University of South Carolina Libraries
|XocaI | ! flews I jj gj 1 : personals : Ij Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Dpnnrrl wprp i here Tuesday for several hours. Mrs. W. W. Bradley spent Wed-i nesday in Greenwood. Joe Botts of Smithville, was here, Wednesday. I V Mr. Turner/of Prosperity, wasi here on business Wednesday. \ A. T. Mcllwaine of near Dar-! raughs, was in the city Wednesday on business. Misses Ida and Mary Sharp of Bethlehem, were here yesterday shopping. ?V Mrs. C. B. Wilson has returned! home from Brevard, where she went! to visit her parents. . : Mr. and Mrs. Lee Norwood of Route 3, and their baby were in the city Tuesday for the day. W. H. White has purchased a fine new Buick Six, t which is the delight of his family. Miss Margaret Cothran is the proud owner of a new Auburn Club Etoadster. It is a beauty. A. M. McCord came down from Greenville Wednesday to attend the faneral of Mr. D. A. Dewey. ___ Clyde Murchison came down from Jreenville to,, attend the funeral of lis brother, Mr. D. A. "Dewey. bji ~~~~ >ri Mr. J. Howard Moore, of Abbe.ftl At . .11 _ A1 3 I lie, is among ine attorneys arcenaig General Sessions Court.?Oreenood Journal. Miss DePew, a pretty Salvation! rmy worker, has been in Abbeville >r the past several days in the inirest of the Rescue Home at reenville. Mrs. Mary Parker stopped in Ab-j jville several days last week on her ay home from a pleasant visit to iends in Athens. Mr. J. Allen Smith, Jr., who is in! tlanta for medical treatment, is nproving. He has been away forj iveral weeks. j ' Mrs. R. C. Stephenson has re-' irned to the city from an extended sit to relatives in Chicago. She making her home at Mrs. R. C. [ilson's. W. D. Morrah of Bellevue, was; L*.p WpHnp?ir?av ntt.pnHintr to husi Iss. 4 United States Marshal C. J. Lyon me down from Greenville Sunday attend the funeral of Mr. James C. J. Bruce was a business visitor! Greenwood Monday. Mrs. Frank Wilson and attractive j Iighter of Watts, were here Tues-! r shopping. diss Lillian Richey is spending | i week in Due West with Miss' >rgia Wardlay. i I Ir. and Mrs. C. E. Williamson! going to house keeping in the' tairs rooms of Mrs. Frank Gary's. [ gSS'y will move this week. Hlr. and Mrs. Youngblood havej j^Hved into the house recently oc-j SBied by Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Duand will keep house. HH ^^ ohn Hunter of Hunters, was in; |H city Tuesday on business. ^^Bevier Wilson of Antreville, wax ^^Khe city yesterday and he says he intends to run as big a farm H^Hie can but he does not want to HHt peanuts for they are too hard ^Hn Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Lander and Mrs. Wilbur Blake were here yesterday for the afternoon from Calhoun Falls. Mrs. T. G. Seay of Dublin, Ga., is in the city on a visit oi a few days to Mrs. W E. Owen, on Magazine street. Capt. M. B. Syfan, Messrs H. M. Bauknight and T. A. Klugh will have to attend court in Edgefield this week the case being that of the I trial of the negro fireman who shot I Engineer Brown in that county be-! fore Christmas. Engineer Brown j ran on the Abbeville Branch of the Southern several years ago and they! will have to go to testify as to hisj character. THE MILLS MILL. I i The Mills Mill of Greenville, of which Mr. W. B. Moore was president. has been bought by Allen Gra ham and associates, the stock bringing $275. a share. H. W. HANNAH. The new man at the 5 and 10 cent store, who is to succeed Mr. R. E. Henry, arrived this week. His no ma ie Mr IT W TTnnnnh and he comes here from Wilson, N. C., where he had charge of a store. He is a young man of pleasing ap-i pearance and will make good here. PETERKIN-REID. Miss Nelle Peterkin of Fort Motte and Mr. Sam Reid of this place, were married at half past seven o'clock in the Episcopal Church at her home Wednesday evening. After a ten days trip in Florida they will come to Abbeville and make their home with Mrs. A. M. Reid, where Mr. Reid has charge of his mother'g farm. Messrs. James Dusenberry, John Reid and Grier Sherard went to Fort Motte to be present ^ at the WCUUlKg. ^ WOMAN'S LIBERTY LOAN. Mrs. M. T. Coleman has "been appointed as County Chairman of the Woman's Liberty Loan Committee ' of this county. Mrs. Bertha Munsel of Columbia, is State Chairman. PERMITS FOR LIQUOR. After the 10th of March no more liquor permits will be issued from the office of the Probate Judge unless accompanied by a physician's certificate. Jude-e Miller wants to be sure that the law is not being abused. J NEW GRAB MAN. J. J. Klintworth of Marion, S. C. has arrived in the city to takt charge of the Seaboard Grab. He will move his family here as soon as he can make arrangements. They will live in Mrs. Gary's cottage on Cherokee St. HOUSEKEEPING. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hanvey of Troy, were here Tuesday shopping. They are going to keeping house and were in the city buying some necessary things. They had us to send them The Press and Banner, which is one of the most necessary things that a young couple can have in their new home. TO HORSE SALE. Last Saturday there was a big: I horse sale in Greenwood and several j of the interested men went over toj see what they could buy. For some! reason the sale^ was not pulled off' and our men had to come back home, j. The following men went: R. S. Mc-i Combs, Dave Thomas, J. F. Clink-! scales and son, W. A. Stevenson, T. G. White and J. Allen Long. U. D. C. MEETINGS. The U. D. C.'s will meet Tuesday afternoon, March 12, at four o'clock at the home of Mrs. W. A. Harris. A full attendance is desired as plans for entertaining of the Veterans are to be discussed. BIRTH Born?At McCormick, March 2, 1918, to Mr. nad Mrs. Luke Brwon, (nee Miss Etta Dorn) a girl, Narcissa Heneritta. s SPENDING A PERFECT DAY. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Cheatham ha< a delightful reunion at their hom< last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Brook; Cheatham and their bright littli girl, Narietta, were here from At lanta, Dr. and Mrs. Whit Cheathan and the newest grandchild in th< family .were here from Columbia while the children in Abbeville gath ered at the home and a perfect daj was spent. Mrs. Cheatham ha: eight grandchildren and they wer< all here for Sunday, giving love am deference to the merriest, mos1 whole-hearted and loving grand mother in the world. COLONEL AUGUSTUS JACKSON LYTHGOE 19th South Carolina Infantry, C S A Editor Press and Banner: I am an ardent lover of everything connected with our brave fighl in the "Sixties," and strongly believe in keeping alive the memorj of those noble spirits who gave theii lives for the cause they believec right, and which I feel sure will b? vindicated, in time. "Deo Vindice' on our Cross of Honor, is aptlj placed.' In Vol. 5, p. 114, "Confederate Military History," the following occurs: "Here fell the gallant Colo nel A. J. Lythgoe,'of the Nineteenth South Carolina, at the head of his regiment." His Major General wel said of him, "He dies well who dies nobly." Colonel Lythgoe was killed at the battle of Murfreesboro, Tennesssee December 31, 1862, while leading his regiment in a charge. In th( years that have elapsed since th< war of the "Sixties" the majorits who knew of' and participated in th( events of that period have passec to the great beyond." It is for th< living, of the present, that thes< heroes should be called to mind "lest we forget." Augustus Jackson Lythgoe was born February 16, 1830, being th< oldest son, and second child o1 George Birenhead Lythgoe, an Eng lishman, who came to the Unitec States in early part of the nine teenth century? He was a civil en eineer bv nrofession. and in thai capacity assisted in building the olc South Carolina Railroad, from Char leston to Hamburg, S. C. (183031.) at that time the longest railroad in the world, 136 miles. I^tei (1846-50) he built the "Blue Ridge Railroad", from Anderson to Wal halla, S. C. In the "fifties" he re moved to Charleston, S. C., when he engaged in business, having i large flour mill at "Rikersville,' near Charleston. He had a summei home at Aiken, S. C., - and diec about 1858. In 1846 he married mj aunt, Annabella Parker Roberts, t< whom several children were born one, "Issoqufeena," who is Mrs. Ad dison C. Harman, is now living ir Savannah, Ga. From my grandmo ther's bible I secured the date of th< names and date of birth of the chil di-en of his first marriage. Colonel Augustus Lythgoe left : widow with three children, a son George Birkenhead, and two daugh ters, Meta, and Hattie, a beautifu girl, just budding into young wo manhood in the early "seventies" married Mr. Ellis G. Graydon, ? prominent young lawyer, she dyinf very shortly after. In the early "seventies" I was i frequent visitor to Abbeville, wher I always saw this lovely family, anc recall the brave fight the noble mO' ther made to rear and educate hei children as befitted them. She hac so.ld her home and invested the pro ceeds in Confederate bonds. Mrs Lythgoe died some years ago, anc where Meta and her brother now live, if still living, I do not know In 1898-99, I met "Birken" in At janta, \ja. Frank Stovall Roberts, (Formerly of Augusta, Ga.) "The Cordova" Apts. Washington, D. C., March 1, 1918. PETIT JURORS MARCH TERM COURT COMMON PLEAS Said Court Will Convene-the Fourth Monday, 25th March, 1918. C. F. Seawright, 5 F. W. Wilson, 11 G. E. Putnam, 11 G, T. Hodge, 13 F. E. Ellis, 5 W. R. Phillips, 4 | jHMHBi a ~ ~ |||. (| sj H '.I i jj Call Your Attention mB Our Ready-to-We \m To-day we are shov Suits, and Spring C< .j jj this Spring and Sun r'.m showing of these ne1 jj? predate their value. ;|H Ladies Silk Waist ' fes r?ii4"iri+rt /*\"P tin rt nvr\n Igg Cll LiOl/O Ui W1UC CA|JC 'jlj cost of materials an Every garment in -!gj ly new and up-to-da lj jj Wear garments, dor ' i I Our Millinery De Baltimore, an accor experienced assistan Hats that are wan of stylish new shape HADD J. R. Smith, 10 r J. J. George, 14 ; Janes Williamson, _ J. M .Campbell, 12 r. r. uiancK, o ?! J. G. E. Loftis, 13 i! W. V. Pruitt, 5 '! J. M. Cox, 11 rj B. D. Ellis, 13 * ij M. J. Hodges, 11 j H. M. Mundy, Sr. 11 ) J. M. Seawright, 12 , C. S. Black, 4 E. H. Longshore, 11 i J. J. Clamp, -6 H. F. Sutherland, 13 i E. H. Richie, 10 Alvin Ellis, 6 G. C. Reid, 11 i R. T. Gordon, 12 S. ?>. Link, 10 M. A. Simpson, 13 j G. W. Price, 14 W. R. Sprouse, 11 J. E. Rogers, 11 t John W. Fisher, 5 r\ W. L. Kennedy, 13 J. E. Hawthorne, 5 J Edward Milford, 6 t L. J Davis, 4. 1 " STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Abbeville, i At the Regular Session of General j Assembly 'of the State of South |j Carolina, 1916, an act was passed reI quiring the County Board of ComI missioners of Abbeville County to j insert for three weeks in a county I and state newspaper a notice for I the purpose of borrowing money for j county expenses. Now, in pursuant j to said act, the County Board of j Commissioners will receive bids for ! the sum of Eighteen Thousand ($18,000) Dollars, payable one year j from date. 1 Bids to be opened Eleven A. M. April 2nd, 1918. W. A. STEVENSON, Supervisor Abbeville Co. I M. L. Evans, Secretary of Board. M^arch 6th, 1&18. Mrs. Ted Dick of Sumter, is the guest of Mrs. J. Allen Smith, Jr. mmmmmmsmmm don-Wflsoi i to Their Large and Att Spring Dress Goods. jar Department is no loi ring a great number of oats. Silk Dresses will lmer. We have in stock iv stylish garments, you s made in the latest sty] Tience?prices rnoueraw d workmanships l our Ready-to-Wear De te. If you arethinking < i't put it off, now is the ~ MILLINERY t spartment is right up-tonplished milliner, is in c LtS. fted just now, you will f ic o-f rviA^avofo fij uu mvuv/iuw j^i i . if": w ' a v>l I /' *> ? . fe? i $ v | ..' '.3 l>; 1 & h ON-WILSI mSfiV ~ i > . ' 2_ Economy You Purity Your S Your Uncle Sam wants you to b of Food, but there is not a citizen he wanst to go hungry. In the matter of Conservation oi the longest way. You cafcnot econo ducts obtainable. Highly nourishinj the cheapest in the long run. Feed your family from our stor out for the best from every viewp and at the same time highly nouris way to economize. W. D. B l WANTS PRESS AND BANNER. W. D. Lomax, who has charge of the Alabama Coca-cola Bottling Company at Sylacauga, in renewing his subscription writes: "Please send me The Press and Banner on as I do not want to miss a single copy of it. We like your paper very much if it is a day or two late in getting out here." He also says that he wants to receive it as long as he is away from home, and that heis getting on fine with his work. MR. YOUNG TO MOVE. Mr. Young, who is expressman on No. 17 and No. 18, has been made agent at Wadesboro, N. C. He will move his mother and aunt to that city in the near future. They have made Abbeville their home for several years and while here have made many friends. n Co J ractive Collection of I iger an experiment I stylish Spring Coat I be worn extensively m to-day a remarkable m must see them to ap- 9 * | "JE le, all designed by 1 Q i considering the high H partment is absolute- 1 of buying Ready-to- jj time to get first pick. date. Miss Ellis, of I charge with able and 9 . ind in a wide ranere -I )N CO. J ! ' ' ir Watchword . standard I ' - - a ; e as saving as possible in the matter . of these good old United States that '; J : food, remember this: The Best goes mize by using the cheapest food pros' food comes higher in price and is 4 " " i ).,t e. We are constantly on the watch / ' loint. Tf it ic nnro onrl mlinloanmii I hing, we have it. 'Tis the very beat $ j r i i arksdale WITH MACHINE GUN COMPANY. In a note to The Journal, Lieut. J. R. Devlin, states that he has been transferred to the machine gun battalion of the 51st Infantry, Chattanooga, and is "now working hard every day to get in shape to give the 'Boches' a warm reception when we 'go across.'?Greenwood Journal. LONELY WITHOUT IT. i I enclose $1.00 for your paper. Please send it right away, as I have moved to the country after livin' in Abbeville 20 years. I am lonely without the Press and Banner. My address is, Mrs. W. A. McCurry, Lowndesville, S. C., Route 2. Let me know how much it is far . > a year.