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i" WANTS 1 ? i FbR SALE :?Now is a goo4 time to I plant your fall garden. I have nice strong Georgia Cabbage Collard plants. They grow loose white heads like cabbage. Will grow on 1 I any good land. Price per 100, 35 s cts up to 1,000, by parcel post or express, ,$2.25 per. 1,000. R. P. ^ f VERMILLION, Hodges, S. C. 8-2-2t. 1 LOST:?Near Abbeville, about ten f f days ago, one auto dealers license ' number plate. If found please ' t fnrnroTH tr? StnH<?haker Motor Cor- ^ f t | poration, Atlanta, Ga. 8-2-lt. ! : ] MULES WANTED:?For the Brit- { ish Army, 8-12 year^old. Willbe 1 at J. S. Stark's Stables Saturday, ( August 3rd. JOHN DAVIS. ] 7-30-2t. ] < i I WANTED:?Experienced 1 clothing * and shoe salesman. State salary. * MRS. SARAH WEINRAUB, 1 8-2-lt. Calhoun Falls, S. C. ? ( i FOR SALE:?Home ground velvet ] flrioct crnnrincr fnod for 1 UCOilO; UUVOV gav ?> pigs and cattle. Also a good stock < seed peas at lowest market price ] in South Carolina. ^ 7-9-tf. P. ROSENBERG. , i L. NELSON, Abbeville, S. C. , Wanted Wanted j Junk of all kind , Rags, : Rubber, Bags j j ' and Iron. j j 5-7-tf. ( 666 cure* Headache*, Biliouanesa, ' < Loss of Appetite, foul breath, or T ] f that tired aching feeling due to Ma laria or Colds. .. " < . K remove* uic tau*v> i 7-16-lt. ea. wk? 10 wks. i ?^_______ 1 CANDIDATES j' ' * ! FOR SENATE. [ I i ' * J We are authorised to an ounce ( J. HOWARD MOORE, Esq., as a ^ j candidate for the State Senate from | Abbeville County, subject to the , I roles of the Democratic primary. : S. C. AVIATOR IN THRILLING BATTLE ON WESTERN FRONT , J With the American Army at the Marne, July 28.?Lieutenant Alex- ' ander McLanahan, of Philadelphia, and Lieutenant Edward Buford, of 1 < Nashville, Tenn., engaged two German double-seaters over Fere-enTardenois this evening and one of ! the German machines is believed to ' have been shot down. Lieutenant William P. Erwin, pilot, and Lieutenant Byrne Boucom, i ' - of Milford, Texas, an observer, had i an exciting experience while on an i I observation trip. They were attack- i ed by seventeen German fighting i planes and their machine was riddled with bullets but both escaped. On his first flight, Friday, Erwin's observer was shot dead in mid-air , by a German piloting a captured air , v plane. , Lieutenant James MeEsner is officially credited with bringing down fouj; Germans. His fifth victory was shared with Robert Z. Cates, of / .' Spartanbui?, ;S. and' Hamilton Coolidge, of Boston* all three participating in the fight. v Lieutenant Douglass Campbell, of California, ;who is officially credited with downing seven German planes, is going to. the United States with T 11 _ A O i--.? / uaptain w alter Lioveii, 01 du?vuh, to organize training, schools to fit pilots for the actual front,# so they j will be ready to begin work when they reach France. , "Ace" Eddie) Rickenbacker, of i Columbus, Ohio, has rejoined his . squadron. 300 U. S. SOLDIERS ENROUTE -x TO FRONT BAPTIZED IN MARNE| f ' * n With the American Army at the Marne, July 29.?While a German airplane buzzed overhead' and the big guns near by were throwing . over shells, 300 American soldiers, en route to the fighting front., were hnntizeH in the Marne River in a . [ 7 single batch by a Baptist chaplain. The weather was hot and afterward the do,ughboys enjoyed a swi.n. A score of soldiers, who h id atte^ipte i. to. 'T id"" the men, vere sj ^tirfed that 'they got baptize i them: selves.' --v. < -*1 "t- ; - . . '< : y; ' ' Vc- V 'v\ ... - . V . ABBEVILLE COUNTY S. S. ASSOCIATION CLOSES Mr. C. D. Brown Was Elected President For the Year. ' V \ 1 The Abbeville County Interdenominational Sunday School Associit'on/came to a close Sunday afternoon, after two days of sessions in ;he Baptist Church. The attendance was fairly good, considering recent rains and the conditional the roads Saturday morning was largely *iven over to business, brief reports seing read by the officers, to wit: J. M. Nickles, County President'; ,C. E-. Williamson, County SecretaryTreasurer; and Miss Allie May Power, Elementary Superintendent. 3apt. R. B. Cheatham, Adult Superntendent, could not-attend because )f military duties. Rev. H. Waddell Pratt led the devotional exercises. Vlr. R. D. Webb of Spartanburg, State General Secretary, and Miss 3ora Holland, of Spartanburg, Ofice Secretary, delivered the principal addresses. The devotional exercises in the ivening were conducted by Rev. J. L. Daniel. Because of the small at:endance, all of the scheduled addresses except "Our Second Line of Defense" by Miss Cora Holland, jrora nosfrnoned until the following: iay. The devotional exercises Sunday morning were led by Dr. Geo. W. Swope. "Drifting Over Life's Sea" jvas rendered as a sopfano and baritone duet by Miss Fannie Stark and Mr. Leslie Swope. A splendid adiress on the adult bible class was delivered by the Hon. C. C. Featherstone of Greenwood. He urged the making of the world safe for Derrio:racy "by Christianizing Democra:y". Talks were also 'made by Miss Holland and Mr. Webb. * Mr. Joel S. Morse led the devotional exercises at the final session Sunday afternoon. After several addresses of interest, the officers strew* elected for the ensuing year. Mr. C. D. Brown was chosen Preaii J T "M* xt;?VUq 1112111 IU 5UCCCCU xrxx* *J. AU. Mr. J. R. Magee Was elefcted VicePresident. The office of SecretaryTreasurer wafc turned .over to Mr. W. L. Peebles and Miss Louise Brown vwas made assistant Secretary The Superintendents elected were: Miss Allift JVI^y Ppwer, , Elementary Superintendent; Miss Birch Clinkjcales,. Teen-^ge ' Superintendent; Sheriff R. M. Burts, (Adult Superintendent; Dr Geo. W. Swope, Administrative Superintendent. The following district presidents were also chosen: Prof. .E. L. Long, Due West; l\lr. Eugene Patterson, Antreville; and Mr. J. F. Edmunds, Abbeville. V COLD SPRING NEWS. Cold Springs, July ?1.?Mr. and Mrs. A. B." Newell spertt Wednesday of last week with Mrs. F. E. Hager and family. Miss Ruby Uldrick spent the week end with Miss Ruth Uldrick. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Kay and two children spent last Wednesday with Mr. and -Mrs. R. S. Culbreath. Mrs. Mattie Bowen is spending this week with her daughters, Mrs, T. F. and B. A. Uldrick. TWi?s: Jane Mr. Combs returned home last week after spending several months with her daughter, Mrs Press Smith of Donalds. Miss Dessie King is spending this week in Due West the guest of Miss Selma Watt. - Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hagen, Mr and Mrs. C. C. and children spenl Sunday at Mr B. A. Uldrick's. Mr. and' Mrs. Floyd Uldrick spenl Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. P McMahan. Mr: James Bowen spent a fev days last week with Mr. Marvir King;' ' : i Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as thej cannot reach the seat of the disease 'Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional conditions, anc in order to cure it you must take ar internal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken Internally and acts thru the blood on the mucoais surfaces of the sy&tem. Hall's Catarrh Medicine was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years. It is composed Of some' of the best tonics known combined with some of the best bloc purifiers. The perfect combination c the ingredients la Hall's Catarrh Modi cine is what produces such wondert'u. results in catarrhal conditions. Send foi testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY ft tO., Props., Toledo, O All Druggists, 75c. . > Hall's Family Pills for constipation. SUFFRAGE HANGS ON HIM. Senator Benet's Vote Expected To ' Decide Queation?Is Blease's ? ! .Worse Enemy. (The Sun, Baltimore, July 22.) ; Washington, July 21.?Hopes of the advocates of the Federal amendr i T . 7 '< rtient "for woman suffrage in the Senate will, in all probability, be realized or will die with the decision of Senator Christie Benet, of i South Carolina, who was appointed to fill the state vacant by Senator Benjamin R. Tillman. Senator Benet has /ot declared his position on the suffrage question, .and has been in several conferences with Presidnt Wilson, and the suffrage advocates are hopeful that the Federal amendment was the topic of these confernces. Senator Benet's vote for the amendment, it is declared, will give the Federal amendment its necessary two-thirds majority. His vote against it, it is asserted, will kill it if the ballot is taken as the Senate now stands. The South Carolinian holds two distinctions. He is the "baby" of the Senate, being only 39 .yefers old. I He is also the leading antagonist in South Carolina to Cole Blease and has led the many fights that South Carolina has waged to blot out Bleaseism. And in the past few am/1 Viifi onfi /Rlnoofl years DCllCb OUU 1110 U11 Ui-x/iVMiJV forces have been coming out on top. It was more on account of his reputation from one end of South Carolina to the other for fighting Bleaseism that Governor Manning picked him to take the place of Tillman and occupy the seat once held by the brilliant Hampton. Known To aBltimoseana. Senatoe Benet is known to many Baltimore people through his brother. Hugh Benet, one of the righthand men of" Bartlett-Hayward Compa?iy, the big munition manufacturers. Hugh Benet is an engineer.He is al*j *hell expert and is only j 25 years old. When this country en* terii the ;war Hugh Benet started to en'ist, but was prevailed upon' by , the Bartlett-Hayward people to , remain in his present job, where; lie was told he could be of vastly more service to his country than being,one in a trillion units in Prance. - The Bartlett^Hayward people later had , the War Department to exempt Mr. . Benet from the draft on account of . his skill as an engineer and shell . expert. Another brother, Dr. George j Benet, of Boston, is now in Europe ( with the American Medical Corps. , Senator Benet's enlistment as a . soldier was only blocked by Gover. nor Manning's appointment of him as the successor of Tillman. He had come to Washington, preparing to . enlist in the tank service when he > received word that he had been nam ed to the Senate. When his appoint> mnt was announced, the leading edi torial writer of South Carolina referred to him as possessing "a soldier's heart." Thorn In Bleue'i Side. 1 Senator Benet, young as he is, has been the thorn in the flesh of : Cole Blease. He had charge of the first campaign against Blease tor /?/v?rawnAi* OVt/4 Irtof if Utlf Tlftt ' gUT^lllVl C?<iu 4V0V *vy IJMV Vk.v. t give up. He took charge of Gov. Manning's first campaign and won , it. He against directed the fight against Blease two years ago and beat him out. The young South I Carolinian is now on the firing lirie, j working day and night to keep Cole Bleaae out of the United States Senate. } Senator Benet is a candidate for j the short term. N. B. Dial, of Laurens, a brilliant South Carolina lawyer, is the candidate for the long I term, upon whom the anti-Blease forces have concentrated since death I removed Senator Tillman from the j race. Under the South Carolina law ! a Governor can only appoint a Senary tor for a period of six months, and , J Senator Benet's term expires two j months before March 4 next. The ! primary and election are to name a man for this two months. Former ' Attorney-General Peeples is oppos^ ing Senator Benet. | ' ( Senator Benet springs from a [ I prominent South Carolina family. i His father was Judge W. C. Benet i and he was a grandson of General McGowan. He has always stood for clean politics in his State, and has a large following. He stands over six feet tall, is strikingly handsome and is one of the most noted athletes of the University of Virginia. He is |I Hill?III III 11 MAI I,' / . ( j '* ' V |wn i + V < 1 Are sti! A . X . , I * "I " .* V.: : Haddo " V " ' one of the few ajumni of Virginia's ? alma mater who returned every year 1 to help coach her football team. I Senator Benet married Miss Alice ? Haskell, of Columbia, and has two children. He is a member of the s law firm of Benet, Shand & McGow- t an. The only other public offices c held by him were prosecuting at- I torney and counsel for the commis- t sion form of Government of Colum- 1 Ma: . . ' I i . ? FATE U-BOAT TRAPPED ON ? THE BOTTOM OF SEA I 1 Discovered by Airplane and Held in ' Place by Trawler* Until Ezploa( ion* Destroy Craft Without | Trace. ' 1 c 1 ' London, July 30.?A sea port , ' which has arisen out of the war? ( hunting German submarines by airship?is described in The Times. The ^ writer's story concludes with telling ^ how the crew of the U-boat appar- c ently preferred death to being captured. One of the crew of an airship spotted a submarine lying on the Ka4 i\f tVio nnonn in -fnirlv cViallrtW water. "The wireless sparked," reads the ^ account in The Times, "and soon j away on the horizon there appeared a little destroyer, followed far astern ,by four squat trawlers, all racing * toward the spot above which the airship cruised around. "The destroyer came up first, of . course, and it was not long before, i guided by wireless instructions, her guns were trained in readiness to ' greet the unsuspecting U-boat should it bob to the surface. It seemed ' ages to the impatient. crew before i the trawlers arrived, but things mov- I j ed rapidly once they were at the J scene of action, for they knew their l job of old. I "Working in pairs they approachi ed their victim from opposing direc tions, steaming toward each other. ' Between, each pair a strong "sweep" i :! was Stretched an dalloWed to hang ? in a huge loop that it might traverse t j the seabed. The vessels met and i i' crossed e$ch other's tracks immedi- t tVELi ALDE t t i '' ' i- tY . TKT _ -^111 [IT I vOC : i " "*? ? II to be fo : :r % our stock. . ' t - - * . :fr n-Wik itely above the doomed praft. Th sweeps', of either pair engagd th J-boat fore and. aft simultaneousl tnd held her in a gigantic cradle.; "Thus far the German boat ha ihown no signs of alarm althoug ;hose with her must have heard th :hurning of the trawlers' screw 'vTow she suddenly seemed to awak ;o the menace that threatened her. Vh* tfAaa An f/% A AnrtwiVvA ??v Ht wvis guvtj va vvf ucisvitvc tu fate of the submarine. "She wrif fled and squirmed about in a franti mdeavor to escape but it was us< ess. Not a loophole was there t )e found, and at length, realizin ;he helplessness at her plight, sb leased to struggle. This fact w? iuly wirelessed by those on boar ;he airship to the destroyer belov rrapped securely, the enemy vessi :ould still rise to the surface di ihe so desire, and, to give her a >pportunity to do so, the Britis :raft now waited for several mil ites. She preferred to lie still; an io, at a flagged signal from the d< itroyer, the' starboard foremos ;rawler and the port aft one attacl ;d a tin of high explosives to eac )f the 'cradle wires' and allowed 1 ;o slide downwards until it reste lpon the U-boat's hull. Then thos n the airship flagged a signal an lpon the two trawlers two firin ceys were pressed. "Followed then the uprising of jeyser of water, and when th xoubled ocean became calm, of th mbmarine there was no trace othe ;han an extensive patch of oil floai ng upon the surface of the sea." rOCH TO WIN WAR AT SMALLEST COST OF AMERICAN LIF. 3olicy of Caution Justified by Gei man Retreat?Kaiser Withholds Terrible News From People at Home. New York, July 29?General Foe s continuing his strategic pressu igainst the Aisne-Ourcq salient wit he same firm refusal to be tempte nto a general engagement, that ha narked his course since the German DUS | $ I -. Mil ; i'?t 3H iar:1;':1 % ' 1SB H IV 91 * und in 1 HI />'i\ onCo.| HN e started to retreat from the MaH H e _ Full justification for this poliH^H m y caution has been provided by newed German retreat durmg^^^l m , last forty-eight hours. General e! is fighting with brain power a^HB 3. as with man power. This cotHBHH e tion does not provide the " spectacular results that Lude^^^H e . Has accomplished by the use lc power alone; but it will win tl^HIM 3- with a minimum loss of lives. g -It is not necessary for the^aHH ie purpose to throw away lives is thousands in order-to gain ttflSHH d victory a little more quickly^HBB allies' mopey can hold out si ever extent is necessary to d lives of the allied troops. n the principle on which' Gener^^^^H h is working. The depressing 1_ upon German morale of d denburg's retreat froni theH^HH - will be the same regardless 'HbD9| >t method by which it has been 1_ about. h There is encouraging H that the German war lords a^MflHfl d frightened at the prospect o^H^^Hj ;e to tell the German people d happened north of the S the first time since the war^^E^^H the German official commun^HH^H a deliberately lying and cam<flH^H| e The Germans at home hav^^^HH^HI e been informed that Luden^H^^^H T had to give up his entire ho^^^HH t_ Mame and is headed back^H^^^H the Vesle and the Aisne. vious German defeats the at Berlin has been frank purpose of impressing on f the belief that German m^^RflGflf , sufficiently unbending to r- bad news. This condition HHHH| exists. The kaiser dare nCH^MH Uio A rt4- /\iif?J 1UO piVOVliU UWJLUV breaking the news slowly^HHHjH orously. Well he might, HHHB 'ynasty is in grave dangeHBBEHH h found out. After Verdun, . '? h We always like those d us; we do not always s whom we admire.?La cauld. MM