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I. The Long Cane Prove To i Judge W. C. Benet is writing an( 1 article for the book "Scots and Scots ] K& Descendants in America," which is 1 now in.course of publication. The'* article of such interest that it has'l L - liiA.J .'vi Iri "ThP Deen puonsiieu hi auY#"w ??? - ? | Caledonian," a magazine published in < * ' /' New York devoted to the interests^1 of Scotch History. The Judge makes^ r interesting reference to the "Long( * Cane Irish" and tells us that they are 1 not Irish at all but pure Scotch, p Judge R. E. Hill is the Abbeville man | '< who changed his mind on the ques- c tion of Home Rule. * The story oi the Irish potato a'hd * how Maxton^got his name is interest- j T ing. We /wish it were possible to( copy the entire article for the enter-' * tainment of our many "Scotch-Irish" j readers. j *" 11 "At the outset let us summarily. * dispose of the "Scotch-Irish." This ' t is easily done, for no sucii being nor . race of beings actually exists, nor , \ ! * ever did or ever will exist. "Presfoy-, terian-Catholic"?that is what the l c "Scotch-Irish" would properly imply, and that is a compound as unlikely to1. occur as one of oil and water, or of Orangeman and Ribbonman. The term "Scotch-Irish" is of American manu-| facture, and is a misnomer of a most , I * - misleading and mischievous charac-( ter, which ought to be dismissed , from our vocabulary. "But the Irish in America are not t I 1 alone in being misled by the term j "Scotch-Irish." The descendants of: { the Ulster-Scots themselves, in manyj j States, seem to be similarly misled. j wnen in tne eany seventies nome ^ Rule for Ireland was a subject of: world-wide interest, while the Ulster-'.* Scots in Ulster were to a man bitterly; , I opposed to it, the Ulster-Scots in Am- j erica were largely in favor of it. This ( was supposed to be due to their Irish I ^ blood. I recall one striking instance: ^ Discussing the subject with a very in-j, \ telligent man whose grandparents hadj come from County Down, I assuerdj * him that if he would go over to Ire-j * land and visit his cousins there, he, t jjt; ; THE i You - get and TheS when Week! PRESS \ Irish Be Pure Scotch svould find them opposed to the Home Rule scheme, and that he himself .vould become an opponent. He did is I suggested, and the result was as [ foretold. .7 r:.*: T j i . "Another illustration: In Abbeville| Uounty, South Carolina, there is a ural settlement on Long Cane Creek. J The people are known as the "Long Dane Irish.",, They are true-blue J Presbyterians; in blood they are all of! Jlster-Scottish descent; there is not in Irishman in the community; norj loes anyone have an Irish name; yet he influence of the term, "Longj Dane Irish," was so strong that they| vere strenuous supporters of Home itule for Ireland, and liberal contribu-J ,ors to the cause. "It is curious that there is another [ibernian misnomer in use only in he United States?the so-called' 'Irish potato," which is no more Irish' han are the Ulster-Scots. Although' t is a South American tuber, found irst in Peru, I believe, the name mis-1 eads many to think that the potato' am-e originally from Ireland. The1 ristory of the misnomer is Interest-1 ig. In the early forties of last cen-j nrv. a famine was caused in Ireland >y the failure of the potato crop. A lighting disease, previously un* :nown, had destroyed the potatoes.' Vs it had first appeared in Ireland,' he potato blight was generally called j he "Irish potato blight"?not that he potato was Irish, but the blight.' Before long the word "blight" was' Iropped, and the "Irish potato" was! eft. - ; .. j "One or two illustrations will show^ low thoroughly Highland are the peo)le of that region today. While hold-! ig court in Marlborough County,! south Carolina, a border county, I( lave found as many Highland names, >n the jury lists as one might find in i court in Oban or Inverness. And a >anker there, himself a genuine j Mac', told me that until he was^ welve or thirteen years old, he^ hought every white person's name legan with 'Mac.' . V 1??? lllllll PRESS t Is now Thrice the New: * iubscription the Paper [y?$2 the AND BA ? Abbevi / i "Still more striking is this: small North Carolina town in tl 'Scots Country' used to be ,cal Shoe-heel. This was thought to b( corruption of 'Lochiel'?'the name the famous Highland chief?p; ( nounced Low-heel, and vulgarized ! to Shoe-heel. When, over thirty ye; (ago, the great Seaboard Air-Li Railroad passed through that tov it was thought by the inhabitants tl a town with a railroad and a post < fice deserved a better name th 'Shoe-heel.' A public- meeting v held. Every man present was a 'Ma All the Highland clan names we there? MacDonald, MacDough? MacLeod and all. It was unanimoi ly agreed to call the town 'Maxto which, being interpreted, is 'the toi of the Macs'?and Maxton it is. I me add, however, that the old chur nehr the town is still called to She heel Presbyterian Church. If this not a true story, it ought to be; a I believe it is." i . _ J League as issue ueoaieu The peace treaty as a possib campaign issue was debated at leng again today by the senate, with proi inent Republicans criticising declar tions made on the subject yesterdi by Elihu Root in his address to t New York Republican state conve tion. Assailing the position taken by M Root as "a crime against the Ame: can people," Senator Hiram Johnso Republican, of California, an acti" candidate for the Republican pre; denial nomination, said it was "u terly silly" to suggest that the Unit< States should go into the League Nations and then reform it after tl next inauguration. The Republican senate leader, Se ator Lodge, of Massachusetts, inte rupted to suggest that under tl covenant, amendment of the leagi would be 'practically impossible', ai Senator Borah, Republican, of Idah again served notice that if the par did not come out against the leagi and treaty entirely be would carry \ fight against ratification to the pe pie themselves after the nation conventions. President Wilson is fond of poet: but the works of D'Annunzio a probably not among his favorites. t AND BA published -a -Week s when it i ? Price is th< was publis Year. LNNER C( 11 c n 116, Oo * / \ ^ I- SAYS HOT WATER ? \i WASHES POISONS - ' FROM THE LIVER m- j WO # ne' Everyone should drink hot water J Nwith phosphate In It, V before breakfast iati I Df-J v / I i To feel as fine as the proverbial a , fiddle, we must keep the liver washed ras clean, almost every morning, to pre c ?! vent Its %ponge-like pdres 'rota clogI ging with indigestible material, sour !re bile and poisonous toxins, says a noted ill,' physician.* > | If you get hcadaches; It's your liver. ls"j If you catch cold easily, it's your liver. n,'i If you wake up with a bad taste, furred vn! tongue, nasty breath or stomach be j comes rancid, it's your liver. Sallow skin, muddy complexion, watery eyes ch all denote liver uhcleanliness. Youi livor is the most important, also the ' must abused aud neglected organ o' is the body. Few know its function oi nd bow to release the dammed-up bod: | waste, bile and toxins. Most folk; resort to violent calomel, which is ( dangerous, salivating chemical whict can? only be used occasionally because , it accumulates In the tissues, alse attacks the bones.' ' th iivery man and woman, sick o: yj. .veil, should drink each morning be lore breakfast a glass of hot watei 'a" with a teaspoonful of limestone phop ay phate in it, to wash from the liver anc bowels the previous day's indigestible material, the poisons, sour bile anc . n_ toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary r canal before putting inore food.intc ' he stomach. ri- Limestone phosphate does not' "ren otrict the diet like calomel, because it ' can not salivate, for it Is harmless and 7e you can eat anything afterwards. It si- i3 inexpensive and almost,tasteless, and any pharmacist will seU you a quarter pound/^which is sufficient for a dem2(* omtration of how hot' water and limeof stone phosphate cleans? stimulates and u freshens the liver, keeping you feeling | fit day in _and day_out. ? r" HAD LOST HOPE * OF GETTING WELL ae id lealth Better Than for Ten .0, Years, and Can't Praise ty Meritone Enough le ,js "I had stomach trouble for ten years and had just about given up all aj hopes of ever getting any better when I heard about Meritone and started taking it," said Mrs. H. T. ry Haynes, of 713 Anderson Street, re Chattanooga, Tenn. "I had no appetite and didn't care WW*?? NNER t x is News r I 5 same as hed Semi"MV/FD AMV J1V11 t~\.l > 1 I ! ! for anything to eat. I had constipation so badly that it seemed nothing would help me. My whole system became run down. I got nervous and couldn't stand any noise and couldn't sleep right at night. "Meritone put my stomach back in the best condtiion and relieved the rconstipation entirely. "My appetite is go.od and i can eat anything I want without suffering afterward. "Noise doesn't bother me now and | THE BEST PEOPL | WHERE WILL BE | Automotr and | Merchants ' | COLU | Mar ch 2 Biggest Auto Show a ever held in the Soutl ent makes of passenf exhibited; splendid e gest tent auditorium state Riircest socia 5S5 ^VM,vw' OU - Five fashion models 1 turing the new sytles jj| Footwear, etc., stag Mr. Daniel A. Reed, of Columbia Merchan the week. I PARADES?Ml For further informal Columbia Auto Assoi ~ ' 1 K ^ (JOlUiriDltl UI1UI1IUCI tn bi ?? ; HI X \ I N ! \ J; \ . % ! N. y . M j 1 i ' -<i! ::i ! . - 7 ??J -- ^ - I sleep fine and get up feeling good. ; "I am in better health now than Jfor ten years, and I give this state[ ment for publication in hope that ; J somebody else who feels like I did twill hear of Meritone and give it a 1 trial." j Meritone is sold exclusively in Abbeville by The McMurray Drug Co. ' The situation in Italy is said to be (serious, is tnere any piace wnere u, | isn't? E FROM EVERY- | : HERE FOR THE ? /e Show | ? VVT 1 1 rade Week g MBIA 1 2 to 27 | nd Fashion' Exhibit l. Eighty-one differ,rer automobiles to be xhibit of trucks. Lar. gg ever used in tnis I event of the season. Tom New York feai in Gowns, Millinery, ed under direction of All Spring openings B ts will be held during USIC-DANCES | inn write Secretary | ' ciation or Secretary f Commerce. JJ i 1 \