ' ,rTjf Wilhelm Turman ' '? Fastu Miller ? V Allen Hunter ~ r-r! J. S. Bowie T." l Janie Vance Bowie ,rr ? "* Willie Bowie 1 V Tt; Mrs. J. S. Cochran ^ > J. S. Cochran ?' >" Miss Mildred Cochran 7 W. A. Lee. Committee No. 5.?W. L. Peebles and C. E. Williamson. C. E. Williamson f W. L. Peebles *3\ Joe Little * P? / E. C. Lucas I P. D. Southern "* L. H. Crawford T ' !T f;l C. A. Yoder '? ' : f W. J. Duncan | J. R.'Guillebeau ~ ', $! G. T. Wood ?'* -r Tj R. 0. Edwards !?" * V H. W. Johnson ' * B. L. Shaw ?!' ? ] J. L. Sprouse P 5 L. P. Sondley f ? J. L. Schroeder *< T * :i' V. H. Deadwyler. Committee No. 6.?Meadors Langley, Mr. Little and A S. Thomas A. S. Thomas * Stanford Thomas W. M. Langley v -1 Mrs. W. M. Langley John Carter V A. B. Hollingsworth Cliff King ' HT' J. E. Castello t ^ S. J. Woolbright v ' r A. A. Bowers E. C. Little * J. G. Owens '? L. A. Hall J. J. Long " " H. E. Strickland S. F. Norrell J. K. Smith r Alex Owens T Watson White T J. B. Langley J. L. Burrell G. B. Hamby G. R. Miller * E. T. Link T C. B. Walker * ? xr ti l^i? umui T. R. McGuerus Fannie Edmunds R. H. Brazeal John Walker D. W. Baker Mrs. Edwards Jessie Gaddis Bennie Langley.' Committee No. 7.?C. D. Brown, Dr. C. C. Gambrell, Mt. Pleasant Colored Baptist Church. Joe Wright Henry Rapley Thomas Luther Henry Marion Gates Henry Keller Pete Talbert ership 'ity of Abbeville Elliott Brown Will Beard Marion Wilson P .Thomas A. Crawford . f, Mary Lou Pratt Nellie Drennan Jim Stone 'X : * Will Reed S. Crawford Joel Matthews John Thomas John Roiri&ns Tally Wideman I W. J. Lomax Eliza Fair i. Frasier Minor . Northa Miller, Lula Greene v Louie Nutter; ' .V Pnmmittpp No. 8.?C. D. Brown."! and Dr. C. C. Gambrell, Fire- I brand Baptist Church. Albert Taylor David Pinckney Baker Collier I Lou Robinson ^ I Prince G. Vance * '' " John Oliver 1 Ned Zion | Josie Taylor I R. E. Shiors I Will Lawton , I Henry Taylor R Tom Wideman I Lucia Oliver ' 1 Savannah Collier I Peter Jenkins List of Members secured by W. L. W. ,L. Devfin/Colored. ! W. L. Devlin , , :lM J. R. Grant T. C. Carter D. W. Brooks Samuel Brooks ' r y Paul Crawford . ^fiij J. R. Pair VrM J. L. Weston Henry Weston Allen Sanders. Samuel Harris . ^ a List of Members turned in by Morse. R. C. Wilson Miss Rebecca Cater I Miss Willie Link, R. F. D. 3. I Mrs -Ray Clinkacalea I Mrs. T. A. Klugh I Mrs. Paul HaU 1 ' Mr.; G. W. Syfan I Mr^. G. W. Syfan 'i v 1 Mrs. Luther Botts Mrs. Eugene Nance ' -B Colored List. .:;-M M. J. Butler ' ? M Mrs. M. N. Pinckney { Mrs. D. H. Johnson - ' Guilford Coleman. : vfl Additional List turned in by J. S.I Morse. ' I Charlie Hearst Florence Hearst Emeziah Johnson : rfl Eugene Fisher Jeff Bell Mamie Lee / Nina McLaren ; Lieutenant A. A. Morse ? Cash p^id $1.00. Julia Brown Henrietta Mitchell > 'I Sam D. Adams " I Alfred C. Coleman. SAVE THE HENS. ; fl Washington, D. C., Feb.?Ever]? laying hen sold from the farms befl fore the first of May means a ldsfl of about 30 eggs to 'the food suppl]H of the Nation. These eggs are valuH able food, manufactured laigel^H from insects, weeds, and grass, garfl bage and waste. The eggs, thereH fore, are almost wholly a net gaii^l in human food. Moreover, the he^l is just as good meat after she ha^B laid these eggs as before. y Save the hens is the message thajH the United States Department ol Agriculture is sending broadcaaHj through press notices and poster^H and through its county agents, pecially in the southern pouItrj^J raising sections. |fl "Humility is the lowly and tru^H -l! ?>e -?" la an/iatifaill<A (1^1 6S11U1UIC Ui. SCIi | AW ia nwwj#iMMvw the place appointed by God, whethe^B it be in the front or the rear; it simple acquiescence in God's ord<^B to suffer or to act without thougl^fl of rights or of reputation. It is tb^H emptiness of self which God Canon Barnett.