University of South Carolina Libraries
BIG SALE OF JERSEY CATTLE < Clemson College, Oct. 16.?October 22nd is to be "Jersey Day" at the Piedmont Fair in Greenwood, and iti will be a red-letter day in up-country j Jersey circles according to J. P. ^c*|e Master, Dairy Husbandman of the ^ Extension Service, which is helping to promote the affair. The event is^ being planned cooperatively by the Piedmont Fair Association and the various Jersey Bull Associations of * the Piedmont section. A regular Jersey Bull Show will be; staged, $250.00 having been offered as prizes. Thirty or more Jersey bulls from the various bull associations in * the up-country will be entered. Ac- ^ cording to present figures there will be 3 from the McCormick association, 5 from Greenwood, 10 from Abben ville, 3 from Anderson, 6 from Laurens and 2 from Greenville. Doubt-' less others will also be entered. The ^ Piedmont Fair Association has recently completed an excellent $700 e barn for this exhibit, and every ef- v fort is being made to put on the biggest show of its kind in the South. It will be, so far as is known, the first inter-association show ever staged in the United States. Mr. E. F. Burton, a representative e of the Dairy Division of the U. sJ Department of Agriculture, will at-] , tend "Jersey Day" at the Piedmont,' Fair, will be present representing v the American Jersey Cattle Club.) cpntlpmpn will render exDert!^ uuu?enough to build i>,uuu miles 01 improved roads. At present it is estimated that the consumption of gasoline by motors is 84,000,000 barrels a year. The total consumption for all purposes is about 91,000,000 barrels. Production of crude petroleum is believed to be at its peak with an annual production of 400,000,000 barrels. But 100,000,000 barrels of gasoline can be produced from this total, leaving but y,UUU,UUU lor export aemartds. Recently oil companies have started a nationwide movement for gasoline conservation, in some places by rationing so that the demands of legiti mate motor transportation may be met.?The State. j MAINE WOMEN MUST GIVE THEIR EXACT AGE Portland, Me., Oct. 14.?Maine women must give their exact age and date of birth before being registered as voters, Associate Jus""" tice Scott Wilson of the Maine supreme court decided today. ^ assistance in organizing the new club, j which is very badly needed, because there is at present no organization P of Jersey breeders in the state. Many n of the Jersey cattle men of the state feel that this is the oportune time for spch an organization to help boost lie breed, especially since there is|P developing a decided interest ill dairy p cattle as one of the effects of the ad-j^ vance of the boll weevil| j jt There will be a sale of 24 register- j ed jersey heifers and cows at 12 O'clock. J The Jersey sale is to be held under , the auspices of the Greenwood Jer: sey Bull association, and all of the< cattle to be sold are well bred and I j. guaranteed by reputable breeders, j 1 Most of the offering consists of heif- i. II ers recently bred or old enough to breed this fall. They are a select lot,' * * i*" I ^ of popular blood lines, and good individuals. Mr. D. D. Eiliott, Wisacky, jl S. C., is sale manager, and catalogs . < ii- ?i- l j c I S1 V? tile sale may ue iiau iium iitiu. ^ ' WASTE GASOLINE tj GROWS SERIOUS v. / If each of the 7,000,000 motor ve-jh hides in the United States wasted 0 half a gallon of gasoline a day, the^ total amount of fuel wasted would be; 1,332,250,000 gallons annually?$333 062,500 thrown away yearly. jti * T^iese figures, estimated by the 31 truck fire department of the Good- ^ year Tire & Rubber company, indicate that the waste of gasoline thru-' , out America has assumed serious pro-1 portions and that there is an imme. diate need of conservation. If the drivers of all passenger cars and motor trucks were careful to coast up to stops, on down grades, had carburetors properly adjusted, did not race their motors when starting and did not let run idle, 8000,000000 gallons of gasoline could be saved annually. At an average price of 25 cents a gallon, the total saving in money would amount to $200,000, :OTTON MILLS RUN K NO MORE IN RUSSIA ndustry Has Gone to Piece* Under Bolshevism. , IV London, Oct. 16.?Russia's grvat >re-war cotton industi'y"- has suffered to such an extent during the revoution that it is doubtful whether nany of the mills ever will be able ! o c operate agai ? says Sir /Charles ^ tfacara, an English authority in the ^ world's cotton trade, in an interview ^ n the Yorkshire Post. \ Based upon information obtained rom an Englishman who recently re-i 1 -r ^ uiiicru iiuiu xvudo ay ? hcl j iui j.i . cars he was the manager of a large , tton factory a^r Moscow, Sir 'tarles estimates thai of the 9,000,- U 00 spindles running i.; Russia before ' he revolution not more than 200,000 r 300,000 are now operating. ! ? The experience of 'the English manager of the Moscow factory were ? old as an example of the methods n C1 mployed by revolutionists in dealing ^ nth one of Russia's great industrial ssets, the textile factories in the ^ loscow district. This particular mill arried on all the processes from cot- ^ on spinning to the finished product, S1 7,000 workers having been employd under normal operating conditions 111 When the Bolsheviki assumed pow- 2 r the whole cotton industry was na- ^ ionalized. At every mill committees hl re re formed and finally, in October SI 919, a decree was issued that all rho had been connected with the1' ormer owners would have to leave.) Vith the experts gone, the mill stop-jni ed. After a time attempts were tl lade to re-start it, but it was al- cl io$t impossible to obtain raw cotton bi mall quantities were obtained, bi rhich after being diluted with 75. ts er cent waste, was put through the a< rocesses. ict The machinery now is in a very hj ad state, in such a state, in fact m lat it would be almost impossible to} perate the factory properly, ac- A oVding to the information given Sir Sharles. Whenever machines are'amaged, other machines are denud-j d qf parts to repair them. J Sir Charles stated that there was ? | w ttle possibility of English work-|c< ten going to Russia for employment; 1 textile factories. Mills in Ger-!^1 I pi lany and Austria were turning out nly from 25 to -30 per cent, of the I ?J ormal production, he said, and Eng- , wC sh workers faced the almost impos- __ ble task of making up for the four S" nd a half years' stoppage of texle manufacture owing to the war. h Up to January 1, 1919, Germany M ad 47,637 airplanes in war. Reoiks show that 1,072,957 bombs ] rere dropped by these machines. m The famous French war decora- hi ion, the Croix de Guerre, was in- m tituted as a medal for the world tc rat only. \ Did own __ We have a pla %mi% : your re We have a numbe . * -?Com L. M. TOLBERT Manager IONE OF THE LARGE B MILLS IN PIEDMONT SECTION CLOSING lost of League Plants Are Catch- ^ ing Up With Orders, But Little Advance Business Booked m p Greenville, S. C., Oct. 16.?None f the large cotton mills in this sec ion of the Carolinas, the bee hive of i 11( ,ie textile industry in the South,' ave shut down, although practically j o cotton goods are being sold, ac- | ording to reports obtained from the ? residents of 56 cotton mills resid- J lg in Greenville. Most of the large J jxtile plants are just now catching J p with old orders, but very little dvance business has been booked.' everal smaller manufacturing com-janies in other parts of this and ad-jS >ining 9tates have either shut down, j r announced plans for curtailment j ext week. Some of the larger mills* urtailed operation at night, al-ij lough they are running on full day- j I me. 11 Cotton mill stocks, very active j J tst fall and through winter and 1 jring, rising to unprecedented high I svels, have been quiet for several j1 lonths, and have suspended from j | 5 to 50 per cent in some securties. | [ost stockholders, however, are J olding tight in the belief that next,? )ring will see renewed activity. ? m Part Time In Spartanburg ? Spartanburg, S. C., Oct. 16.?An- j ouncement was made today that} le cotton mills oi tms county win1 ose down for three days next week! gginning next Tuesday. There has!. een no agrement as to further cur-ji lilment beyond this time. Such ;tion, it is said, will depend on the mdition of the goods market which I as been very dull for the past two i ionths. ? E THENS, GA., MAN HAS ( FAILED FOR $750,000 J * . [ Athens, Ga., Oct. 16.?Settle- ? ient of the obligations of John ? felsh, local cotton factor, who re- ? jntly failed for more than three- ? jarters of a million dollars, were J roceedingly today tn accord with j i agreement between bis creditors | id relatives reached yesterday af-.gj iTOOon. ? TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, [ COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. ? Probate Court. ? i Tli* MafA# fK* OP 7 IRS. CORNELIA B. COTHRANJJJ * Deceased.) H Notice to Debtors aqd Creditors, j q All persons indebted to said estat3|S| iust settle without delay, and thoss 3 aiding claims against the estate'if iust present them properly attested * > J. S. COTHRAN, Executor,-J 9, 10. Greenville, S. C. | Ijj M mi KoH9 rarranti| Deed, you ever t i a home i n whereby you c nt money and pu . turn it over to r of desirable homes c e in, phone or write o every detai DIXIE L ti./ EGIN PAYMENT , i OF $500,000,000 LOAN TO MORGAN' i New York, Oct. 16.?Payment of le $500,000,000 Anglo-French loan aturing today, was begun _ this orning at the banking house of J. . Morgan & Company, syndicate, anagers of a county-wide group of, inks which underwrote the loan in ^ i ifififfifitBifiifflEffiRBfl: Worl .< ( At Prices ( \ \ We have just garments purchas i be ap ; Work 5 Overalls I } We also earn } gents' fu I to o " V | J.MJ i ItrT! ,or a Bunch o hink how instead of \ an convert your if a fcw rlnllare Lt IA A V/ f VAV4AV4AU ns as a navmer ind farms listed that ur representative?h 1 and show you the and coi It is understood that payments ti will involve more than $200,000,000 the greater part of which* will represent the. French portion of the a obligation. England having antici- c1 pated the major part of her state, j o: Today's payment is the largest is ever made in connection with an in- j w ternational transaction* but banking j -w interests believe that it vfill be ac- si complished with a minimum of dis- j v f k Shirts ?V 11 overalls Consistent With 7 received a large shiprr for the laboring man 1 ed late and at prices tt 1 ipicuLciieu uy puiuiidsc ihirts . . . . . > ) 1 \ V '1 f 7 at all fimes a mm rnishings and are in ] ffer you substantial s< ings in these lines. taderson Coi _ ' as f Kent Receipi easily you < paying rei rent receipts into with it each mont /vr? 1-* it un a num^. we can sell on the sm e will be pleased to ex property. WPANY I arbaijce to the money markets \ I ' I The assertion that a womfn is old. t thirty ip not borne out by the ases of the most fascinating women f history. A notable case in Roint i that of Ninon de l'Endos, the ronderful Queen of Hearts, 'who-as adored madly when she. was ixty, and at ninety received a fer- y ent declaration of love. 1 and i J 'he Times jj ipnt nf- 15 ? 7T ^ | that was f I ' if 11 ' ktilf Ifif in Wm KB i? l|?jl M v ??? ! I plete line of [| portion j, ? . ' V ' ? I. " , T.j? :| 11 npany | S liUitigfitfgnsraraigigfiilm ~ r, | mm f :an at? k a deed. Take h and " ' ) . all payment plan plain ABBEVILLE S. C.