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f ' I Xocal | (flews | I : personals : I %; Mims Cason is at home from Wof-1 ford for the summer vacation. V { j; Mrs. Oscar Jackson and son ofi Cataba, are visiting relative^. Rev. Hook and family of Tatum,i are visiting Mrs. Joe L. Johnson. . . Miss Mary Hill is home from T-immonsville, where she has been! . .. . ! xeacning. ; f .. Miss Mary Knox of Sharon, is vis-j iting her sister, Mrs. Mabry Cheat-: Miss Sara Haskell has returned from the hospital and is looking L' !?? ^ fA i Miss Kate Haskell is at tome from Winthrop for the vacation. Mart Cheatham of Camp Jackson,! spent Sunday here with "his parents, j . .. . ? James Bailey of Great Falls, is i visiting Lewis Seal. ?? . Misses Margaret and Julia Pen-, oal ape visiting their aunt, Hrs. J.1 E. Bailey of Great Falls. ? Mr. D. A. "Wardlaw, Sr., returnid home from Pryor*s Hospital Frilay very much improved. 1 -? . Mr. Tom Abies of Atlanta, spent he week-end with His parents. / ' t< i t'' Mf. Mansfield Hollingsworth has efcumed from Hot Springs, Ark., there he was two weeks for treatnent. _ _ ^ Mr. Ernest Hipp of Clinton, spent he week-end here with his brother, 1 B. Hipp. Mrs Jas. S. Cochran went up to &&rlDtte Saturday lor a few days iBit with relatives. Miss Eleanor Todd was the -pretty isitor of Miss Ruth McLane over laturday and Sunday. Sergt. Albert H. Rosenberg, of be Q&cbcb Training School iat 'Camp ievier, was at home for Sunday. j ??? Mr. L. CL Bates spent several l*y? th his home people at Van) fiTyck, S. C., last week. _ ?' Mrs. J. C. " Ellis, Mrs. L. T. Hill ind Miss Mary Hill spent Monday 1 Greenwood. ' Mr. and Mrs. C- D. Brown acomftanied Miss Charlotte Brown ack to Chester Monday. Mrs. Arthur Calhoun was in town or several days this week visiting be family of Mr. L. C. HaskelL Mrs. Ida H. Caldwell of Green^ J i. TT? J -'Li. i 0^1 Iuuu, spent r riuay mgiii unu oatrday "in the city with Mrs. Jas. S. Dchran. . Mrs. J. Irwin Gilmer and little lughter, Dorothy, leave today for tlanta, where they will spend a onth with relatives. Sergt. Allen G. King of Officers' raining School at Camp Sevier, >ent the week-end here with his >me people. Dr. J. A. Anderson of Antreville, as in the city Saturday and re>rted Magistral Luther Harkness i not expected to live many days. Miss Mary B. Martin, County emonstrator, will leave tomorrow >r Winthrop to attend the Short ourse. I Mr. and Mrs. Foster Barnwell id their two bright children, Fosr and Josephine, and Miss Eva jar is went down to Columbia Sat>da/ and made a sight-seeing trip 'er Camp Jackson. They went rough the country in their tar. ''' ^ SHOWER BATHS I FOR CHILDREN L Low Wash Basins and Little Shower Baths Adapted for the Use of the Tots. CHATEAU DES HALLES NOW CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL iu . I 1? One of the Most Complete ?s- y tablishments of Its Kind in ? France, With Jolly Playrooms * and Toys to Amuse Patients, J Vi Up In the mountains, where th? g) ssow falls early and lies deep, 30 mile* & from Lyons, is the little French Tillage cl of Les Halles?a story book village, f with Its massive stoue church standing B sentinel over two long rows of trim, 1? blue-gray plaster cottages. And a mile farther on is the Chateau des Halles, ' where your Red Cross has established c< a home for 200 sick children. Manginl built the chateau. Man- T ^ roll. ^ ?1111 was uic Luau nuv uum uiv ttui- ^ road along the Riviera and many oth- ^ $r railroads In France. And thirty ^ odd years ago be built this castle up in the mountains for his country home. ' But soon after his two children died. Then he died, and when his widow followed him she left the chateau to the city of Lyons to be used as a hospital for children. * ? ti The War's Wreckage. ^ Then came the war. A little rivulet L of the war's wreckage began to trickle n in at Evian?"repatries," elderly men T and women, children, even babies, who d fiad once lived in the parts of France engulfed by the German tides and tr whom the C4ermans. finding them use- tJ less, were beginning to ship back into France by way of Switzerland. Grad- li ually this rivulet swelled. Soon 1,000 aj of these nnforturiates Wert arriving s< at Bvian daily. And fully half of o them were children,, undernourished, ? thinly clad, dirty, sickly and, worse, grim, spiritless, with faces that bad forgotten bow to smile. To dare for these children was the task your Red Cross at once assumed. Working with the . French authorities, the Red Cross secured permission to make use of the old and almost forgotten Cbauteau deft Halles dp there in the mountains. For years the castl? had been closed. No effort bad ever been made to fit it up as a hospital. Tour Red Cross had to begin at the eft beginning. Rooms Big and Jolly. ?ut what a wonderful task it has accomplished! The Chateau des Halles, transformed into a children's uubpiiai uuu iwi uume iu iuriuus haste under thp terrible pressure of war needs, with little time to think tfrloe and no time to retrieve errors, is not only one of the most complete establishments of Its kind; it Is one of the best children's hospitals in all France. The two rooms where the arriving children are isolated for a few days are big, Jolly rooms?Just what Is need to efface from the little i ones' minds the memories of those iron j days behind the German lines. The [ big play room is strewn with rocking horses and wonderful smile-enticing parrots and other toys carved by the wounded poiltte. And so you stray from room to room, and everywhere you find new evidences of this watchful care. And ^ then you reach the bathrooms. This Ahatoo n ma a KnUf Kv ? nf nroalth I UMIMU TTUO UUlll WJ ? UJttli TTVUIlUt | ^ Its plumbing was excellent, and yet it I ^ has been stripped oat aod replaced with little, low wash basins and little ' shower baths that the children can use *' more comfortably. That is how your Red Gross thinks and cares for France's children. 1 ^ HER WEIGHT IN GOLD. * c An Aviator's Letter Tells What a Red v Cross Nurse Is Worth. a "As for the American Red Cross 6 ?well, I could never In a thou* w sand years express my appreciation and admiration of those u American women. I worship them. I guess all the fellows do. The a first day I came into camp?and my morale was right low; I'll tell B you about it some time?well, I went fnto the American Red Cross, 11 and there, standing behind a nice v clean counter, was a little round v faced Red Crossie. She was Just 8 beaming on every one. Imagine I P I never came as near making a v fool of myself In my life. I felt 11 like throwing my arms around her a and weeping for Joy. As it was, I managed to salt up my chocolate P ! a bit?only a drop or two that I e couldn't help rolling off my cheek. b "If 1 ever paint an angel it will ^ look Juet exactly like that little tl Red Crossie. They would be tl worth their weight in gold if they c did nothing but Just be here." - "civ ** v.'-' ; ' ' . ' I************ .ETTER IN THE MORNING MAIL " low Mrs. Lane Finally Realized! That Thousands of Other; Mothers' Sons Are at War Scarred Battle Front. By MAXIMILIAN FOSTER Of the Vigilantes. Mathematics teach us that 1 from 1 saves nothing, and there is also the 1 -ell known biological theorem that1 ou cannot get blood from a turnip, j : Is also assumed, Sir Isaac Newton ! aving demonstrated the law, that j hat goes up Is bound to come down, | at this is only abstract Mrs. Lane robably would hare denied it The flat rent* previously $1,200 a ear, now was $1,400, and it showed no ; gns whatever of coming down. The j ime condition applied also to her i iiildrea's shoes. The shoes now cost i r, whereas they formerly had cost $4. ut this was merely a detail. A simiir phenomenon occurred as to beef:eaks, potatoes, butter, fish and the f other varieties of domestic essenals. All had gone up; none had )me down. About the only thing stale in Mrs. Lane's cosmos was Mr. ane's yearly Income. This was $7,000 year. Already Mrs. Lane had given p ooe maid. The war literally was at er door. True, Mrs. Lane had no son, o brother?no tin of any kind?in the ar, but the war still was at her door. Hard to Make Ends Meet Give money for the war? What do ou think she was doing, anyway? he was giving every cent she had, ying to make both ends meet In her ousehold. It hurt, though. Mrs. j ane was a kindly, warm hearted wolan, and she would have liked to give, he war was dreadful! It was so readful she'd stopped reading about it But one must read letters. One tust do that when a friend takes the ouble to write them. Thfe letter came in the morning mail Irs. Lane read it, then she read it gain. Afterward she sat there ab- i )rbed, silent, rigid. The color had crept i at of her face, and her breath came swiftly from between her parted lips. "I have just come back from the canteen," it read. "Such an after noon I A traMoad of serioufly wounded to be fed at once, which is trying, as one has to climb into all the carriage*, one after the othr er. We begin with the men who are well enough to sit up and handle their cups, and those who are too til even to lift their heads, 6f course, we have to lifti and feed ourselves. Feeding the ones wiih bad face wounds 'are the hardest. J can stand ordinary wounds of Wood, hut ichpn a man ought io have a nose and mouth and all he has is?ugh!?it takes all your courage to get through a feeding'. ' I managed to get half a pint of milk and a beaten egg and some brandy down the throat of a boy of twenty who had no mouth left, and J had to clean it between every mouthful. He had had no food fpr fifteen hours and was Jo thirsty that he was nearly insane. I held his head against me, and I gagged all the time, but I just kept thinking, 'Suppose it was my boy who needed a drink and thert was no one to give it to him.' Bo I weiit through with Mr and he finally went to sleep. Oh, Martha, Martha Lane, we need everything?all you and the rest can send!" If Lawrence Had Gone to War. ?w ?i 1%_ -%r?1 r Mitn une o ClOCK siruc*.. aim. j-muc ouu at with the letter clutched In her and. "What's for dinner?" asked Hanah, the maid. Mrs. Lane hardly heard er. She was still sitting there when Mvla floundered In. Olivia was four?en, the conscious age. "Mother," she aid fretfully, "I can't go to dancing chool again in brown gloves when all tie other girls have white ones." The lalnt reminded Mrs. Lane that Lawence at boarding school had written hat morning about his socks. He had nly two pairs of silk ones left. "And, lother," said Olivia, continuing? But rhat Olivia said Mrs. Lane didn't hear, he had dropped her head on the table nd unaccountably was weeping. "Just uppose it was my boy?mine!" ohe . as sobbing. "Why, mother!" ejaculated Olivia. She hurried toward her mother. What is it, mother? You're acting Just s though Lawrence had gone to war I" Mrs. Lane looked ""up, the tears treating down her face. "That's just what is the matter with ie! I should be acting as if Lawrence rere there. And so should you! If Viilie were like these, the boys there," he pointed to the letter that had sliped from her lap to the floor?"if he rere, like them,- in need, dying, wantig eggs, milk, brandy, to keep him liv, would you be buying white loves? And would we think what other eople wear or how they live or whethr we had only one servant now? If my oy was over there, if my son were?" But other women's sons are over here. Krs. Lnne had at last realized liis. The tears were rolliag down lier heeka, I l?v ** MWMMW?i KE Wear I and be com! Men's Palm B< |$7.75 | $10.00 fpKI 1 iSarw L' 1 vntrd mrn T I T | Buy Them An Help Win Hie V JOB SALE EVERYWH IH/ I ? I i . imti 5. rr n a n n i . .. J S. Mr. L. D. Witt of Greenville, is I visiting his wife, who is quite ill at the Eureka Hotel. f Mr. J. C. Raines* four-year old son was bitten last Saturday by a 0 mad dog. a a L. C. Haskell, Jas. Chalmers and j Ernest Pennal went to -Clemson Thursday and brought Allen Haskell 0 and Earl Graves, who have been in ^ school there,' home through the t country. ' d Sergt. Leslie McMillan spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and g Mrs. J. L. McMillan. He was ac- f companied by his friend, Lieut, p Slattery of New York. e Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Anderson and g Mrs. J. L. Daniel spent the weekend in Coronaca. I Miss Clara Williams, of Milledge,| Ga., is visiting Miss Louise Urown. Miss Pearl Hagan spent Sunday with Miss Lee Pruitt at Sharon. o Lieut. Albert A. Morse of Camp a Wadsworth, spent Sunday here with ^ his home people. ^ fi Robert Cheatham of Camp Wads- v worth, spent Sunday with home- a people. a si NOTICE. a; All School Trustees who failed fi to rtieet with us on June 1st, in the p interest of the War Savings Stamps f< Campaign now on, are requested and urged to call on the undersigned some day this week for blanks 5 and instructions. P. E. Harrison, County Chairman. ' q CANDIDATES / ? / m u; FOR SENATE. tl We are authorized to anounce d: J. HOWARD MOORE, Esq., as a ti candidate for the State Senate from a] Abbeville County, subject to the w rules of the Democratic primary. n . r--. ... (, ' ! - EPKOi KING KL CLOTHES fortable during thes each Suits in a vari I ; < \ ' , L Will' apprecia J sure you we c as cheap as ? give you well far and absolute ; EES \ Imlersi PHON \ ..\ . ^ _ i ESTATE OF HENRY DAVIS, Dec'd Jot ice of Settlement and Application for Final Discharge Take notice that on the 29th day f June, 1918, I will render a final ccoufat of my accounts and doing s Administrator of the Estate of lenry Davis, deceased, in the office f Judge of Probate for Abbeville Jounty at 10 o'clock a. m., and on he same day will apply for a final lischarge from my trust as such Ldministrator. All persons having demands aainst said estate wil present them or payment on or before that day, roven and authenticated or be forver barred. Charley Davis, -4-3t. Administrator. 'STATE OF AZRA C. CLINKSCALES, Deceased. lotice of Settlement and Application for Final Discharge. Take Notice that on the 25th day f June, 1918, I will render a final & ccount of my acting an.. doings as Ldministrator of the Estate of Azra !. Clinkscales, deceased, in the ofce of Judge of Probate for Abbeille County at 10 o'clock a. m., nd on the same day will apply for final discharge from my trust as uch Administrator. All persons having demands eainst said estate will present them Dr payment on or before that day, roven and authenticated or be srever barred. J. H. CLINKSCALES, Administrator. -24-lt ea. week-4 wks. WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN. Charleston, June 1.?A very uniue plan has been decided on by the outh Carolina War Savings comlittee for the purpose of waking p the state of South Carolina in le forthcoming intensive W. S. S. rive in June. From June 14th unI June 28th it is planned to have II church and fire bells, factory histles, and other mediums of oise, ring and blow as loudly as _____ - J*i OL II ! .ASS 1 ?, v< ' :?i . y. > . ^ ;e hot days ety of colors. Ill '* ' $9.00 1 cm o cn I i ^ = -v'i te a look and as- ) '. 1; i ' : 3 an sell you a Suit the cheapest and I shrunk garments ; I good colors. v 1 | /i )nlo. r ono ill JU AVl/i ] I they know how, evert day at 12 o'clock noon. vEvery man, woman, and child in eveiy community, 01 hearing the noisy demonstration, will interpret it as follows; < ' "Wake up, South Carolina] Sign , :t the pledge to $aye, and jbUy all War Savings Stands you can. Wake up!" 1 m Tbq state-wide concert will be a clarion call to duty, and won't disturb anybody except Bill Kaiser? and no loyal American is very solicitous about Bill Kaiser's welfare. WANTS j; I L. NELSON, Abbeville, S. C Wanted Wanted Junk of all kind Rags, Rubber, B?ft and Iron. 5-7-tf. fw rOR RENT:?Two nice furnished upstairs rooms, with all conveniences. Apply to Mrs. R. C. WDson. 4-26-tL A-l SAW MILL MAN?with gooi engine, and teams to do logging* to saw several hundred thousand feet lumber in LowndesviDe ' fS Township. I will furnish saw mill and cut timber. M. P. McCALLA, Lowndesville^ S. C. 5-31-2wk* FOR SALE:?Porto Rico, Nancy Hall and Triumph potato slips. - - " .1-5 $3.50 per thousand, five thousand : and over $3.25. F. 0. 0. Anderson. Cash with order. J. K. Manas, 5-28-lmo. Anderson, S. C. FOUND:?One light bay mule, 3 white spots on right side of neck. J. D. LEWIS, Abbeville, & CL Star Route. 5-31-2t ' WANT?TO SELL?One fWe-yearf old mare colt, well broke, $140, one good male $100. D. T. BLACKWELL, Due West, S. G 6-4-3t. FOR SALE?200 bushels of corn m the shuck, at $2.00 per buabeL J. H. CHEATHAM. f-4 lw-tt . $ ' '<2?