? L>LV'X* A "BAYER CROSS" !' ON ASPIRIN I! A A olr- ^Ar ^laninna /VlW Am tl? 82 ACRE TRACT OF LAND? ' IV - M ?LL..^1U iH' 4 nuies soutu ox nwoiuc. I ^ Tenant house, barn, 8 or 10 ^ acres of fine branch bottoms, 35 acres in cultivation, bal- A* ance in woods both pine and {** In ash. Rented for this year. Near school house. ?. Price per acre $20.00 UP LOT?on South side of town, 150x150 feet. Price, $150.00 156 ACRE TRACT?Located 4 1 miles Southeast of Abbeville S. C. Six room dwelling, 3- j room tenant house, barn. I&ol About 2-horse farm rented * lllu for this year. Good bottom land, plenty ashe wood and |U< ^ timber. Price $4,400 rlci S TWO STORY DWELLING?6- to ' A1 AA^WIA K/vlifa ftn/t ' ^ lUUUlf uail) ClCObitv ngiibg UMVI i Tnil sewerage, 5 minutes walk j bRC from square. Bargain at $1,250.00 I 9er ! rr? 166 ACRES?6 miles from Ab- i beville. Good dwelling, barn tenant house, located in Leb- a# anon section, close to school ey. and ciiurch. j l?aj Price per aere $30.00 11 1 ! of ' . I 5-ROOM DWELLING? On bo3 South Main Street, at Cotton wo Mill. Price, $1,100.00 an( i ! hoi 36 ACRE?Tract of land, 3 1-2 for miles from Hodges, 8 miles : era from Abbeville, good dwell- ] e(*_ J ing, barn and outhouses. ! haJ Price, $1,650,00 i prc 9ai . ( of g01 iriiiniLj'N-iiri.i* tha vHm'BBilijjfiitl'li ioo I j ||;| ^ VI fll I 3j| Un ilVPMVW^ I pr( Ln^Krs&xHaaBmnJ The New F DON'T LET HIM LURE AWAY YC You remember how the Pied Piper i his pipe and lured the children away in ore trvino- tn inrliiffi nennlp tn sell amps. They are making "golden" pre rns which they say will make you rl >n't let the -Pied Pipers make a laug* ? E TELLS WHAT KE . ' THINKS OF AMERICA rlan 8ays Now l? Time For Every Man To Prove Patriotism?Answer Found in War Savings - -8tamps. [t eometimes. takes the new-comer 1 appreciate Amerioa. The native- ] rn is often too close to the situa- 1 n to realize what this country 1 lans to the world today. He is used . all that it offers, taking it as a mat- 1 of course, and frequently loses the 1 ion in sordid detail;, while the < ir-comer?but listen to what one of ! >m had to say. ^ I ie la George E. Rihbany of the* 1 9 class of the Boston High School < Commerce and he came to this ] intry from his native land, Syria, en he wag 10 years old. In a four- < iute speech on the value of War 1 rings Stamps, given at the school j ently, he said In closing: f Hate Is not characteristic of the 1 erican people, but the Germans c ght us unwillingly how To hate c m. Now it Is a sin not to hate the 1 rit the Hun showed and not to abol- t It from the face of the earth. Of > latter we are positively sure, be- c se the American passion for Jus- e 1 Is a hundred times stronger than 1 1 the German passion for conquest. I ???! snUrtninill th? I ft* ft of bfl- > ting an orator and I am lurt that j ick oratorical ability,. but such t lillcationa are unnecessary on aa t Mlon like this, beoause the only fc best inducement to a true Ameri- 0 Is the call of his duty and govern- t it, and not even the bMt oration of t greatest speaker of all times. Whether we all realise it or not, t are bow 1a the midst of a period r eh will be known to all the op* r ised peoples of the world as the g irtoaaiiatioa period. Now Is the | s for every one of ns to prove ? ither ho is a sham American or a y ttlno American.** b ho praotloo of thrift and the y?r> r sb of War Savings Stamps are Jaot * r good Indications of jChe genuine t srioan. They mahe for financial 0 ?poadence, freedom, prosperity and k piness. 1 [CLE SAM'S MONEY I BEST IN THE WORLD - - ? ? Saw* Gamin* t r LSMI uw? ? ?-r - Heme After teelnf Only Perelfn Currenoy for Mentha. s oat how food Amerioan mono? Its to a man away from home is v atrated by the story told by one of j ae boys whq foufht In France in j wat for the preservation of civil- i lion, and who afterwards saw Mr- c ? across the border in Germany. I ergeant H. H. Coffee was attached , v Company L\ 35-1 th Infartry, and for t months was at Trier, Germany, 3^ j t es from Luxemburg. Ivjw ha 13 i k homo. -v ' t. While wf were in i'raiice," aaiUpj t geant Coffee, "we were paia m ? inch money. And afterward, when a were in Germany, we were paid in i man money. The difference be- S ten the French and German money, t compared with United States mon- e Is amazing. Tt is printed on white >er, and one gets an awful wad of 1 for comparatively a small quantity i American money. i 'When we got this foreign stuff the t rn were very liberal with it. They i uld gamble with it, wqyld lend it I handle ft very carelessly. But j en we got to Brest on our way 1 ne, and that money was exchanged w real Amerioan money, all that lib- ] ,lity disappeared, and it was guard- ( zealously." f That la ow of the lessons ine wa?= , j taught. American money, any >mlse to pay on the part of Uncle 1 m, Is mightv valuable In the eyes i the world. That is why the Liberty j nds found so ready a market, and s it is why the War .Saving.-; Stamps t k just as good as money. They are *] th evidences of indebtedness on j icl? Sarn's part and his written < co pay. There is no record I t that he ever failed to moet an Ipatlou. - " \ V led Piper v in )UR GOVERNMENT SECURI.TIE8. i gt of Hamlin Town played a siren tune , ei . The land is now full of Pied Pipers j w their Liberty Bonds and War Savings , n( )mi6e8; they are offering stock in con-1 ich. Hold your government securities. I >ing stock and a sucker out of you. ^ KEEP GRIP ON YOUR ? WAR SAVINGS STAMPS ^ 1 V? Advertising Clubs Issue Warning To co Protect the Public Against Ubiquitous Stock Swindlers. jn ca Various ~ways for prospective fnves tors to detect the unscrupulous stock m promoters are contained In a bulletin ed recently issued by the Natlonah Vlfi-, ^h lance Committee of the Associated q^Advertising Clubs of the-World. The bullotin indicates several unmistaka ble signs of the "wild cat" stock ped- to lleis which owners of War SavingB re Stamps and Liberty Bonds will do well nc to consider before exchanging their valuable. securities for the offerings mi >f northern stocks. Tho warning to Q13 prospective investors is as follows: ra "So far as we* have been able to assertain not a single ease has ever been ga eyorted where ffer to take Liberty 'Sonde should Qf >i onpt the bond owner to consult a ^ ranker or legitimate broker as to the 'slue of the stpek that is offered In izchange for the bonds. The offer to Mam A A IJLVlUUlgO IS Ail OKllllMa WU1VU D11WU y I lerre m a warning. "Another earmark* of the faker if iij attitude when it i? proposed to -V KMtpone aotlon pending an inrestiga- V ion. He will usually sneer at the ^ bought of consulting a banker or , roker U standing, suggesting that, t eouree, they would not recommend ? he itoek because they hare stooks of heir own to aell. "Is sueh a caae the prospective in- S ??tor might be eenetble enough to H emember that it la the one who eaata H ejections upon baatneec men' of H tending who ia Hkely to be the fly- H y-nlght ealesman, wad that the bank- H r haa been in the eemmnnlty maay J ears and will an dMbt eontkme in H usinees for many more. Ho might H eaeon that an eetabliehed Arm H roald flgnire that .It eeuld not afford H deceive. Tet then are thoneande H t people who allow themeelree to be H e^d winked beoauae they bellere evoh H airy iter lei." S IAND GRENADE BANKS I WILL SOON BE READY I IMIdre* Are Urged be Begin gavtiig H Meney At Onee ge That They H Will Net Loae Any Time. H Some NO,000 hand grenade beaks H rill. be ready for distribution In 4he Ifth Federal Reserre District by H Lugust 10, according to a statement I sited at the War Loan QtfSf this district. " H Kvery one of theee hand grenades H ira* manufactured to carry destnlc- B| ion to the Huns, and now.-with per- H :usBion cap and exploeive removed, . B Vy are to i^rve in tfxe campaign for IB 'r"t. Made into penny-slot bank} IB key will be lent, on* to each child B inder cerentcen yean eld who calls at B i baafc. ' Then, if enough money 'to! j B rarehase one or more War Savings j B !Ump? Is saved In a specified time, |B he hand grenade becomes the pr?p-;B irty of the child.'. |B There -has been line delay ia | B Vf.oltlMariAn U *af#(ntf ihM rMllA^AI 11 rTMU!U?bUu ?wv , _ eady for distribution, due to the large | B lumber that bad to be prepared (or j B heir new oapaclty, but it is now aa- ' B lured that they will ahortly be ready. B Every child who would like a real B lourenlr of the great war can get it | B )j caliirig at the bank as soon after B luguat >0 ai possible, (or there Will B probably be more than 250,000 ehll- B lren in the district who will .want the B grenades. and the supply Is neoesear- B ly limited. ^ Meanwhile, the children are* urged B :o "begin -saving at onoe so that tbey B nay have a "running vtart" when the B jrenade banks are delivered. The B >ooner enough money Is saved to ouy i m i War Savings Stamp the sooner the!I aand grenade belongs to the ohfld, ;1 md the sooner the child begins toil nve the sooner the desired end wlll'H be reached-. B \m Coin Thrift into Thrift Stamps. 1 V V V V V WV V V V V vv \ \ COTTON MARKET. V Cotton sold on local mar- V ket yesterday at 31 cts. V October futures closed in V New York at 31.40. V vvvvvvvvvvv * I -1 HREAT OF STRIKE ON GREAT SCALE Washington, August 5".?T h e 1 ireat of a railroad strike continues. > spread throughout the - country 2spite the efforts of the organised; bor heads to hold the men in check j ntil authoritive and official strike )tes can be taken. / Shopmen everywhere are throw-; g down their tools in premature' rike, was reported, and are'threatling national, industry, because; ithout them railroad equipment can-j >f hp Went in usable order at the; ost necessary of all times?crop1 oving season. Above that hovered the threat ofj 1 even more serious labor situation,! I le demand of all the organzed rail-1 >ad Industry that the profits of the! isiness be overhauled and retire pri-[ tfe capit&l and create a new partite) ntrol. s* Reports beg^n coming in today say-! g that unless railroad equipmentj ,n be*'kept in running order mills,! ines and factories will be threaten-j [ with closing. It was reported1 at there' are now more than 200,10 cars out of commission. Formal announcement ^as made night of the final tabulations in the ferendum conducted among busiiss men by *he Chamber of . Commerce .of the United States on the lestion of government ownership ofj ilroads. More than 99 per cent. of| e vote, the official annauncement id was against it. | Vital Statistics. "< Ji-? ? 1.U JL'ne vitai statistics aui wie munui July for the city of Abbeville show J saths?white 4, negro 2; births? lite 5, negro 1. uvvvvvvv\w\v\ BUY YOUR CREAM V from \ MRS. D. A ROGERS. V Phone No. 1. $ V 7. ~; ?. ' . ' x-' r .1 VJCllillg 1 AX/ The new goo & Express. I . , ' position tosh styles. ; If you have school, wear able demand. write or phon Haddc FARM ] FOR SA 401 1-4 ACRES?3 miles fr< ing, four tenant house: room and 1 two-rooms houses. Fine Pasture, a bottom land on the plac Price . . . 155 ACRES?9 miles from I two tenant houses; gin out-houses. Nearly all Stream runs through \ lands. School 1-4 and Price 293 ACRES?10 miles from level. No rolling: land. there is White, Red an .Grass. 1-4 mile from church. Quantities of 1 The place is well wate cultivation. Price 40 ACRES?About six miles provements, all in wooc Price 227 1-2 ACRES?11 miles i splendid piece of prope on this place. -Price. . Plenty wood. The plac 100 1-2 ACRES?12 miles f idence and out building plenty of wood and timt Price ." 189 1-4 ACRES?10 miles i did farm but no impro^ acres bottom lands. Prl Can Arram ROBERT \ \ /. Aarlv fnr I . VV/UUJ 1VI ; . 1 rinter Busines ds are coming h \n a short time Wi )W you the latest ft \ . > Children getting e prepared to mee c If iimi mn't mi J* Ml Will l> Wl e us your orders. < % >n-Wilso LANDS I \ ^ -s :>m Abbeville. One Dwell^ ; 1 frmr-rnnm 9 fhrAA * * , ~ ^ ?and all necessary out, good lot of saw Timber.. ;e. Eight horse farm open. . r $45.00 Per Acre Abbeville. Good residence; house and all -necessary ' the place perfectly level. )lace. Some fine bottom church 2 1-2 miles. .. . $60.00 Per Acre * Abbeville. This place is Fine pasture in which* d Burr clover, also Blue school, 3 miles from * ; wood./- Some saw timber. ' red. About 100 acres in . $50.00 Per Acre ! from Abbeville, no im*? .' -j I and timber. - . $25.00 Per Acre Tom Abbeville. This is a - r. rty.. A lot of saw timber $17.50 Per Acre r i e is well watered. Fine A> pom Abbeville. Good ReV^ fs. It is well watered and ' >er. $30.00 Per Acre from Abbeville. A splenr cements, about 50 or 60 ce i... $18.00 Per Acre S. UNK I ? -^ :W an ana mm ?^ 1 n by Freight H i will be in H all & winter I * i [ ready for H t all reason- H ne in person ? HB -* HE nn n Co. I BH m 1