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v \ \ V V V \ i\\ \ \ \\ v \ v * V DUE WEST LOCALS N v A R. Presbyterian. \ \ \ wvvvvvvvvvvvvvx Mrs. R. C. Brownlee, Jr. reachec Due West from Montreat last week. Senator and Mrs. James W. Wide man are visiting kindred in Due Wes Miss Lizzie Jordan left on las Monday for the mountains of N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lee Young oi Columbia are visiting friends anc relatives in Due West. Mr. James W. Phillips of Chester, is spending the summer at St. Petersburg, Fla. Mr. D. S. Edwards has sold his fine Jersey calf, one week old, to Dr. J. R. Bell for $150. Mr. W. W. Bradley, of Abbeville, bank examiner, was a visitor in Due West last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Putnam ana family returned last week from the mountains of N. C. You can almost see the crops growing around Due West. High seasons and abundant fertilizer. Prof. Galloway goes this week to Columbia, on business connected with the public school. Miss Agnes Brooks leaves this wppV -fnr flliftnn Fnrw Vn SVip meets Miss Nair in Gastonra and they go on together. Mr. 0. Y. Brownlee and Mr. Avery Newton went up last week to Mon\ treat and joined Mrs. Brownlee there The Brownlees have a summer home fk" . at Montreat. Mrs. James Rowland is back from the hospital in Collumbia. We are ?lad to say that she is steadily im-| proving, following a serious opera' t ; tion. Dr. Moffajt reports encouragingi prospects for Erskine. Nearly all the rooms in the dormitory are taken j up. Dr. Moffatt was around in town1 making inquiry for rooms to rent. The Due West contingent, consisting of Mrs. Mamie Pressly, Miss' Bertha Pressly, Mrs. 0. Y. Bonner' and Miss Barbara Grier reached ^ home last week from Rock Hill, having been in attendance on the sum-! AM >, UlCi 5VMWI, j Solicitor Homer Blacswell paid l Due West a short call on last Satur-N I day. Mr. Blackwell has made a 1 ? - ? iPiwrifiFiririFiri fihfiwh if p Si r ? 11 Beaut I j* I Sirengtl Iji g THE MARK OF |! twined in the Peric i | TURE That We H ij BED ROOM SI SI A Pleasant Night, I' NITURE That Mj You Wives Tha lect Some New Pi< the Home. Your Small Prices We W. A. i S Home Furnishers $ ^sssiiiiFHyyyHyHa ,'good solicitor and is again asking the k| support of his friends in this section. k. He is a graduate of Erskine. J Mrs. Leila P. Todd has bought the stock of drugs belonging to J. H. Bell and Son. We hear that Mr. 1 John Todd and Mr. James Plaxco will enter this business as soon as proper arrangements can be made. Mr. D. G. Phillips, Jr., returned from Montreat with Mr. R. S. Galloway, Jr. He did not tarry long, as i a magnet of irresistable force drew I him to a little town about 30 miles south of Due West. > Rev. W. P. Grier and family of Clover are spending some days in Due West as the guests of Prof, and i Mrs. P. L. Grier. Mr. Grier occupied , the pulpit in the A. R. P. church Sabbath morning. Our people heard Mr Grier with pleasure and profit. The annual reunion of the Ellis family takes place at Bethlehem i church August 5th, 1920 at 10:30 o'clock. All relatives are requested to attend. Mrs. T. W. Hayes and Dr. W. W. Orr reached Due West last Monday evening. Mrs. Hayes is now living in Roswell, New Mexico and is county Superintendent of Education. NEW MATRON. I , The authorities at Erskine have | succeeded in securing Miss Jessie ; Houston, of Altapass, N. C. to take charge of the dining hall of the boys home. Prof. Reid ran up to Altapass last week and had a personal conference with Miss Houston. i Miss Houston has had fine exper- ! ience in managing boarcflng houses ( at Altapass and also at Spartanburg. She has a fine idea of dietetics. A number of our men have known Miss Houston before, having been much) pleased with her service at Altflpass,!* where she runs a hotel eacn summer.] Miss Houston is< a first cousin ofl Secretary Houston of the Treasury department at Washington. The c faculty at Erskine are congratulating n themselves on securing Miss Houston for the position. ? ? ?1 HERO NAMES HIS HORSE BENEFICIARY IN POLICY fi ;ir. Buffalo, N. Y., July 28.?KniplowJ a 13-year old stallion, w?8 the bene- w ficiary named in the $10,000 war in- L iLndf?jmifiLniniranu7-JiJ?.rii ty That Is Sti and j That Is Be THE MASTERPIECE-! -j c?:?. _f niNiwr. R< JUL lJUIlO UI v> ave in Stock Awaiting Y JITS That Make Homes ] and LIVING ROOM ai ike a Man Love His Hot t Love Your Husbands C eces of Our Furniture to 1 Husband Doesn't lin A.sk For Dependable Goc Calvert & To His Majesty?The TAi surance policy carried by Harry K. f Thurman, of Memphis, Tenn., and his | aunt, Mrs. Mary Mitchell, of Buffalo, is complying with the terms of the policy. Thurman died in action over-1 seas. The facts in the case came out when Mrs. Mitchell sought to have Kniplow placed among the mounts of Troop I, State jguard, tn tne armoryj here. She said Thurman was much attached to the horse and having: no near relatives who would suffer thru his death, he decided to provide for the animal's care in case he did not return. The surplus above the cost ofj the horse's keep goes to Mrs. Mitchell. Kniplow is suffering from a sprained tendon but is recovering and is expected soon to become a part of Troop I's outfit where he is a great favorite. SEEDLESS GRAPE HAS I BEEN DEVELOPED BY j A GREENWOOD FARMER I I Mr. A. A. Dominick, of Phoenix, I brought some seedless grapes to the Z Index-Journal office this morning J vh'ch he has succeeded In growing by J a special system of planting. He cuts a the tip of the vine off and plants it E just as any other cuttings are plant- ( ed. The vine from this cutting pro- [ duces grapes that are a trifle small- [ er but are devoid of seed. Occasion- g ally, he says, one grape on the bunch ? will have a seed in it, and that grape j is always the size of the normal g seeded grapes. The grapes are very sweet and are as prolific as any oth- I ers.?Index^Journal. J : i IRMY OFFICERS g MUST KEEP OUT | i )f National Political Campaifn j Says Baker [ I Washingtort, July 29.?Army offi- g ers and others connected with the -j xilitary establishment are prohibi- ? jd, under an order issued today by ecretary Baker, from taking any S active part in political manage tent or in political campaigns" or :om "using their official position to ' j ifluence the result of an election." Secretary Baker said the order " as not directed at Major Gen; no eonard Wood, who sought the ]dic =~m on R!/gmn^jar?iiEnifiui!i^ ? *ong |? Sl-' :autiful t s m i inseparably en- ffi sti DOM FURNI- jfi " our Order. J Places to Spend S to id HALL FKIR- |* ne. ft Pi tome in and! Se- th Rriffhten Ud Sm d Paying- the ffiC )da.^ . lu Sons | merican Citizen. X f,J ErafBraiaraiaraiBfEiEiaii | Don't Le I That ANDEI 3 3 3 3 3 i This is < i Everythi i solutely j Stores ii j Lower 1 j Pay. ! We are M< j and we are i your pure/ i move our i i i f 1 LiUld U1 I ed. W1 i ASK? ! J. M. ! I imnHimimmmii mination as the Republican canlate for the Presidency, who has amised his actice support to Sena r Harding. Mr. Baker expiainea it Gen. Wood's activities in poli3 has been with his full knowlge and consent and that the genii's position had been exceptioninasmuch as he was a candidate the Chicago convention. He addthat it was not the policy of the partment to stand in the way of i people's choice of any official 10m they might want for Presint. The War Secretary would not be >re specific when asked if the der would affect Gen. Wood's atude in politics in the future, say? that the order spoke for itself. *EAT BRITAIN AND AMERICA WILL I^IEVER BE ON OPPOSITE SIDES I.';ncior., July 29.?Elihu Root, ;mei American secretary oi ite who recently took part in th< 5rk of the commission of jurist; the Hague for the establishmeni a permanent international cour' Justice todav formally presentee the British people of Saint Gau jns statue of Lincoln in Canning juare as a gift from, America, am ter the statue was unveiled remier Lloyd George abandonee essing official business to Jelivei e speech of acceptance. The presentation was made in th< esence of a distinguished audi ice in the central hall of West inister with Viscount Bryce, for er British ambassador to tlu nited States, presiding. The even as widely heralded in tho Britisl ess as further cementing nn?lo merican friendship. In the course of hi3 aldress Mr jot declarel: "It would be difficult conceive of a sharper conirnsi all the incidental and immaterial ings of life than existed betweer ncoln and the statesmen whose atue stand in parliament square.' Later in his address, however r. Root said: "It is the identica ndamental conception in botl untries which make it impossible at in any great world emergencj reat Britain and America can be t opposing sides. These concep^ >ns of justice and liberty are the eath of life for both. While thej ? !fgigfgraiEfgfi!iiiiaraiaraiani t It Slip \ {SON'S Big Rei Still Going On, \ Bona Fide CASI . . P. mg m our two otc Every Article 3 Being Sold- at Price than you C % oving to Greenwc i giving you evei loses than it wo stock. New Goods bein * hy i Pay More 1 / ANDERS I rannuEiHrarEraiziaiarafiEJiir prevail, both nations will endure; if i 1, they perish, both nations will -die. I I ' | These were Lincoln's inhertitance." i Mr. Root recounted in great detail Lincoln's life struggles and his .(ideals .which he maintained Eng, lishmen understood at the time he J , commanded public attention. He^ . emphasized this by reading a copy 1 of a sympathetic letter six thousand Manchester cotton operatives, un- : employed because of the shortage . of cotton during the war between.; the northern and southern states, i _ ?[Chero i ' THE UN IVEI r j II The Ford One Ton Tn i just as faithfully and ecc Ford Touring Car serve a I and economically. The I sity to the grocer both ir in bringing goods from tl * HI from the country. It i: J 11111. because there isn't a w; I III I business man that it does | | of quick transportation a I III I Come in, examine the T t I HI I over the subject. T\ _____ four Mind |! i ? ? noval Sale Is jj Sale of 11 r >res. Ab- 3 I in Both || a Much h ; )rdinarily [j ^ - Si ^od Sept. 1 i j . n more on i j | aid cost to ji i i ' ' A or inrlii/l- 5 5 ?w% %* m than We \ j i{ ! I: [I v. ...g )N CO. I H B^B B^B ^^B f^*B P^B ff^B B^l f^B^^B npk *. E3ih31E3nCBlEIEflEZlEflE3GflEi^EnE9Rp^ T-, - sent to Lincoln after promulgation'*. i T"i-? ;'r of the Emanicpation proclamation.^,* ' * "- j tC; /i I ' r ' HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS ih S* ' "Josh, said Farmer Corntossel to^ his son. "I wish, if you don't mind,.?? ( you'd eat off to yourself instead o?.^; . with- the summer baai-ders." "Isn't my society good enough , for them?" "Your society is fine. But your appetite sets a terrible example." ' ?Washington Star. hCo& ?; ncC {SAL CAR lck is serving Dusiness j momically as does the 11 11 the people faithfully ord Truck is a neces-. I i delivering goods and le stations, docks and | s an ideal motor car I ant of the farmer or ;n't supply in the way || t a minimum expense. |j ruck, and let us talk A 11 Arnoia ^