University of South Carolina Libraries
MBHMmiMrainnstnitiniiiuiMiMitiMinimintqftairmtiitnifMNiiiiiriimittmnMiitMiiHiiiiiiiMiiti iMuiiaiumimiOiuiwi<iNtmiHiiuiiinMMiituuiiiiiiiKRNiiitiiiiiiiiituiinuiiMiiuiHi<Hiiiiiiiiiiiiu GENER/ >;ii?iiuiiuiiainiui(iiiiinuiiimiiiiiuMiiiiiiuuiiiti>iMiiiiuiiiiiiii"iii'iMiiiiMiMu>iiiiiHniuminiii IMUMtMMMUIHMllMIUtinilUtNlltllMlllUllinilHIlUllltlllllliniiiitlHtiliniilNUilMUiltlUIIIIHItiUH Washington, June 28.?Secretary Baker leaves tonight for an inspec tion trip to army posts and camp; around Hampton Roads. Washington, June 28.?Belgiun today was given another credit o: $9,000,000 bringing the otal loanec to that country up to $131,800,00( and total'to the allies to $5,981, 590,000. London, June 28.?Accorling to i Petrograd message, transmitted bi the Exchange Telegraph correspond ent at Copenhagen, the food situa ion in Petrograd is\ desperate. Riot.' /loilxr if io r?aplarOfl aiC waiving UUilJ , ?v UVV1M* VV. London,?Twenty-one German de 8troyers, a large number of submar ines and numerous auxiliary craf are penned in the Bruges canal dock! as the result of the recent Britisl naval operations at Zeebrugge. Chester, June 28.?rWr. D. B. Ma Jone of Chester, received a wir< from Adjutant General McCain thii morning tendering him a captaincj in the Officers' Medical Reserve Corps. Washington, June 28.?rPresidenl Wilson this afternoon signed a bil providing for the vocational training of soldiers and sailors invalidated in service. He signed another calling for the erection of a statue tc former President Buchanan. Washington, June 28.?A regi, t ment of troops in General Pershing's expeditionary force has beer nv>)orar1 tft Italv nrnhflhlv JIR nn Jld. vance guard of additional forces tc be sent later, to complete the units k on that front of Italian, British, French and American troops. ( Fort Worth, Texas, June 28.? Thomas Clifford Anderson of Dallas Texas, a cadet aviator, fell 5,00C feet at the Carruthers field todaj and was instantly killed. He was flying alonp at the time. An investigation is being made to discovei the cause of the accident London, June 28.?Kaiser Wilhelm seems about to add "King of Austria" to his long list of roya] titles. It looks as if Austria will disappear, not by action of the allies of the rebellious peoples held subject to the Hapsburgs, but b> that of the Hohenzollern ruler- ovei the senior partner in the Teutonic alliance. Amsterdam, June 27.?Three car - loads of parcels of foodstuffs for German soldiers were seized recently by the Austrian railway authorities and handed over to the authorities at Cracow for distributior among the people, according to a Vienna dispatch to the Berlin Kreuz j Zeitung. Atlanta, June 2^.?The appointment of Lyman Delano as federa! manager of the Atlantic Coast Lint railroad and the Winston-Saleir South bound Railway, with offices a1 Wilmington, N. C., was announcec here tonight by B. L. Winchell, federal dicertor of railroads for th< Southren region. The appointmem is effective immediately. Rocky Mount, N. C., June 27.? Carl Vivrette was killed and Georg< W. Williams seriously .injured in i shooting affray at Elm City today the shooting is the result of a Ion* standing disagreement between th< " two men. Both were residents o: Elm City. Williams was rushed t< Wilson, N. C., for treatment. Washington, June 28.?Secretar; McAdoo today informed the house in response to a resolution by Rep resentative Madden of Illinois, tha there are 595 men of draft age ii the employ of the treasury depart ment who have been given, deferrei military classification. Scarcity o skilled men was given as the reasoi for asking the exemption.s London, June 28.?King Georg has consented to follow the presi dential precedent in the Unite States by throwing the first ball a the American baseball game on th miltiittmin iiuiMiiiiiuuuiiiiitiiitiiiuiiHiuiinuiiiiiiiiiiN(iiitiiiiMiitinniimiiiiiiuiii>iiitiiuaiiMmn? J il NEWS j Fourth of July, it was reported to day. The players will line in style 5 at the Savoy before the game, and then drive to the Chelsea football . grounds in historic four-in-hand 1 coaches. f 1 Washington, June 28.?The war ) labor, board at the final session to-. - day of the hearing on the request of street railway company employes for an increase of wages with1 held decision on the proposal made f by employes and the companies that " President Wilson be asked to raise " local'transportation rates if it is 3 shown that this is necessary in order for the companies to increase the pay of their employes. Washington, June 28.?The poa-P /tifioo a-P "Panama qtiH I L lILUlg VI Vllt V? A WJ. a m?v* i Colon has been taken over by the 1 United States Government, it was announced here late this afternoon, as the result of fears expressed by - the Panama Government that the J postponement of the election set for 3 June 30 might result in a serious r internal disturubance. The action i is in accordance with a treaty ratified in 1894. ( t The number of men engaged in | atheletics at Camp Jackson last week j I broke all previous records. Between [ 28,000 and 30,000 men were actu. ally active in some form of athletics > despite the fact that the only period opn to athletic work is just after supper. These numbers do not in. elude many others who did not use . the Y. M. C. A. material and theret fore did not register. t Ureenville, June zi.?At its regup !ar meeting Tuesday night, city council made preparations for a thd^jugh enforcement of the "work or to jail" ordinance passed re cently, which requires all ablebodied , males to carry a labor card showing > that he is regularly employed in ' some useful work continuously. The \ new law goes into effect July 1, and several additional members will be added to the police forces to see that J the law is thoroughly carried out. " 1 .! Virginia, Minn., June 28.?Steam | shovel crews tonight began digging [ | into the debris of what once was the [[Silver Open Pit Iron Mine, near . here, in hope of finidng the bodies [ of more than a score of miners killed r today by the premautre explosion of nine tons of dynamite. T^nii^oon aw Vnnwn Vinvp hppn * v,*.* | killed and many are missing and se| verely injured. J According to the owners, a bolt j of lightning cuased the blast. Raleigh, N. C., June 27?Govern or Bickett issued a proclamation tot day asking that all ehurch bells be i rung for two minutes at 7 o'clock : each evening from June 30 until the end of the war and that during the ringing of the bells all citizens bow " their heads in fervent prayer to ' the God to give our forces on sea !! and land wisdom of foresight, cour1 age and fortitude and to make them t more than conquerors of the powers ' of evil arrayed against them. i Camp Sevier, Greenville, June 27. t ?Regimental headquarters company and the supply company of the Seventeenth United States Infantry, ar rived at Camp Sevier this afternoon. i These detachments came from Chari leston, where they have been station , ed for a few days. The balance of I the regiment is at Fort Oglethorpe, SiGa. Col. E. A. Roche commands the fj regiment and he and his adjutant, 51 Capt. T. S. Sinkler, who is a Char| leston man, are among the officers i who came in today. 'i ' (> Washington, June 28.?Arrange-iments have been completed for the t{ transfer of about 2,500 enemy aliens i j held at Hot Springs, N. C., from the I ;?1.1? i?i j i jurisdiction ui uie iauuir uepaiuucuu jjto the war department, an announce f ment said. While the formal transn fer will take place July 1 the aliens will not be removed to Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., where the internment e camp of the war department is loi cated, until about July 15. d The camp at Hot Springs will be ,t taken over by the surgeon general e for a reconstruction hospital. London, June 28.?The Amster- t dam correspondent of The Express r has obtained an interview with a t neutral journalist who was the guest s of the German general staff during t the recent fighting around Soissons, j where the scenes were described as q "more terrible than anything else j] witnessed in the war." J e "The German losses were inde-lb scribable," the neutral journalist ii said. "Whole regiments were wiped out in no time. I saw masses of corpses tied in bundles with wire to o be burned." 'The Germans could not p spare enough men to dig graves for p burial purposes. e a si Washington, June 28.?The sen- ^ ate agricultural subcommittee con- c sidering the emergency agricultural ti bill yesterday rejected by unanimous vote an amendment proposed by ti Senator Fall of New Mexico author- n izing the government to comman- u deer cottonseed meal. Under its v provisions the government would ^ pay the owner $34, a ton for the s< meal, which would be sold to cattle ei raisers at a 10 per cent, increase in ^ order to cover the costs of handling. w Cottonseed meal, according to mem- jr ers of the subcommittee, now sens v for between $45 and $50 a ton. h ir Clinton, June 28.?Liuet. Frank ^ IT McLeod and wife and brother, Mr. Jas. McLeod, en route from Florence to Camp Wadsworth last night, when making a very sharp curve0( across the C. N. &. L. railroad track about three miles east of Clinton, . IS were thrown from their automobile. . Mrs. McLeod received a small scalp w wound and quite a shock, but is not gi regarded as serious. The colored ^ driver did not see the acute curve i a< at this point and when he attempted to take the curve the accident hap y pened. Dr. T. L. W. Bailey-attend- ^ ed Mrs. McLeod and she is 'resting V well at the Clinton Hotel here. No V \ . . . other occupant of the car was injur- v ed. Lieut. M^Leod is the son of Dr. McLeod, of Florence. ^ c< di Washington, June 28.?Another ct bond bill authorizing eight billion hi dollars of Liberty bonds in addition tc to all heretofore authorized, as framed today by the House ways and j m means committee in preparation for j vj the next issue expected in October j onrl nrnviHp for a suhseauent is-1 "a. sue when necessary. Authorization jyj is outstanding for $4,000,000,000 in bonds and the next issue probably w will be around $6,000,000,000. r Besides authorizing $8,000,000,- g< 000 more bonds for domestic pur- R poses, the bill which was approved by the committee for immediate re- j sj port to the House, would authorize M $1,500,000,000 more for loans to the allies, increasing the total pro- G vided for this purpose from $5,500,- h< 000,000 to $7,000,000,00o. In trans- B mitting the tentative draft Secretary McAdoo stated that advances to S: the allies for July, August and Sep-jM tember had been estimated at $500,- J 000,000 monthly. j N I s< ! Approximately 750 new technical j , and military books have been re-1 y ceived at the Camp Jackson library | and are now available to all soldiers | desiring to use them. They include I all of the latest books on military! ' i W science and especially those on field ^ artillery. All of Moss' official manuals in their latest and revised ^ editions are, of course, the most important books of allotment for both P officers and enlisted men but such - - , books as "uompany Aamimsirauun | and "What a Company Officer Should Know" are of additional value to the officers and those privates who Frenchwise see fit to "carry a ir marshals baton in their knapsacks." e si Of especial interest to the arrivals are the many books on the preliminary training such as "The Platts- ^ burg Manual," "The Cantonment Manual" and "The Citizen Soldier." . d In the session of the South Carolina Dental Association held 27th, tj Dr. T. P. Hinman of Atlanta, made ^ two instructive lectures, one in con- ^ nection with Dr. P. D. Brooker of [ this city. a Dr. Hinman and Dr. Brooker v spoke concerning the league formed ir of American dentists for free work e to the drafted men. There are 13,- i( 000 men in the United States who q give an hour each day for work on y ?TirtrtifHiY - he teeth of the draft men, without ay. Only 20 per cent, of the men, iefore they join the army have anitary mouths. Sixty per cent, of hem are in a deplorable condition, iighty-five per cent, of them re-, uire dental attention before enter-' rig the army. This league is formd to make the American army the est dentally equipped body of men n the world. Spartanburg, June 28.?A bridge ver Holstein Creek in the southern art of Camp Wadsorth, just comleted, is said to be one of the most xpensive structures ever erected by! ny force of bridgebuilders. Every troke of the work in connection rith the building was done by offiers, including cutting down the imbers, hewing them, hauling them 3 the scene of the building operaions and placing them. The enlisted len had nothing to do with the nderstanding in any way. The work ras done by the officers attending | ie Pioneer - Infantry Regiments ;hool for officers. The dnly enlistd men who had anything to do with , were two or three from Maine, ho had had experience in timberlg. They were called in to give adice as to the selection of timber, andling it, etc. They were really istructors. As for actual work, ley let the officers do it. Colonels, lajors, captains and lieutenants >iled side by side and hewed and eaved and fitted timbers together tid blistered their hands and sprainj their backs, but they built the ridge and they are proud of it. It a good bridge?there is no better ridge of its kind anywhere in the orld?and it will be standing and iving service long after those who iiilt it have gone to scenes of other itivity. V BETHIA NEWS. V V Bethia, June 28.?Was so glad lat grandma Wilson was able to >me down Sabbath and spend the ly in her dear old home. Hope the >ming and going would not hurt ?r and hope that she will be able i come again. Mr. and Mrs. Pennal of McCorick, spent a few hours at Abbelle last Sabbath with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie and little J. r. and Thelijfia took dinner with ts. W. M. Hall Sabbath. Mrs. M. E. Beauford and children ent to preaching at Long Cane A. . P. Church Sabbath. Always the sou sermons mat are preached by ev. R. F. Bradley are enjoyed. Miss Clara Harrison of Abbeville, jent several days with her sister, ts. Luther Link, last week. Miss Inez Adkins from near reenwood, is spending awhile with sr cousin, Mrs. Luther Link of. ethia. Grandpa Howard and son : spent aturday night with his daughter, [rs. Azilie Wilson. Sorry to hear that Mrs. Harry Mceill and baby are scik. Hope how >on they will be all right. Mrs. Henry Beauford spent Tuesay afternoon I with Mrs. A. K. I'ooanurst anu naa a jony time icking blackberries. Mrs. M. E. Beauford and daughir, and Miss Addie Woodhurst ent up to town yesterday for a I lort while. Charlie Beauford has a bad foot rom sticking a weed in it while lowing last week. Mrs. Jim Link and children mo>red over to Greenwood Sabbath nd spent the day with her sister/ Irs. Davis. Willie Beauford, whp is working 1 the navy at Portsmouth, Va.; is xDected home Saturdav for a weeks tay. ; Mr. and Mrs. Will Langley spent londay in Abbeville with relatives. The Greenwood mining people njoyed a picnic at the mine Monay. There is more Catarrh in this secion of the country than all other iseases put together, and for years ; was supposed to be incurable, loctors prescribed local remedies, nd by constantly failing to cure 'ith local treatment, pronounced it lcurable. Catarrh is a local disase, greatly influenced by constitu)nal conditions and therefore reuires constitutional treatment. [all's Catarrh Medicine, manufac ... 1 factured by F. J. Cheney & Co., To-| I ledo, Ohio, is a constitutional rem1 edy, is taken internally and acts^ through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hun-1 dred Dollars rewaru is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills for constipation.?Adv. July 2-lmo. I i Everyone Should Drink Hot Water j in the Morning IWash away all the stomach, liver, and bowel poisons before breakfast m r> 1 1 A. 1M Aiif lO ieei your u?bl uay 111 ituu uo; vui, to feel clean Inside; no sour bile to coat your tongue and sicken your breath or aull your bead; no constipation, bilious attacks, sick headache, colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid stomach, you must bathe on the inside like you bathe outside. This is vastly more important, because the skin pores do not absorb Impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do, says a wellknown physician To keep these (poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast each day, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will cleanse, purify and freshen the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food Into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from your pharmacist. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your system of these vile poisons and toxins; also to prevent their e formation. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and , muscles became saturated with an accumulation of body poisons, begin this treatment and above all, keep It up! As soap and hot water act on the skin, > cleansing, sweetening and purifying, so limestone phosphate and hot water before breakfast, act on the stomach liver, kidneys and bowels. HAVE DARK HAIR AND LOOK YOUNG Nobody can%Tell when yoi , .Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. ? '"V 1 A . Grandmother kept her hair beautlfullv darkened, Klossv and attractive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, Improved by the addition of other Ingredients, all ready to use, at very little cost. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to *he hair. > A well-known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied? it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, it Is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and beautiful. This preparation is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not Intended for the cure, mitigation or pre-' vention of disease. TO A MOTHER. (Youth's Companion.) It is hard, perhaps impossible, to say anything that will help you to forget your loss or that can dull the sense of emptiness in your heart for the boy who is gone. That consolation it is beyond the power of words to bestow, but it will come to you of itself, unsought and unexpected ?a light from the glory of the great cause that has taken him. You are his mother, and therefore have had a mother's dreams for your son. You taught him to be honest?with himself as with others. You set his feet in the difficult ath of courage and helped him to walk in it. You encouraged him to think | little of himself, but much of others j and to hate injustice and cruelty;; and you made him see that for us; Americans the love of country is; not love for a mere set of geogra-i phical boundaries or a political sys-j tem, !<ut for a body of moral prin-t ciples, a creed of justice and liberty, < As the years have passed you had) the supreme happiness?the deepest j and most enduring satisfaction that:' life affords?of seeing your aspira-|' tions take form and express them- < selves in your son's character, andii of knowing that it is your dreams [ and your guidance and teaching that ! have made him what he is. When I the call came he heard it and was ] ready. He went in the purity of i iffia M M his youth, with his visions all undimmed and his heart on fire with noble passion. So, for you, he will always remain. < It is your high privilege?and in the years to come it will be your proud comfort?to remember that, having made him worthy, you also gave him the great opportunity that he took so gladly, and by your sacrifice set the seal of success on both your lives. Your reward and your peace are the assurance in your heart that now and forever " "it is well with the child." Mill ACHING_KIDNEYS| We eat too much meat, which nlngiB Kidneys, then Back hurts and H Bladder bothers yon. H Most folks forget that the Mdney^B like the bowels, get sluggish and clogge^H and need & flushing occasionally, alse have baokache ana dull misery in thflH kidney region, severe headaches, rbenflK matic twinges, torpid liver, acid stom&ci^B eleepleaeneee and all sorts of bUdder dit^H You simply must keep your kidneyBB active and clean, and the moment yo^H feel an ache or pain in the kidne^H region, get about four ounces of JaM| . M ? amm maaiI - J rrf nnn Dtllttt ilUlU OUjr kwu uau^ take a tables poonful in a glass of wat^H before breakfast for a few days arJH your kidneys will then act line. ThM famous salts is made from the acid <fl| grapes and lemon juice, combined wil^D lithia, and is harmless to flush cloggAE kidneys and stimulate them to norm^HB activity. It also neutralizes the aciJ^H fa the urine eo it no longer irritatcHn thus ending bladder disorders. RSfl Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensiv^H makes a delightful effervescent lithiHfl water drink which everybody should ta^H aovr and then to keep their kidneys clesHH thus avoiding fierioua complications. JB| A well-known local druggist says bells lots of Jad Baits *> folks who belie^H In overcoming kidney trouble wfcils it^H only trouble.- M WILL NOT RECOGNIZE FARCIAL TREATS Kerensky Declare* Russian Peo^^fl Not Bound by Pact Made at^H Bresl-LitoTsk. 1 London, June 28.?"I bear iHH ness that the Russian people ne^Hj will recognize the Brest-LitoBH treaty, which hurled Russia into ahvss of annihilation." said Ale^^^H der F. Kerensky, former premiei^M| Ruissia, in an address at the 1^R| conference today. 9EH Mr. Ketensky said that Russia bending under German insults HH bleeding at every pore, but still^H? posed the enemy invasion. ^BS An important assemblage of sian diplomats will meet M. Kei^^M ky in Paris. A. P. Iswolsky, the mer Russian foreign minister now head of the league of Rus^HH faithful to their country and heB|H lies, and the ambassadors of HH Kerensky administration at Rome and Madrid will attend. The labor congress capitulateHMH M. Kerensky when he appearecfl^B the^ platform at the close of a^H^P afternoon session during which siderable anti-Kerensky sentiHQj had been vociferously in evid^KH With his appearance the oppoiHnH to him vanished and before h^^^H finished his speech he receiv^MXj great ovation. Finally he ha^^^H leave the hall by a side door i^^Hl der to escape the crowd of besi^^^H who were clamoring for his HH| graph or a handshake. The great "central hall" seats 3,000 persons and is the quarters of the British Met^^HH organizations, was packed to cation and thousands of p^H|Hj were turned away. FRENCH HONOR DEAD SHR AMERICAN SOlHD Washington, June 29?The distinguished service cross ha^JSHj awarded to Private Joseph field artillery, deceased, for gH^B| ry, General Pershing announcfl^HB his communique dated June made public by the War Depa|HHB yesterday afternoon. Leitvan'?^Hfl Iant action occurred at Coull^^D^H EVans* a A ni*il 97 roViavi nn^ bombardment, he voluntarily to the assistance of other who had been buried in a duJBflH enemy shell fire, and was kille^^^^HS engaged in this heroic action.^hMH In section A, General said that "aside from the repHH^B hostile parties, which attemptMHHEJ raid our position in the Vosge^^^^H is nothing to report." 19HBb B?