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INCREASE OF OVER MILLION BALES OF COTTO As Shown By Condition of Crop c July 25?Decided Improvement Over Last Month's Report Washington, August 3.?Increa: of more than a million bales in tl prospective production of cotton ovi the indicated yield a month ago wi forecast today by the department < agriculture. A total of 12,519,0( bales was estimated from the cond tion of the crop July 25 wnile II 450,000 bales was forecast from tl condition June 25. Good growing weather during Ju caused much improvement in tl prospects of the crop, the conditlc having advanced from 70.7 per ce: of a normal on June 25 to 74.1 p< cent on July 25. The crop's conditic is 7 points higher than it was a yei ago and a little more than a poii below the 10 year July 25 average A production of 11,450,00 bal was forecast from the condition Jui 25, which was 70.7. Production la year was 11,329,755 bales and tl condition on July 25 a year ago w; 67.1. The 10 year average conditit on July 25 is 75.6 per cent. Condition of the crop by states c July 25 was: Virginia 74, North Carolina 7 South Carolina 77, Georgia 68, Flo ida 64, Alabama 67, Mississippi 7 Louisiana 71, Texas 74, Arkansas 7 Tennessee 76; Missouri 81; Oklah ma 85; California 85; Arizona 8 all other states 85. COTTON MEETING IN COLUMBI Reports From Every County i State Will be Heard?R. C. Hamer to Preside Columbia, August 3.?Eac eounty in the State will be asked 1 send 100 delegates to the mammot meeting to be held in Craven Hal this city, on Wednesday, Augui 18th, at which reports will be r< ceived from the campaign now b1 ing conducted over the State ft the erection of cotton warehouse the employment of cotton grade] and for an increase in the membe ship of the American Cotton Assi c'iation. ry TT IA ? (. +1 iv. *_ . nuiiiei, |jxcsiuciii> ui <-i South Carolina division of the J merican Cotton . Association, sai DURING the past ten y the manure and lime s time of many wagon n '. hill stuck to the wagon and Over rough mountain roads, logging camps, these wagons Thus the fame of the Tl the demand grew steadily gi Tough Highland Their plant is located in mighty forests of mountain h; is hard?the climate severe, fight for life. So it grows ! dose-grained and tough?we It has nearly twice the strei grows in softer ground, whi brash. The white oak, grc conditions, develops a similai The oak and hickory are < shelter and kept there from so piled that the air can ci Mp dries in it, THE ? ' I " ~~~ " I last night that it was hoped to make N the meeting on August 18 the big-' gest ever held in the state. The J in president of each county branch of i the cotton association will be asked j he said, to appoint 100 delegates] 'and to see to it that they attended 'e the meeting. ie A trophy cup will be awarded the 1 2r county which makes the best show- i 13 ing in the campaign now in pro- < grass. The contest for the cup is ex-J* ^ pected to be very keen. Reports re-^ ceived from over the state, Mr. : ?" Hamer said, indicate that all of the ' ie counties are going to make a good : showing. Invitations have been extended to j ie secretary of agriculture, E. T. >n Meredith and Gov. W. P. C. Hard- , ing of the federal reserve board to , er delivere the principal addresses at >n the big meeting. It is probable that : a* several other well known men will n*ibe invited. Final arrangements for ,the big meeting will be worked out ; es| n the next few days. le i J. FRANK HANLEY *e , KILLED IN WRECK i ' as . ,n Was Former Governor of Indiana i And Candidate for President I j Dinnison, Ohio, Aug 3.?J. Frank < "^Hanley, former governor of Indiana r",and candidate for president on the Prohibition ticket in 1916, and Dr. (< and Mrs. Gaker of Kilgore, Ohio, 1 ?" were killed six miles from here * early today when a Pennsylvania | freight train struck the automobile i ? , d ,in which the party were driving to | A Kilgore. | All three suffered fractured 1 n skulls and crushed bodies and nei-l ther recovered consciouness fter be-(< I j ling brought to a local hospital. Mr. jHanley died at 0 a. m., Mrs.. Baker :h at 11:30, and her husband at 5:30 p.1 ;o m. ;h| Dr. andMrs. Baker had met Mr. : 1, Hanley in Dinnison this morning ?' st and were driving him to their home | ?- in Kilgore, 20 miles from here. (' 2-j The automobile drove across the 1 >r tracks, back of one freight train | s, and directly in front of another. 1 re The automobile was struck square- i r* Jy5 j Mr. Hanley was enroute to Car-'] rollton, where he was to have de- ] ie livered an address tomorrow. He ! I- had intended to spend the day with [ id the Bakers at their home in Kilgore. | Made In the I . i _ it j i me narawooa ears the automobile, Some say thi preader occupied the hardwood regioi lakers. But Thorn- such a wear-pr to the farmer trade. true. For good, through swamps, at no man can mal did duty daily. But much is iornhill spread, and plant. Materia reater. and come out a ! Hickory man does but a , J, . t to pcrfcction. the very shadow or m ickory. The ground A Cuu The wood has to But to the rr sturdy and strong? hill long-wearin 11 nigh unbreakable. ago they attrac lgth of hickory that wagon building, ch is usually brittle- provements, ani wing under similar ceived their just toughness. Together the; Iried outdoors under than had ever b' three to five years? went before. Tk. T i IWUiaiW M Uw JUCl Uo ailUYV the value of Th ;tark vehicle c * BETTER DAIRY CATTLE ; ? I Dr. Preitlj Pleads For Better Cow* | In County?Jersey Auocia- [ tioni Have Been Formed |I [ May I be permitted to call at- 5 tantion to the notable progress that is being made in the improvement i of the dairy cow in our county. Few i of our own people are aware of j what has been accomplished, and!" fewer still can correctly estimate . I the far reaching consequence of thejl measures that have been adopted. J | I Under the efficient leadership of I W. A. Rowell, County Agent of the E Cooperation Extension Work, | Jersey Associations have been form- jj ed in different sections of the coun- J ty, each association embracing ff from four to six neighborhood clubs r with an aggregate membership of ? probably one hundred and fifty, p Each club has purchased a bill from the best strains of blood in the Jersey world. Four of them came from the famous herd of the Hood Farm, Lowell, Mass.; four from the I herd of J. A. Shanklin, Camden, S. J| C.; four from the Allendale herd of jj Kentucky. I Each of the bulls is from Register f 5 of Berit Cows; that is, from cows that averaged above five hundred pounds of butter a year. At the I end of a two year's 1 period three I bulls will be exchanged by the vari- 1 ous clubs constituting as Associa- | ions, in order to prevent in-breed- j in?. Z By a conservative estimate, J hese twelve high-bred sires will in- j crease the value of the dairy cows j f the county in very few years one g hundred per cent, anl at a cost to he individual members of the vari us clubs that is purely . nominal. J Well authenticated experiments in ther sections show that an increase 1 has been attained in a single gener- I ation. A moment's reflection will I onvince thoughtful people that I this movement is worthy of consid- 2 eration. [ The time has come when? we must { widen the sphere of our activity, I and include other Interests that'|j have been neglected to our interest. ? No array of facts is necessary to f prove that the common cow is a j ^ liability rather than an asset on ny farm. * ' 5* h Our further step in this scheme j 0 " f leart ^ C R# . a] p crmn s w V sir location in the heart of tfifl a i is the reason why they can build t] oof wagon. And this is partly) } f , tough oak and hickory are things f Ice. I due to their modern labor-saving !. is start at one end1 of the plane finished wagon at the other. Each! a single task, and he does that tasli 11 a n of Master Builders ien are due many of the TKora* gt light-running features. Years ted to their plant the masters of . They asked these men for imd the men who made them re-' : reward. v y worked out more improvements t mo moAf in fVi<> fu7i>nhr vcaw n c you a Thornhill and demonstrate a ornhUI construction. cew-N) \ OMPANY : ?,... ??. s " b pugfiiigraiiiiaiafEiafEia Don't Lei That ANDEP | This is a i Everythi: solutely Stores is Lower I j Pay. We are M< and we are your pure} f move our i Lots of ed. W1 ASK? ; J. I r??nnnaaaaqfl ratlUUUUMlMMMM* progress is urgently needed bj e members of the Associations. Every one of them should pur ase at least one thoroughbrec w, and in doing this only female: the best breeding should be se ;ted. This is a matter of first im rtance. The auction sale of the Shanki herd at Camden on 7th and 8tt Aug. will probably furinsh an op rtunity to buy at a reasonabh ice; but in any case prices shoulc a surbordinate consideration lly the best blood will give the st results. DR. F. Y. PRESSLY. WHOLESALE PRICES OF BEEF SHOW A DECLINI Chicago, Aug. 3.?The wholesal ice of beef declined throughout tb ist on an average of 10 to 15 pe ?nt between June 26 and July 24 ie American institute of meat pack s announced today. The decline ii ie cheaper cuts was greater than ii ie better grades, due, the statemen iys, to a heavy demand for choic eats. NOTICE OF ELECTION. Whereas, more than one-third o ie resident electors and a like pre ortion of resident free holders o ge of twenty-one years of Publi chool District Number 29 of Abbf ille County, South Carolina,, know s Sunny Slope Public School Dii rict with the lines hereinafter se orth, have filed their petition askin or an election on the question of ii uing bonds of the amount of Fou 'housand Dqllars, bewaring lnterej t the rate of six per cent per ai um, payable annually, wnlch bone re to be payable twenty years froi ate thereof and are to be of the di Aminofinn n f On? TTnnHrprl Dnllai ach, numbered from one to fort; nclusive, and to be dated Septembe st, 1920, and whereas, tne said p< ition fully complies with me pr< isions of an act entitled, '"An A< o provide for the issuing ot Bont f Public School Districts in Sout Carolina" and amendments therei ,nd as provided by Sections 1743 l .749, inclusive, of the Code of Lav if South Carolina, Vol. 1, 1912, an amendment thereto of General A embly in 1919, and said amount < londs does not exceed eight percei rarEfgfaiaiaiafiUiUMifgfaia t It Slip \ [SON'S Big Rei ft111 Coing On i Bona Fide CAS1 ng in our two St< Every Article i Being Sold at 'rice than you ( wing to Greenwi giving you eve lases than it wo itock. / New Goods beir by |Pay More i ANDERS I , fiiuzjEJznifEfliraJiirEfErBjn j i turn of the assessed valuation of th< property of such Public School Dis . trict for taxation. I Notice, is hereby given that on Sat ; urday August 14th, 1920 at Littl - Mountain School House in said Put* -, lie School District in Abbeville Coun j ty, South Carolina, an election wil j be held up on the question of author II izing the issuing of bonds to- th . | amount of Four Thousand Dollars ; bearing interest at the raze of sto I i percentum per annum, payable an . j nually, with principal due and pay> j able twenty years from Septembei j 1st, 1920, principal and interest payable at Planters Bank, in Abbeville i South Carolina. Should the said elecItion result in favor of the said issue j of bohds, that trustees of Public School District, a corporation Bound>ed as follows: Union Public School . District, Number 28, Antreville Pub j lie School District Number 27 . Brownlee Public School^ Districi ; Number 25, and Little River. As is i ^ ore fully indicated by survey mad t j by JK. IS. Cheatham, Engineer on Julj j 23rd, 1920, a Plat of whicn Is on fil j in the Office of the Clerk or Court o j Abbeville County, South Carolina, i Will issue the said bonds of th Public School district in accordanc I PALMETTI 5 ;|| Palmetto College offers t j! raphy, Secretarial, Type counting and kindred br Palmetto College gives j g,il; Free Employment Depai ^lljj calls for trained executn irj ij in the South. We furni ilj! business colleges with | I j; struction. New equipme |i|; Day and Night School. 1 nj;i; can complete the presci S Palmetto College in less ed in any other school. M:!; sents every state in the " Pennsylvania. The reas s ;!?' known everywhere. J- sji :t : Address, Box 65, Varn or Box 173, Orangeburg Charleston, S. C. ? | The School1 That's rs ij: We Pay Your Railroad -I PALMETT aaaaaaaaaaaajB four Mind || noval Sale Is !j ?!i E I " !| | Hi Sale of |j Dres. Ab- fi in Both [! a Much [ i - Ordinarily S I I nd Sept. 1 ij n more on ij j uld cost to 11 ig includ- |! than We 1 ON CO. I lamanraiaiEranniaaiffi ? * . 5 with the authority given Dy the Act of the General Assembly aDor* . referred to' and amendments thereto, 1 . section 17.43-1749, Code of Law S. C. Vol. 1, 1912, and amendment . . thereto of General Assembly in 1919. V; j At such election the qualified electors of said Public School District, I j * u. j with lines hereinbefore ses forth, j will be permitted to vote. Those far1 oring said issue will vote a ballot up: on which is written or printed "For Bonds." Those opposing said issue . will vote a ballot upon which will be : written or printed "Against Bonds." The polls will be opened at eight t o'clock in the forenoon, and close at . four o'clock in the afternoon. The ? following named persons will act as > managers of the election and make their return to the Board of Trusi tees of said Public School District . No. 29 known as Sunny Slope Public School District: E. T. Blanchett, Ed c Stricklin and W. W. uampsell. 5 By order of the Boards of Trus| tees of Public School District No. 29 1 :V r of Abbeville County, South Carolina, j known as Sunny Slope Public School | District. C. B. PRINCE, H. I. TAYLOK. Aug. 3, 1920 Board of Trustee#. O COLLEGE , ; horough courses in Stenog- writing, Bookkeeping, Ac- 1 l\ 1 A 1 _ 1 1_ ?_ _ . S / ancnes. a scnoiarsnip m rou a membership in our ;!; rtment We receive more i: res than all other colleges j: ish all the old established jj| teachers. Individual in- j! nt. Experienced teachers. : : Positions guaranteed. You :|; 'ibed course of study in : ; than half the time requir- j | Our student body repre- j | South and as far east as ; i ;on is Palmetto College is ; ; vllle, 8. C (Mother School) I, 8. C. or Wentworth 8t., j|j i Known Everywhere. Fare to Palmetto CollegeO COLLEGE ' '