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- ||: TheRo I I || De HI Faiii* Abt Stores Dry H ^ | ^ Vem^ ^ai ' Eg If = ' E |j Beautiful Voiles ?s*V-B || Ginghams in every H- II smooth as silk and Percales, Madr H II Satins and every 1 spring and summe I j i We happened tc * | just good luck, bu dry goods contract W'? bH 8 goods in stock now p i | market, and we do Last week's disc but there is no em I I | SOME SPECIE v I || DRESSES HAVI Wo H rkrto fn R pr - ? TV V A ivpv ^ Dresses Next Wee] I I || v19 I Rosenl m m II ' H i-1 ?* /. j . i JiizjL :. . ,. *jjw. -- v ^ , v , . am1% /VH/I/V M A1 senueig mo partment Stores eville, S. C. JJj Goods StO I t ge shipments h arrived I 5 in light and dark pal r imaginable combinati< I closely woven. as, Bleaching, Sheeting cind of material you n r, 1920. hit it right again; w it by having our spring ted for months ago, w r at a good deal under not have to worry abc :ount sale left some er Dtiness now. VLLY ATTRACTIVE : JUST ARRIVED. :eive More Spring Suiti k. THE a/i )erg ivier. imiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiWMWinn?iiBwiimmmiiniiiiniKiiniiiiniiiii =="-' \ # ^ I f. Co. |j I ; Ij ! my || J partments 1] 1 II I ] if S If B ' n ? II S 1 're !i I' ave just II | - - K 4 tterns; Dress j jj' on of colors, H , Scrim, Silks, ?fl nay wish for Ji 'J , e'll admit is J sf L""' and summer re have the the present >ut deliveries, I jj < 1? npiy siicivcB, s s li WM n U || jj SPRING jl 11 5, Coats and j| j|1 II 11 |f g e ft 11 Co- III 11 H'i 11 pi I lllllllU .milltHHIIIIHlWIIfMIIIMHIIIIIIIIMHHMHMMIIIMftMltMIIIIIHlHIIHUIHIHIIimH | P MHHiaHHnii1 A WW VV V GENERAL NEWS. V V GafFney is to have- a $100,000 ilant for the manufacture of brick. The Childs restaurants made big noney in 1919, their profits being >ver a million dollars. Irvin Cobb, the humorous story writer and war correspondent, lec;ured in Spartanburg Wednesday. A Washington street lot in Green/ille, 40 feet wide and 142 feet deep sold yesterday for sixty-four thou:and dollars. A Chicago theatre has opened up i smoking room for women. The manager says the "women drove him to it." The outfitting of the room was at a cost of ten thousand dollars. The Harvard Corporation has anI 9 nounced an increase of twenty per cent in salaries to teachers. This is the first increase in fourteen years. New York is training a regiment of one thousand sharp shooters and four machine gun squrds, to be used in case of riots or serious disorders. The street car men in Columbia ire taking a vote on the question of striking and Legislators are likely to lave to "foot it" arourjd the capital :ity. i ?? The Inter-Church . World Movement has established officers in Coumbia, the work to be in charge of Harvey F. Gilbert and Rev. J. A. ?T. Broek. James Shipes, of Augusta, Ga., has been sentenced to seven years in the ij - * ? -f? un: il ? - ^ state prison ior Killing tne uuuis. ixi a local restaurant, because he failed Co serve him a gizzard with a chickin order. Pope Benedict XV celebrated the fifth anniversary of his coronation with a brilliant pontifical mass in the Sistine chapel of the Vatican. The Pope was carried by sixteen uniformed chairbearers and wore a heav ? [Chen [Fish F j ] 3 ??"????'*?? 3 We are making tl year we have ever pr charged with iish, an 4ish this year than ev why it is the best. 11 in Abbeville County t 1 3 ~ 1 i, goous iiuiut;, uui w< more for it than othe It will pay you to g< with us early, as the s Anderson PI | Oil Coi Anders' I W. F. FARJ i!M5ISJ3JSJS5fEMSf2J2EI3M2M3?2fS?E/5icL,c ily jeweled triple gold crown and a white robe lightly embroidered with gold. Scores of cardinals, archbishops, bishops and patriarchs preceded and followed him. The red and purple robes of these dignitaries were in' striking contrast to the black velvet, uniforms and white collars of many( members of the lay court who were dressed in Spanish style. i The ten million marks worth of charity gift packages, containing food and clothing, reached Germany from the United States during the three months ending Nov. 15, 1919. One million cans of milk were sent. Ninety-five thousand civilian men and women must go to work as a result of the discontinuance of the 'government's dole to the unemployed. This is expected to have considerable effect upon the labor market, j In all). 135,000 persons were receiving the government's donation, but of these 40,000 were enginersj rendered idle by a strike of iron ! 1 1 A ^ il-- -i.1 ftp AAA mourners, ui tne omer ^o,uuu, oi,000 were men and 34,000 women. It is generally hoped that the women will again enter domestic service. The government's unemployment dole to demobilized service men and women will continue until March 31. DOUGHBOYS ARE j MONEY KINGS Coblenz,, Germany, Jan. 16.? Money? Yes, oodles of it every month in these parts along the Rhine?for tlje doughboy with his 33 iron men per month. ) But 33 iron men, calculated in the German mark, is a mere handful 1 7 I - ? 1 ~ ~-C ~ 1 CAA . ui Sliver n naiiuxui ui auuuu i,uuu i marks. So when the American sol dier, who looks after Uncle Sam's I interests in the Army of Ocupation, j sallies forth on pay day, he can do , things with lavish hand. Not that the doughboy is naturally a spendthrift. When a fellow has the .dough, he doesn't haVe to count the pennies. The doughboys doesn't 'count 'em. Does he want a bottle of the I O finest Moselle wine that comes from the grape-clad hills of this region? He can get it by changing a very small part of the 33 per into native currency and never even notice the hole. Does he want to buy curios ijjgp ? 2EISJB?5J5J5J5J5fSISJBlHS15l5ISJ5J5J5J5I5I515fSJij d e ertiltzer I ? I le best fertilizer this | i oduced; it is heavily | id we are using more I er before, and that is I t will pay any farmer | jo use it. It is the best ? 5 do not charge any 1 rs do for their goods. | et in communication | supply is not large. ! tosphate and ( mpanv I on, S* C Pi a VIER, Sec'y. ? ??S2JS.'3JE'S;rSJS.'E.'KMSJSEJE?SE??fS/Si20/2.! "" % # * 5SS from the shop to sendokeeper ?bjo from the shop for the folks back> home? He can get 'em by changing a few more of his 33 per, ' and still not feel the stringency. Even should he want to buy out half the shop, he can come pretty near to doing itwith his month's pay, and have enough left over to buy a thirty day's supply of cigarettes, soap, and bar chocolate at the sales commis- .,*1 sary?and not miss any of the movies at the X, which don't cost - raj him a cent anyway. * isj Master's Sale. The State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. Court of Common Pleas. /0. EDMUND JOHNSON, Jr., Plaintiff, against EDMUND JOHNSON, Sr., and others / /| Defendants. By authority of a Decree of Sale by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, in said State, made !in the above stated case, I will offer fnr sale, at Public Outcrv. at Ahhe. 7 ?' ville C. H., S. C., on Salesday in February, A. D., 1920, within the legal hours of sale the following de- v scribed land, to wit: All that certain lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the City of Abbeville in Abbeville County, in the State aforesaid, i containing Five-Eighths (5-8) of an ! Acre, more or less, and bounded by lands of Nellie J. Gallman, by lands of J. L. Perrin, by Poplar Street and the Augusta Road, This lot' of land is sold subject t* any assessment for public improvements made by the City of Abbeville. TERMS OF SALE?CASH. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. THOS. Pf THOMSON, Master A. C., S. C. I l-14-3t. jTURKS AT FIRST INTENDED TO BE Jj | ON ALLIES' SIDE -fffl Constantinople, Jan. 20.--Turkey .11 entered the war on Germany's side ; v|| after the cabinet had decided to join the allies, according to statements before a secret parliamentary Mi committee published by the news papers. Tl^e machinations of the !war party, led by Enver Pasha, war ; ' minister in 1914, were responsible tVtn *1 rrQ f^Cn^". i sm When the war broke out, the newspapers say, the majority of the , Turkish cabinet was friendly to the 'entente. The war narty, however, i began attempts to persuade a suf- '| 'ficient number of minister? that Turkey should acquire the G."man cruiser Goeben to take the pir.c: of .k .'Turkish ships which had beer, requisitioned by England. Objection was ' rruade that the Goeben, which arrived here in August, 1914, after fleeing from alied warships ir. the Meiitcvranean, would attack Russian ves- ujffl | sels while under Turkish colors, but . JjEnver Pasha declared the command1 er . of the cruiser had pledged hinv. . \| ] self not to make any such attr.ck. In j! j reply to this assurance, David Bey, jjthen finance minister, remarked I ' Ijthat the admiral would be "more J likely to stand on his word than the J German war lord." ? | Decision was reached b^ the cabij net to oppose Germany in the war [ and it was agreed that when TurI key took her stand on the side of II the entente, the Goeben and her si*-' ' ter ship, the Breslau, should be j; bombarded by the Bospherous forts. [ Enver Pasha, however, made secret jarangements with the Germans and the Goeben jointed Black Sea fleet, even the grand vizier being kept in , ignorance of this move . On August, 29, 1914, the Goeben, while flying the Turkish flag, attacked and J destroyed two Russian ships. This act brought about Turkey's alignment against the entente and several ^embers of the cabinet resigned. ;The facts were misrepresented by the censors and the Turkish public, even the Sultan, believed for several years that the Russians attacked the Turk?. NOTICE TO CITY TAX PAYERS. The Two Per Cent Penalty will be added to all City Property Tax not paid before February 1st, 1920. The Penalty will be Seven per cent March list, 1920. T r DTDDIM 1. VS. 3 j l-2t.? 23-28. City Treasurer. 1 Engrnvcl CarJs and Invitations? jThe Pros?- air! Banner ('< f i