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BAPTIST MEETINGS FOR i< THE SUMMER t i'v . 1 ?? I Next Monday, June 28th, will ( mark the beginning of three impor- I tant Baptist gatherings in Green-'1 ?" ville, South Carolina. |s t The first annual Baptist State jc Sunday School Convention will be 1 held there June 28-July 1. Hundred < of Sunday School superintendents,' f teachers and pupils from all over;* the State will attend. On July 2, 3, and 4, and twentyfourth annual- Convention of the Baptist Young Peoples Union of South Carolina will meet. A large j o-ntViprins' of voune people is ex pected to come to Greenville for ' this meeting. There will be demon- . ?trations of practical B. Y. P. U. methods, and inspirational lectures V J by gifted men; Many social features will also be enjoyed. . The dates for the South Carolina Baptist Summer Assembly are July 5th to ltOh, inclusive. This is the sixth season. Chautauqua lectures, a Bible instiute for pastors, the Wo Kv" mans Missionary Union Summer j : Conference, and a*training school! $ V I for Sunday School teachers, are j s:me of the iteresting things in store, as well as many delightful recreational activities. fAll the meetings will be held in the building of Greenville Woman's j- . . College and the First Baptist j The Great Te Li'/' M When a thing happen; " 4"Vl a I mier mai unuu l/UV i will be the same the se L , I Were it not for this, lit I and very little progres j We all learn by exper I When a stranger com* I receives prompt, couri 1 urally concludes that J his account here, the s J vice would continue tl I ed him. j He is never disappoin I NATIONAL BANK jt;" I "Abbeville's Stroi I %? 1?? | PROTECT 1 | I AGAINS1 It is usually the uuforseen "? J 11 . rain storm approacnes uui son; it may bring devastati standing grain in just a fe 5 of HAIL. The Season of HAIL i IVou probably know of son or even part of vou" seasor iton by the elements, when in an insurance policy will fjj tection. Vou probably know of sum damage of just one passing man's profits for his entire We can write your HAIL II inal sum in a good substan is small?the protection is Call us up ?r drop us a line IS point to see you. is I CITIZENS INSURAN I W. D. WILKIIN I ABBEVILLE, SOI - * Church. The Assembly and Convenion delegates will be very comfortibly housed in the dormitories of Greenville Woman's College and ?urman University. Rev. Thos. J. iVatts, of Columbia, the general :ecretary, is daily receiving appli:ations for room reservations, and las reason to expect an attendance )f more than one thousand at the Assembly , :"ii the twv. Conventions. A LETTER FROM GERMANY The Manufacturers Record is in receipt of a letter from a Berlin business house, calling attention to the fact that a member of the firm has just left Berlin on a visit to the United States, and that he will bring with him "a select and expensive set of samples of a great variety of articles, and that only such articles have been chosen as can be delivered promptly." Among the articles named are, dolls, wooden toys, Chirstmas tree decorations, mechanical toys, kinos, scissors, pocket and carving knives, razors, manicure sets, etc. This firm writes us that it 'represents first-class German and Vienna concerns, and that the member of this firm who is on the way to this country, will also have samples of fancy articles made of ivory, metal and leather, optical goods, etc., and u?muwmwa l mil aaLav I ClCIICI | 5 once, we logically | same conditions, it j icond time it happens ! ;tle would be learned I >s would be made. I ience. I es into this bank and I fceous service, he nat- 1 I should he establish I same high class ser- I hat was first accord- | ted. . I ; OF ABBEVILLE. Ij Rank" I llgVOk ??? BBsmamammm fOURSELF | ' LOSS I that happens when a I ing the growing seaion and ruin lo your . B w minutes in the form STORMS Is Here. ? ie instances where the i's work from destruci a few dollars invested give you financial proe instances where the ; storm has wiped out a year of Farming. MSURANCE for a numitial Company; the cost i great. jj| j a-nd we will make it a [CE & TRUST CO. ? ISON, Manager. JTH CAROLINA I ???I f # 1 ,that all of these things would be exj hibited "to our American friends in New York, at a place to be fixed immediately upon Mr. ?'s arrival," and more of the same kind. German'toys?made by men who butchered Belgian and French babies! German Christmas tree decorations?made by men who violated every precept taught by the One whose birth of Christmas celebrates German cutlery, pocket and carving knives?made by German butchers who, with bayonet and sword, committed unto death the helpless old men and women and children of Belgium and France! German-mafle optical goods? j - u.. wVin qi*o Klinrl +n lliaue uy UCWUOUO nuv V .? all that is true and good and civilized, but whose eyes were open to fevery atrocity that the vilest criminals on earth could commit! Oh yes; let these German toys come into America; but may the fathers and mothers who buy them hear ringing forever in their souls the dying cry of murdered babies, murdered by Germany! Let those Christmas tree decorations come, but may those who buy them realize that they* are contributing to the prosperity of a nation which spught definitely to destroy Christianity and everything which Christmas typfies! And yet there are people in America who have so little rememi nr?CT-vqqLroKTo primp? UI (3IICC Ui Uii<9|/vunMW?v v? * va~ of Germany, for which no word of repentance has yet been uttered, that they would clasp hands with the blood-dripping hands of the German toy makers and the German Christmas tree decorators and forget the dying wail of the murdered babies and the cry of horror of dishonored womanhood, and {he fact that out of this development of trade Germany hopes to get ready to make another war upon civilization. DESERT OF SAHARA ONCE WAS THICKLY POPULATED Viewed in the light of history, it i may be that the late Jacques Lebaudy's dream to convert the desert of Sahara into a habitable kingdom was not the crazy ''den after all that j *1 1J l\? k*r flio . Qnhpr- I It WHS UCIICVCU tu uc uj vuv MWBrv>_, minded world, which regarded the eccentric Frenchman as a madman for assuming the title of king of Sahara. Charles de la Roinciere, librarian j of the National Library of France, has discovered documents which prove that the Sahara was at one [ time a thickly populated, highly [ prosperous region. "Hitherto," says M. de la Ron-1 ciere, "Africa has figured not at all in medieval history. It still was a j "dark continent" when Stanley and j Livingstone penetrated it less than j a century ago. Yet it would seem j that the Jews of the fiteer^th can- j tury had trading posts in nortlfwest! Africa and carried on a vast conv j merce with the natives from the I Sahara to the Atlantic and from I Algeria to the Niger. < "Antofiia Malfante, a Genoese j citizen, traversed this region and wrote his descriptive letters, in 1847, from Timbuktu and Tount. Timbuktu was the Chicago of the west African plains, and Touir; the> center of the camel caravan traf-j fic that exchanged the wheat and j barley of Egypt for the powdered j gold of Timbuktu and the precious j salt from Teghazza. "All the places visited by Mal-j fante were so well known to the i Jews of his time that they were; listed in a Catalan atlas prepared j three-quarters of a century earlierfor Charles P," according to M. j Poincare. "But shortly after Mai-' fante's visit the Jews were' driven ' out of Spain, and since the Jews' were the only ones in Europe who knew of the Nigeria country and; apparently permitted . no Christian 1 to enter there except Malfante, theI Jewish knowledge was lost to Europe. Not until Doctor / Gerhard JRohls began his explorations in Al-j geria and Morocco in 1860 did the; rest of the world gain from a con-j tact with the extensive regions of Malfante's travels." ?Philadelphia Public Ledger. THAT'S DIFFERENT Town pepole don't want the farmers to desert the farms for town \ unles they come to their town.?) Tne Toledo Blade. j ' ' J ? Good Valuesi .. 190 ACRES, 2 miles frc dwelling, with larg piazzas. Two goo barns and other oui with plenty of wat< tion in one field, fi\ tion in place. .. 46 3-4 ACRES, One mi; room cottage in gc ir, ; WC11 CtilU IS 1J1 guuu ideal little f^rm .. i .'. '? * ' ^ 123 ACRES,-about thre> . all fresh land; 3 he 2 good five room h \ I ^ 1 * I Ten Rpom Dwelling, j 2 bath rooms with ; dwelling recently ? gles. Will make pi * i i I V I , : Abbeville Ins ' J. S. STARK, President. 4 . ' \ | tul. ? iX I . | i |J :';;c ; ' I v.- -?-? - ~ ^ y. "i THORNH1L1 SO IVI E Tho comment on th? ease with which the*"^^ ^ , wagon can be "backed up." This is due / ; to the full circle iron. The ordinary circle is but a \ i Vi^lf mrr\t? f t i ^ In m^lrinor a sham turn bolsters often run to the end of the track and become "derailed." Thornhills cannot do this because their track is a circle ( O ) Others comment on the fact that in spite of tre; mendous overloads, Thornhill axles never break. The reason for this is plain. They use tough highland hickory?reinforced by a steel truss bar that extends the full length of the axle. Still others comment that the gears never get out of line. This unusual feature is due to one of their workmen's inventions. He designed a malleable front hound piate?bolted to the gears at eight points. It's literally a jacket of. iron that holds gears in line and insures light running for life. From hilly sections come reports that the old trouble of broken king bolts is unknown among owners of Thornhill wagons. This because of a cup and saucer arrangement on the bolster THE STARK VE |t in Real Estate j )m Antreville.- Six-room > M ' ^ " L e hall and front and back r 'x-M d tenant houses, large || , . tbuildings. Large pasture ^ er; 100 acres in cultivate horse farm in cultiva- II .. .. $85.00 Per Acre. lo fmm AKKovilln fhitiu L *-> XX VJLli XlWVIillVj JLVSVCJL >od condition. Land lies . state of cultivation. An .. .. $150.00 Per Acre. e miles from Mt. Carmel, >rse farfti in cultivation; ouses and barns ' > ||. y ;\fy $4U.UU Jfer , Acre. ust off North Main Street '%W. all modern conveniences, | . > covered, with metal shinnee right for quick sale. .& Trust Co. W. L. PEEBLES, ; 8 Manager. ^ ? - : L WAGONS that relieves the king boJt of strain. To others the amazing feature is the long life or jj . Thornhill beds?due to their location which gives ; them thfe pick of the yearly cutting of wood and * due, in part, to the fact that they paint with pure : lead and linseed oil despite its high cost , Thousand? of owners have found in Thornhills tT unusual strength where they are accustomed to J . ( weakness. Let us show you this perfected wagon.. [604-n] H1CLE COMPANY r " < ' .