The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, June 25, 1918, Page THREE, Image 3
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Many are le
Their lives i
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I I Are you leu
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Thousands of our b<
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to the trenches todi
S|mined, splendid you
battle for you.
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You can at least go
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I IVI infill* 1 11U1XV li
W; If :f
11; June
I National Wt
| There's an army, ^
N
stalwart, windbronzt
I between you and the
young fellows aregivi
fort, their; friends an
their hope of life for ;
You can at least len<
Prove your patriotisn
(National War
, ; ' *
t
I THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED FC
National fei
h
-I
* i m in i H. 1 ? 1 1 " "*?
tiding
what
ding?
oys are going down inV
ly - clean-faced, deter- |
ng men going there to
down in your pockets r
over-be ready on
s 28th
ir Savins Day A
fes, a dozen armies of
id young men standing
grizzly Huns. These
ng their ease, their com1
1 a. l
a noraes, cneir uouics,
you
3 your money for them
i with dollars.
Savings Committee
>R THE .WINNING OF THE, WAR BY
.1, j t u :n?
I
^Health
Q About k
N Gone E
^ Many thousands ol i
women suffering from
womanly trouble, have
been benefited by the use ,
ol Cardui, the woman's ^V. !
tonic, according to letters ^
A i :1~- <? tkls
WC tCVXlVC(6UllUU kU HUB |Vone
from Mrs. Z.V. Spell,
M of Hayne, N. C. "I could
not stand on my feet, and IV
Just suffered terribly,"
sbe says. "As my suffaring
was so great, and 1^
Ikl he had tried other remeM
dies, Dr. had us N|
k^| getCarduL . > I began
^1 'improving, and it cured
me. 1 know, and my
doctor knows, whatCaroui
did for me, for my HK
^ nerves and health were
^ i^/TAKE ^
GiRDUl
r
The Woman's Tonic
She writes lurtBan 41 rv
^1 am In splendid health... Lj
BkJ can do my work. I fed I M
owe it to Cardni,(orIwas
U in dreadful condition." lL
If yon are nervous, run" B^K
j^T. down and weak, or softer
.ttf from headache, backache,
etc., every month, try
Cardui. Thousands of
women praise this medi- ^
ftk dne for the ooodit has
IVI done them, and many TV
phyiicianswho have xiscdl
ttJ Cardui successfully with m
their women patients, for- 1^
AJ years, endorse this medl- BL
cine. Think what it meus>
XI to be in splendid health, HL
W like Mrs. Spell. Give N|
N All Druggists CT
r DRINK A GLASS
nrDMi unT iaintcd
ur ntNtnui uniui
V| BE|OBym^T.
8ay? w* will both look anjjtaol
clean, aweet and frtth i
and avoid Nines*
Sanitary science lias of late made
rapid strides with results that are of
untold blesaing to humanity. The latest
application of its untiring research
Is the recommendation' that It' is as
necessary to attend to Internal sanitation
of the drainage system of the human
body as It Is to the drains of the
house.
-? ? ?- tn
iUOBe Ul U0 WUU ttl KUIUWUICU w
feel dull and heavy when we arise,
splitting headache, stuffy from a cold,
foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach,
can, Instead, feel as fresh as a
daisy by opening the sluices of the system
each morning and flushing out the
whole of the Internal poisonous stagnant
matter.
Everyone, whether ailing, sick or
well, should, each morning beforebreakfast,
drink a glass of real hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate In It to wash from the stomach,
liver and bowels the previous
day's indigestible waste, sour bile and*
poisonous, toxins; thus cleansing,
sweetening and purifying the entire
alimentary canal before putting more
food Into the stomach. The action of
hot water and limestone phosphate on
an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating.
It cleans out all the sour
fermentations, gases, waste and acidity
and gives one a splendid appetite ior
breakfast. While you are enjoying
your breakfast the phosphated hot
water Is quietly extracting a large volume
of water from the blood and getting
ready for a thorough flushing of
^11 the inside organs.
The millions of people who are bothered
with constipation, bilious spells,
stomach trouble, rheumatic stiffness;
others who have sallow skins, blood
disorders and sickly complexions are
urged to get a quarter pound of limestone
phosphate from the drug store.
This will cost very little, but is suffi-1
cient to make anyone a pronounced
crank on the subject of iaternal san<
ttatlon.
Washington, June 22.?Plans of
the War Department for carrying
the warfare on the western front
beyond the trench stage gy a vast
production of heavy mountain, siege
and field guns, were made known to
day through the approval by the
House appropriations committee of
the largest fortifications program
ever submitted by any government.
The bill carried $5,i35,096,224, the
nfinninnl OYne?Hit?r#>9 heint* for
K4.MV.|.N. ?p
heavy artillery. Of the entire sum,;
$2,000,000,000 is asked as a cash
,
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GENERA
IWIWmnllHlllImimw^lWlS*tnmwiiiuiinuniuiwiiiiui'niiu:n'inttmainiimiiuiiw>iiinqHWiu
Dr. J. M. HoHadayj of Marion,
received a cab.le. stating that his son,
an officer in the U. S, Marines, had
been wounded in Battle.
American airmen will soon be
fighting alongside, their Italian,
French and British brethren in arms
on the Italian fronfe A contingent
(the first) has already left for that
rone of battle.
Columubia, S. C., June 21.?<fovernor
Manning this, morning appointed
James N. Craig, of Anderson,
State bank examiner to succeed
Col. 0. K. LaRoque, who has
entered army Y. M. C. A, work. '
London, June 21.?Serious- rioting
broke out in Vienna yesterday,
says art Exchange Telegraph dispatch
from Amsterdam.. The mob
broke into a, number of batestear
stoned the residence of the ptertaet
and also one o? the wingp* of the
Hofburg Palace, the message, add*.
St. Louis, June _1.?-Lieufc. - J*yfc
R. Wheeler, of St. Louis, wbs killed
today when the machine in which he
was flying with John N. Rafter, a
cadetf fell one mile at Scott field. J
Paris, June 21.?Announcement
is made of the torpedoing in the
Mediterranean of the French transport
Santa Anna with the loss of 638
lives. The vessel as sunk on May
10; 1,052 of the soldiers and native
orkmen on board were saved.
London, June 2,1.?The Italians
have gained a gijeat vidonfc, at, Nertasa,
on the west bank of the* Piave
and are fighting to complete^ their
success, it was learned from-an aufhnritnfivA
nnnrr.p this afternoon.
Miss Gladys Smith, State Home
Demonstration Agent of Winthrop
College, Miss Agnes Stackhouse,
Agent <jf Greenwood County, Miss
Mary Martin of Abbeville* and Misa
Ethel Byrd of Society Hill,, wore
the efficient helpers of Miss. Susan
Britt in the County Short Course.?
McCormick Messenger.
Washington, June 21.?At the end
of 1918 the United. States will have
enough men in France to hold the
western front aa firm as a rock and
then will begin the offensive that
will carry the Germans back across
the Rhine.
4
?.? t m rm. ? T*?l
wasmngxun, dune ex.? xnc Italian
counter offensive "surpasses imagination,"
declared an offioial: cablegram
late this afternoon from
Rome. The Italian bag of prisoners
and munition? has neutralized all
effbrt of the enemy; the message
states.
Washington, June 21.?American
soldiers now hold 38 miles of trench
es in France, members of the House
military committee learned, today, at
the War Department The weaat
front battle line from the- North
Sea to Switzerland today is about
485 miles. The Americans therefore
are holding slightly less than
a twelfth of the whole line today.
Washington, June 21.?Provost
Marshal General Crowder today
called for 8,976 draft registrants
qualified for general military service,
to be sent on July 15 to various
schools for special- training. The
call is to be held open for volunteers
until July. 1.
As a result of the- studies at the
front, methods have been developed
whereby more than 80 per cent of
the wounded, who originally remained
at the military hospitals for
months, are now cured and returun
" Ami*.
ed to tne iorces m uucc ? ???
weeks. In order that Army surgeons
stationed at camps,, cantonments,
and other military hospitals in this
country may thoroughly, understand
the latest treatment of war wounds,
the Army Medical Department has
had established special classes of
instruction to which are sent selected
officers who, upon completion of
their courses, returun to their own
hospitals and instruct other surgeons
in these methods.
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L NEWS j J
J >*5
Washington, June 21.?Amental
- ^
aeroplanes equipped with a Rollfc
Royce engine, and piloted by aviators
of the Allied nations will croa>'.<k
the Atlantic within three monthly
General Branker, of the Royal Alt
'Si
Force declared today.
The flierht. General Branker stated*
probably would be made from Neflf^
Foundland to Portugal, via the
res. Seven hundred and fifty hors** v
power airplanes carryign crews o&
three or four men will be used.
Extensive plans for the manufae* - '
.
ture of nitrates in Maryland by theGovernment,
for developing agricultural
land in Florida by private
capitalists, for manufacturing lun&><
ber in Louisiana by Louisiana an&?
Missouri manufacturers, for laying' j.'Ail
nmA 1iv\aq i n Tnvoa Kir rt nrnn rn / -
vif ^Ipt iiiico ixi xcaoo uj uuiUfwgr ' *y
interests, for mining sulphur in Te?>- , ^
as? for developing graphite propel** ^
ties in Alabama and for building f W.1
concrete seagoing barges in Loutt**^ ^
amy are among fete important South-;
em developmental enterprises ask
nounced during the past week. ^
Spartanburg, S. C., June 21.-T**; m
Convicted of being absent without# ..mi
leave, two. Brooklyn, N. Y., soldieraj-'-"
members of the 53rd pioneer infam
try have been tried by courtmartiftl .? >$'
at Camp Wadsworth and each -set** tenced
to serve one year at hard Ujpr ,s ^**1
bor in prison. The soldiers arraign WJ ed
were, Private Walter MflldR. ' *
company C, and Private Martin Kefc ; ' ^
ly, company D.
Soldiers convicted under tHfe .
charge are now receiving sentencM* t
at Camp Wadsworth ranging/ from* ' 'X,.
1 to 15 years in prison.
London, June 21.?If -the wwar -" [ M,
ends this year, it will leave the Gorn
man population with nineteen wtugk? ' .
en for every man, says a Rome dUf 7'
| patch to The Express today quoting 1 ^
an Italian professor of sociology
who has written a book on wan am*
population. He estimates' then&aflfc '
121 women between the ages of/20
and 44 in England to every 160 >
- '
men, while France, has 124 women -r
I to every 100 men, whereas the sexf
(ea were evenly balanced before th^ *?
wan The.' Italian holds, that tbs, y<
I race will improve after the war, be:
causet the men will. have. ? larger
selection, of women to pick theia
wives from and; will choose- thfthealthiest
and strongest. womep?
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Washington, June 21%?Y. M. C..
| A\ hutfr. as well ar Red Cross J?osr, J
I pitalfr. are target* for. German, fright-!
fulness, according to Dr. John, H*.
Mott* in taxational secretary of the
Y. M; C. A>? in a- report issued tor
day, "The- Y. M. C. A.," said Dr.
Mott, "ia steadily, making- its influence
felt closer to the front lines,
and the red triangle of the 4Y' huts,
have become a shining mark- for
German guns. Many huts where.
our men were serving American soldiers
have been completely wiped
J out; our secretaries, haye been killed
| and others gassed, but the work , A
g<ies- right on." Dr. Mott said the
French Government has asked tlie
Y. M. C. A? to establish, work at
2,000- places among the French
troops.
Washington, June 21.?Records, of
I incomes and excess profits of Amerif *
can business during- 1-917 were sup- 4 d
tnrfav bv. the Treasury De
partment to. the House ways aud ''v-<V;|
| means committee, drafting the new ;
i revenue' bill .vV* v
i v
; This data, compiled by the. Collec:
j tor of Internal Revenue in levying
*'Y .1 }
income nad excess profits taxes*. con*
: tained many, revelations to the epnar
I mittee} The fact that the, law rer
I --V, ./ 'i
I quiaes the Treasury Department, to
[ keep such- information secret, pre*I
vented disclosure of the most s*artj
ling: facts placed before the. connmittee.
It was learned, however, that r.
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j many businesses showed enoraou#
1 -Cj~ J?i-~ nine mrtntha
| proms uuiiiig UK m?u ??
; of the war. The coal business, for
k 'S\
; instance, showed profits ranging up
j to 2,000 per cent.
, "
I If the men in our Army and /Sf
' Navy can do without luxuries wa at
| heme certainly can. , ' J
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