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I We invite y< requirement i Our Coat Suits Coats are wonder and attractive. A SI 7 in i Y AM?W WV ^ * Georgette and C Waists in all the le Prices, $4.00 and (attractive Lawn waists for $1.00. %. Suite H . In our verj I good as Andr I 36 inch Sil F 36 inch Sil 27 to 36 i J I u 1 ' T YHE PRICE OF / .] SHAMEFUL PEACE ~ * ? 1 More than a billion dollars of " American, agricultural exports were , old: to the European nations at war , with Germany during 1917. Had this Nation maintained peace at the ^ price of obedience to the Genpan i war zone decree, this European mar- 1 ket would have been closed and this < billion dollars worth of. agricultural < products would, most of them, have j rotted on farms and in warehouses i or been used in unprofitable ways with consequent stagnation and ruin 1 to the American farmers. 1 Interest as well as duty urges _ the American farmer to give fioancial support to his Government in this war. * Tlmr T.ihori-v Rftnds. j ~7 11 THE LIBERTY LOAN ' I AND ^BUSINESS j J ; ? ic "What has the Liberty Loan to, < do with the refrigeration business?" j< was asked by a subscriber in the! < fastnesses of the Rocky Mountains 1 of the editor of the Refrigeration i World. The answer was sound and 1 patriotic: i "At this critical time the success j 1 or failure of the impending loan 11 have more to do with refrigeration' than even the machinery and chemi- 1 cals used in producing refrigera- ' tion. If the loan fails, everything^ else will fail with it. All business M will eventually be prostrated; noth-j ing could thrive." j 1 It is the business of every busi-1i ness and business man in the Unit-J] ed States to see that the Liberty Loan does not fail. They should buy ] Liberty Bonds; they should en- ] courage and assist others to buy j them. No business in the United \ States is going to succeed if the , Liberty Loan fails?if the Nation ] fails. i It is better business to buy Lib- j erty Bonds than to pay indemnities to a victorious Germany; it is bet- ] ter business to win this war than to have our foreign commerce subject ' to the dictation of the Potsdam I' Government. j | The welfare, the success, the pros-11 Dur attention to tl" :s for Spring and and separate fully stunning ny price from 527.50. vfe '2 Our Ha bined v\ ' ' 5 repe de Chine ia?n|rtsh^es; Notice , $6.50. Most from $2 onH . \/ ai Ir\ ClilU. | V U1IC Ladies Silk Hose $1 V \ ). Snow Men's Oxfords $5.50 and $6.50. rs' Blue Serge and Mi: from $5.50 to $10.00. V iarge stock you will fine oscoggins except a little k Poplin in all colors, al Ik Pongee in dress patte nch Cretonne in except M. A I perity, the liberty, and the happiness of every true American is ] bound up in the Nation's success. < We are not fighting, alone for ma- ] terial. interest* for annexations or indemnities. We are fighting for 1 freedom and justice and humanity in/) Pnf nrn ova olan \ ?11U Vi? iltliUblUll. JLPUb TY w ai V MlOV ighting for the maintenance of our -< jommercial rights, for the rights of ] )ur citizens to pursue their lawful ^ journeys on the seas and transport :heir commerce to foreign markets. 1 It is patriotic, and a duty, to buy i Liberty Bonds. It is also good busi- t less to do it. t INTRODUCING AN INVENTOR c (Greenwood Index) One by one our old notions have ^ ;o go into* the discard. For instance ( nost of us have had the idea that , C *uns, rifles and pistols made by ^ certain concerns like Winchester, Dolt and Remington were products )f the men whose names the con-j :erns bear. In a way this is true,' Dut it appears that most of the 11 really important improvements in j < the products of these firms are the! i inventions 01 one man, a man wnu i las been little known in this coun- ( try, John M. Browning. I Mr. Browning is the inventor of j 1 the new machine gun which has, created so much talk and which has 11 Deen adopted by the United States < for use in this war. i Mr. Browning lives in Ogden, ' Utah. He went west with his father j1 when quite a small boy and has i5 lived in the west all his life. His first work was a rifle which became so popular that his father's little shop was overrun with orders for it. It attracted the attention of the Winchester people and the patsnts -were bought from young Browning. This was the beginning of Mr. Browning's long career as an inventor of firearms. The Winchester Company secured nost of his subsequent patents, the 1886 rifle, the lever shot gun, the 09 model rifle, the '91 model, the '94 model, '95, the '97 model shot fun and the 1900 model rifle were ill inventions of John Mr-Browning. mmrnmrn i ie intelligent man: ask you to call ; 't* '' ::C ' : \\ f/: ; :PpSs J'f 4#f: v r -/AV its will delight those who rith quality make them s >0 Cents to $18.00. our swell Silk Petticoats L75 to $5.00 .00 & $1.50 wi i the following goods: 2 lighter weight. 10 yard: : $1.00 per .yard. rns No two alike, $1.75 ionally pretty patterns i lNDI He is the inventor of the automatic pistol , and his first one was produced in Belgium. It was one of these pistols which killed the Austrian Archduke which was the match nrhich started this war ablaze. This pistol madef Mr. Browning famous all over Europe. Millions 1 >f them had been manufactured in Europe when this war began. Mr. Browning is the invetor of the Colt t uitomatic pistol which was adopted v n 1911 by the United States for e ;he use of the army, navy, and Na- E ;ional Guard. I 3 His latest work is the new ma:hine gun. A machine gun in spite ? >f the disadvantages under which E t has to work, getting too hot thru t :api<f firing, is a most Valuable ad lition to an army, it is equal tofn ibout seventy-five rifles at anyl^ ;ime. t fl SENATOR TILLMAN. h When Senator Tillman entered ? he Senate twenty-four years ago? * >nly Lodge and Gallinger o? the a jresent body were there then?few D )f the newspapers of the country, ' >utside of his organs in his own , State, had a good word to say of lim. He was one of the pioneers in . ;he fight of the masses against the :lasses, he had crushed the aristoc acy of South Carolina, he had . 11 cept his own State in years of tur. - - - - v noify he had put many fads in the statute books and, having a vitriloic ;ongue and a certain roughness of v nanner, his entrance into the Sen- b ite was looked upon as dictinctly c iisadvantageous to its dignity and 0 ibility. s c Yet now, when the Senator at v ;he age of 71, announces .to his peo- s' )le his desire for re-election, the ^ eading newspapers of the country ^ eceive the announcement with the f ltmost favor, and, while not rejecting on the capacity of the who vould succeed him, venture to exjress the hope that South Carolina vill re-elect him and thereby honor >oth itself and the country., ci No. better evidence of .the Sena- E mm* i _ ner in which we \ and take a look a * ' i j |v A e_J0/. love the beautiful. St> ittractive. Prices rang \ Ladies Walk Over Slip- f pers for $4, V. ^ $5 and $6. AwaiA SUVER^ ^ Our line of -g( W. B. Corsets is well stock Wr%wl- J A ,000 yards 36 inch Intro s for $2.00. # Only 20 yar< to $2.50 a yard. From 20c to 40c; a yard. SRSC ) - . tor's growth in the estimation of f ;he country. Long ago, by sheer F ability and ardent patriotism, he t ived down the reputation whieh at- f ached to hbn when he first made lis appearance in Washington and r te now ranks among the sanest and ^ nost influential members of the ipper chamber. That the country at large should y 'eel so kindly toward him at this u tarticular time is perhaps due to ]( he servicp lie has rendered in* the 0 Lpbuilding of the navy. When he j? mtered the Senate he was made a f aembers of the naval committee 0 jid the navy became his hobby. As n members of the committee and p r? /*v? r\ ?T>m o r> V* n V100 Kann in/lofofL 1? D UliaiilUUll iiU nao asww** *nuv*MW4 XI ;able in his efforts to develop it ti o the highest state of efficiency. t< Long before we entered the war ti ie foresaw what was coming and new that ?he first call would be on ^ he navy. So far as he could in- 1C luence the situation he devoted 31 ;imself to putting it in a condition i o: c< f readiness for the call, and with /hat results the country has had ^ mpla evidence. Our entrance in- ^ o the war found the War Departlent disorganized and unready. It j ound more or less confusion in all, t b< lepartments of the Government.) 'he navy was the exception. Its'ta rganization under Secretary Dan-1 . els was perfect. It was prepared ^ o move when the signal was given; nd it has been moved ever since > si n a manner to thrill Americans . , ., r( nth pride. x South Carolina could not be more ei worthily represented than it is now fi, y Senator Tillman, who holds a ommanding position in the affairs f the nation in one of its greatest d< rises. His mere expression of a hj rish to be re-elected ought to be jj, ufficient to assure his return.? sa 'rom New "Orleans Daily State, tr larch 13, 1918. to tr IAPTURED GERMAN T] DESCRIBES ENEMY'S m ORDER OF^ BATTLE ^ ~ be Ottawa, Ont., April 2.?A German bi aptured on the battlefield, says bs euter's correspondent, telegraphing at . mMsM .. lave anticipated it our selections. > i Georgettes, J, I Crepe de < loveliest pre from $18.5( rle comj? ;e irom We carry \T /\TTT ! x>cw iuca ^ V 'Your selects Price 15 Cei \ . oys' Wash Suits from 7 $2.00 in sizes from 4 to lso big assortment Was ducer Bleaching, no sh ds to a customer., . . \' ?-ft 5 . , ? )NC \ < ?? rom French headquarters .in 'ranee, describes the order of batle of a division iit the present ofensive as follows: "The division , advances- in two egimental groups progressihg side y side. The first line of.' each roup consists first of one- regiment f three battalions of infantry rhose task is to advance straight pon their objectives, regardless of >sses, leaving the work of" reducing ur centers of resistance to specialit detachments following them, hese consist, first of one company f storm troops, one and one-half lachine gun company, a half comany of sappers, one detachment of quid flame throwers, half a heavy ench mortar company, one batjry of light trench mortars, and vo batteries of what is called inintrv omns. Tn rpsprve enmc t.hp lird infantry regiment and a divisin of five tanks of British origin nd an independent group consisting f two cyclist companies and one jmpany of storm troops. "This division is supported byvI2 atteries of field guns and six of j eavy artillery, including a battery f eight-inch howitzers. "According to prisoners, a numer of enemy battalians have now; Dt special light trench mortar de-i tchments, known as infantry ar-j llery, equipped with two light ench mortars of a new model ounted on specially high wheels, lpposea to be capaoxe 01 nnng zu >unds a minute against tanks or :her obstacles. The personnel of ?ch detachment comprises two offers and 40 men. "It is apparent. from the f oregog that the whole apparatus for ;stroying our centers of resistance is been relegated to the second ie, the celebrated storm troops, ippers with explosives and light ench mortars instead of being first follow after the waves of infany have swept over the position, tie mission of these specialists reams the same. They clear the enches, reduce strong points, >mb recalcitrants from dugouts, it while they are doing this the ittle is sweeping miles further? any rate, in anticipation.** your paticular ,1 Come in. I Foulards, Taffetas, I ^ Chines?the seasons I )ducts in silk Dresses a } to $27.50 arfe here, B. csovu seam-ailowing- m Patterns in stock.* cm should be easy. B . ^ its* ^ e ??TT+o S ' 5 cents *. V 8 years / ?.j ,T~ TT?4.? H &J ill Liai&. v / arch. It is as ?A 11 rv. II ? - - HT I H, nHMHBH' ' flH . ...' i, M . . i at . Mji'i^r?ou ?w rt?eB/ti-niio? ^V/I IV.C. ur LIIJJWLU 1 iun. I H ' H A meetiljgr of the stockholders-of ' the McMurray Drug Co.; wu M3' HE Aprif 1st, at their place of business M in Abbeville for the purpose of voting on the liquidation and :diifcD>~ " lution of the McMurray Drug Co., flH a corporation doing business under the laws of the State of South- Cfcro*- . lina. All stockholders take notice. DR. G. A. NETJFFER, DR. C. H. MeMURRAT, HB _-5_4t. ' ' Diirectorsc. K )^H| : WANTS ] WANTED:?Your order? for To- H mato Plants: Rest varieties*. Targe - HH strong, well-rooted. Prices rights Immediate or later delivery* ,-^^H Phone 21&-12. * Mrs. Gi. ;T. Tate. , ' vv x? ? FOR RENT:?Thje lower- part of BHH my house with garden. Mrs. R. C. Wilson. 4-2. WANTED?At the State Hospital for the Insane, Columbia, white women, preferably between the;^^H| ages of eighteen and thirty years, as student nurses and attendants. For information write the Superintendent. 4-2-4t. HBBfl FOR SALE:?Potorico and Nancy Hall Potato Plants, $2.50 per^^^Hj thousand, immediate shipments.' Thos. H. Brock, Honea Path, C. 4-2-4 wks.^^HB PASTURAGE.?Wanted, about 25 or 30 head of cattle for pastor-HHH age. Good grazing now*' R. McCombs, Route 4. 3-29-2t.fl|^H| FOR SALE:?A mule, and for rent^^^^H one two-horse farm, 2 miles from^^HH town, containing 2 negro houses^^^^H bam and 2 wells. Apply to W. C. DuPre, or W. S. DuPre. COTTON SEED?Wanamaker proved, Cleveland Big Boll. Price^^^^^ $1.75 per bushel^ under 5 bushe^HHH $2.00 per bush^L W.' S.' Cotbra^Hj^H J. link, j