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Xocal j; flewe |j \ ' ^= j c : personals ; |J [ , v- =*!;, Misses Sarah and Alberta Clink- * '>* % j: scales spent the Fourth in Atlanta, i ' ' ! 'V Master Dick Edwards returned to , i j . C his home in Augusta Tuesday. I < .... 7 Mr. and Mrs. John D. Cade of 1 Mt. Carmel, was in town Wednesday !%' < ? Mrs. A. W. Clark and Miss Lilly Clark spent the Fourth in Monroe, * N. C., with Mrs. Fairly Tiddy. F Miss Annie Hill, who has been 8 teaching in the Greenville schools, B - is at home for the summer. I Mrs. Maggie Pennal and children y B are spending their vacation with a fig relatives in Sharon. ? TlatTio ITa-r-r wont rtvpr trt TTmoU I "Wednesday and will visit his aunt, H Mrs. Estes, for sometime. ' Miss Gladys Wilson of Watts, is 9 the attractive guest of Miss Eva - Reames. H Misses Eva Reames and Gladys m Wilson are spending the week-end ^ Si in Atlanta cm a pleasure trip. C Miss Lou Hillhouse of Anderson, p KB is in the city on a visit to Mrs. H. J H. A. Benton. t Miss Jennie Roseborough is here t Kj from York for a short visit to Dr. Hi and Mrs. J. E. Pressly. Td Mr I Mr. ana Mrs. K. 'S. Owens came; ' tip from the bustling city of McCor- c fl mlck Wednesday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. W. H. White. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hipp and lit-J L. "tie Miss "Elizabeth, went over to t j Clinton Wednesday night to see rel-' e I atives. j t I Is j Miss Victoria Howie left Wednes- a day for Monroe, where she will visit p a for some time with Miss Sarah Mc- e I- Neilly. r E. R. Wardlaw, Eugene Gary, f I Hunter Link and Frank Wardlaw c I left Monday for Columbia Univer-; t I sity for training. E. R. Wardlaw! } I was in charge. j 5 S Miss Janie Vance Bowie and Missjp ?n, a-u:_ 1.1 |i jjii^aucui vjtuiiuicu icii uub weeh; g s for camp "As You Like It," a de- r j Xi lightful place in North Carolina for r young girls to spend the sumrrer. j. L1 e "Buster' and Tom Howie have i t been in Atlanta for several days of j j this week. They visited their aunt, j r I took a drink at all the soda foun-j j tains in town and called on Mayor j r I Candler and gave him some points -y l io.oh how to run a town. ! . (9* ' I Mrs. James A. Hill and little Miss! a I Judith Hill have returned home af-1 , Iter a visit of two weeks to Mr. and't Mrs. Henry DuPre at Chattanooga.! ^ They saw all the sights of the big i ^ military encampment and the many \ point? of interest nearby. y . i ? Mrs. Statit Bradley Wideman is' ' 9 I S in the city for a visit to her sister,; Mrs. J. C. Klugh.' Mrs. Wideman c attended the Graded school at Ab? '13 beville when a girl, and has many, * h- friends who are glad to have her j v . |i r- come again. p*>- IF I i f Major F. W- R- Nance celebrated1 I his 84th birthday last Saturday. All j1 I the children and grandchildren were j * Mffl present and enjoyed a picnic dinner,!" |?91 'each bringing a basket. i ANOTHER CZAR FOR RUSSIA i jj^H Amsterdam, July 3.?Grand Duke Michacl Alexandrovitch, bro- t ther of the former emperor Nicho- \ BBHB9 las, has been proclaimed czar of t Russia, according to the Ukrainian! HR| Telegraph Bureau of Kiev. He is i BH9 marching with the Czecho-Slavs' c against Moscow. Grand Duke Michael, after the abdication of em- [) ^^^^Hpcror Nicholas, was named regent. GOOD PRINTING. Mr. W. E. Lomax, of Atlanta, has :ome to Abbeville and connected limself with the mechanical force, if The Press and Banner. Mr. Lonax is a printer of wide experience, 'or more than six years he was the oreman of the Index Printing Com)any, of Atlanta, a concern which loes a large job printing business, le is, therefore, competent to do ill kinds of job printing. On account of the scarcity of ompetent labor The Press and Banler has been at times behind withj ts work in this department, butj rith the help of Mr. Lomax .we hope j n the future to give the people the, iest printing to be had, and to give t to them promptly. RED CROSS WAR DUES. Subscribers to the Red Cross War 'und are reminded that the first payments are now due. MISS ALLEN MARRIED. The friends of Miss Etta Allen Till be interested in the following nouncement which has come to us: Mr. and Mrs. Frederick B. Allen nnounce the marriage of their daughter Etta Louise - to Mr. Raymond Montgomery Burke Thursday the' twenty-seventh of June nineteen hundred and eighteen Woodbury, New Jersey. Mrs. Burke was one of the fourth jade teachers at the Abbeville Jraded School las tyear. She was uccessful in every way, and her upils regretted to see her leave Abbeville, as did all the patrons of, he schools. All, however, join inj rishing for her a long life filled with j he best .there is in life. Mr. Burke is in the shipbuilding! business, and is a man of promise j n his section. ITATEMENTS OF COOPER, McLAURIN, BLEASE AND AULL (Continued from Page 4.) hen has the idea of running for gov rnor. Later he concludes he can >eat both Tillman and Blease, andj ets about feeling his way towards J m entrance into the senatorial cam-! >aign. Before the lists close, how-' iver, he drops back into the guber-l latorial fight, and now in his latest) >olitical Address, if anybody can| igure out what he is driving at, they an do more than I can. I happen o recall that in the campaign ofj .914 he sent Beard around the Jtate, in the interest of Manning, elling the people that Cooper had iromised if elected to make me his ecretary, and that would simply nean a continuation of the Blease egime, when he has admitted to me hat he had no idea that Cooper had ver made any such promise, but hat he was doing it for political ef-j ect to secure the election of Man-; ling. As to Mr. McLaurin's reference to i ny condition, there is also no truth n that. I was taken by him into thei i iffice of Capers in Washington; andj hey took me up on the mountain,; .nd showed me all the valleys and ertile lands below, and told me' ! hey could be mine; but the old or-j ler of things down here in South' Carolina was at no time obscured inj ay vision; and I came on back home evered my connection with the State warehouse system and with senator McLaurin, and have had no onnection with either since. I have nothing to do with Senator .IcLaurin's campaign for governor, ind have no desire to meddle with t; I have nothing to do with his political record, and no desire to reer to it; but while he is making this mcalled for and untrue attack on ne, he might tell the people of the State if he did not withdraw his coton from the State warehouse sys-| em as soon as his connection with' t was severed, and if he has had my cotton in it since. I note the upbuilding: of the sys;em is one of the- three reasons vhich he says induced him to make he race for governor. I regret that the matter has come ;p in this shape, but I feel that I >we it to myself to mak? clear ex-j tctly any connection I may have lad with the things to whcih he re"ers. JOHN K. AULL. Littleton College Has just closed one of the most successful years in its history. The 37th annual session will begin Sept. 25th. Write for new illustrated catalogue, also and quickly for particulars concerning our special offer to a few girls who cannot pay our catalogue rate. Address J. M. Rhodes, Littleton, N. C. 6-11-Oct. 1 WHEN YOU WAKE | UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Wash the poisons and toxins from system before putting more. food into stomach. Says Inside-bathing makes anyone look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. Wash yourself on the Inside before breakfast like you do on the outside This is vastly more Important because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, causing illness. While the bowel pores 4a. For every ounce Of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly ait ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which are absorbed or sucked into the blood stream, through the lymph ducts which should suck only nourishment to sustain the body. A splendid health measure is to drink, before breakfast each day, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in It, which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and, freshening the entire alimentary canal befor putting more food into the stomach. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate costs but very little at the drug store but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside-bathlnz. Men ana women who are accustomed to wake up with a dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nastybreath, sallow complexion, others who have bilious attacks, acid stomach or constipation are assured of pronounced improvement in both health fcnd appearance shortly. State of Ohio. City ot Toledo, Lucas County, es. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County ar.d State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON. (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts tlirouph the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces ? ihc System, tiend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY ? CO., Toledo. O. Sold by all druettrisrs. T^r. Hall's Family Pills U v constipation. HI ItiS MEAT IIM HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flash Kidneyi if Bladder bothers you?Drink / lots of water. Eating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known authority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of T-J O.U- ? LFUU. ouits IIUIIJ <xuy ^uuu pntii , take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithiawater drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding 6erious kidney disease. 4 TOiiSATWssmittS !5SU?D ITT "HE . UNITED STATES ioOVT-alKALENT a> Buy Them And Help Win The War FOE SALE EVERYWHERE Mli . , ; v , V ; k. k&UL'.&L -zii-.isb* ADDITIONAL MEMBERS OF THE LIMIT CLUB The following named are to be ' added to the Limit Club in the W. S. S. campaign just closed: | W. R. Dunn, Donalds. | J. J. Dunn, Donalds, j J. R. Dunn, Donalds. Mrs. Eugenia N. Young, Lowndesville. I ____________________ I There is more Catarrh in this sec-i tion of the country than all other j diseases put together, and for years' it was supposed to be incurable. I Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure J with local treatment, pronounced it! incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constituional conditions and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine, manufac.fcactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred 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. v July 2-lmo. I .... L" n i rr Jt&M Hot kitcii (A I 3,000,000 01 J and escaj pan, soot venience the touch ?that tur that appli utensil?tl fuel?that ! Why don' Made in cabinet to STAND, Wafhington, C Norfolk, Va. 1 3NE\ ' i Mrs. Sudie M. Clinkscales, Lowndesville. Ezekiel Clinkscales, Lowndesville. Jas. F. Clinkscales, Abbeville. J. M. Miller, Abbeville Calhoun Mills, Calhoun Falls. Mr. D. Poliakoff, Abbeville, says that his name was added to the forme list by a misunderstanding, and should be withdrawn. Mr. Poliakoff is a patriotic subscriber, but does not feel able at this time to go "the limit." F. E. Harrison, Co. Chmn. SOME SHIP BUILDERS TO BE CALLED TO FIGHT Philadelphia, July 3.?New draft j regulations which take from the ex-: empt classifications thousands of men employed in' ship yards are being prepared iat Washington, according to Lieut. Col. J. S. EasbySmuth, representative of Provost Marshal Crowder who is in this city investigating selective draft condi tions. me new regulations, it is said, are designed to place in military service men who are now exempt simply because they are. working in ship yards and whose places can be taken by men in other deferred classes under the "work or fight" order. Actual ship builders and technical men will not be affected by the new rules. g^Made By first, last and always to KEEP-KOOL Clothe port of our country's tra threaten, but is actually was it so urgent as now wear "MADE IN U. S. J "MADE IN U. S. A.w Cl< . /. ~4 . suggestive KEEP-KOC satisfactory in point of s THE HOUSE 01 THE SNELLENBURG C Philad< PARKER k in a Cool Kitchi broiling, baking, toasting, boilir lg?elaborate or simple cookingperfectly with a New Perfectioi ove. And you will not broil en. American women use the New Perfe >e the daily drudgery of coal hod an< and kindling. They have gas stove at kerosene cost?a stove that ligl of a match?can be regulated accui ns all its fuel into usable, odorless H ies all the heat directly to the coc riat uses an inexpensive, always avai saves coal for the nation. t you cook in a cool kitchen? 1-2-3-4 burner sizes, with or wit p and oven. \RD OIL CO. (NEW JERS Baltimore, Md. C. Richmond, Va. Charleston. ^ Charlotte, N. C. Char'eston, i N PERFECT! C 31L CCOk STOVES / \ - ^ V COLD SPRING NEWS. Vp 'p Cold Springs, July 3.?Mr. Lewrence Hagan of near Due West? $ spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. Roy McCombs. "t.9 Miss Ruth Uldrick spent a tern\\rjal days of last week with Mr. T F? -w|l Uldrick and family. Messrs. Horace and Marion Kn* m spent Saturday night with Means. Fred and Frank Uldrick. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hagen dined at Mr. R. S. Uldrick's Sunday. Miss Bessie Winn spent a fern :1 days last week with Mrs. T. M. &iyjj Cochran. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Newell ant ,-rjJ son, Westfield, and Mr. and Mrs. CLv^Jji C. Kay and children spent Saturday ^^fl in Belton. with Mr. Henry McGee. They all motored to Greenville tnl '.r-'M reported a fine time. Miss Dessie King spent last wtdk: ... in Abbeville the guest of Miss iiaiiwiu. ^ t ? Mr. Frank Reagen and mother Magazine street, moved to Haarieli.rS^ N. C., last Tuesday. Mr. Reagen w?t lineman for the Seaboard at Abbe ville, and goes to a larger field. Chas. Bruce and family will occupy the house vacated by Mr. Reagest inU3A:[ giving your preference s you rally to the tupde war?which doesn't '-??3 ' being waged. Never for every American to V." Clothes?and of all rthes, that bearing the y' >L label is the most tyle, comfort and price. F KEEP-KOOL P LOTHING COMPANY f|| 8c REESE en - M tg or #' v| -can 1 Oil ina 1 "n-ction 1 ash ! con- . . ?; its at ately eat? j )king | lable Ask your dealer about | the New Perfection Kerosene Water Heater. Use Aladdin Security Oil?Always available, hout inexpensive. EY) IaladbinI [SEMTOrj fi J i> * -v > 11A iii^?a?