University of South Carolina Libraries
JAPS SOON WILL CONTROL HAWAII Honolulu, T. H., ~n. 29.?A fed eral survey commission, headed by Dr. Frank F. Bunker, of Washing ton, which recently surveyed educa- j. tion in Hawaii, in a preliminary re port declared that the "momentum" of the Japanese i*ace in Hawaii puts.' all other racial groups out of the i running in respect to numbers and j that the momentum if continued: will carry the Japanese race into an j increasingly dominant, uumcuvai i position, giving their Hawaiian born progeny in 1930 about 28 per cent| of the electorate of the territory. The report, which is freely inter spersed with tables of figures ob-| tained from federal and territorial * official sources and from the office of the Japanese consulate-general in Honolulu, says in part: "With an actual population now in the islands of 114,137 (1919) as re ported by the Japanese consulate general, against 25,000 Portuguese, the next largest group, it is clear that the Japanese race has acquired a momentum which puts all the other groups out of the running with respect to numbers. "That this momentum inevitably will carry the Japanese race into an increasingly dominant numerical position, if continued, is clearly shown by tables compiled from in formation obtained from the office of the Japanese consul-general and from the records of the territorial board of health." Dealing iwth the parallel presentl ed by the methods of adjustment to island influences represented by the Portuguese and the Japanese races, the report says: "While both groups originally were brought into the islands to satisfy the need for cheap labor on the plantations, | there in with both a pronounced tendency to seek better economic position by breaking away from the plantations and engaging in other < activities giving promise of a free and more ample life. "The Japanese are ambitious to Jjt become tenants, to own land, to set up business, to enter a profession, to rise above the category of un skilled labor and as they individual ly achieve their ambition, they are like the Portuguese, participating more and more in the affairs of the islands, socially, educationally, poli- ' tically. Furthermore, they are all at} work. There are few triflers and | idlers among them. There are now, I approximately 38,000 male and 27, 000 female adult Japanese in the is lands. A table, based upon informa- i tion obtained from the Japanese 1 consulate-general shows that 50,149 " of them are employed in gainful oc- ( cupations. { "It should be said in fairness that there are few Japanese chil- \ dren in the juvenile courts and in j institutions for delinquents; and there are DroDortionately very few ; 'Japanese among the convict labor < gangs and in the jails. Few, if any are supported by puiblic charity, nor , are any begging in the streets. i Their per capita savings bank de- , posits rank third among those of the island races, being exceeded by i the Americans and Portuguese only. "All of which activity laudable in , itself, can be explained adequately on the basis of racial qualities, in- j herent in the Japanese, of patience, j persistence, thrift, initiative, endur ance, ambition, group solidarity, coupled with acumen and astuteness which give them the ability to get on where other races have failed. Indeed, so wfell have the Japanese adjusted themselves to island condi tions, and so rapidly are they in creasing in the numbers of Hawaii an-iborn children, that this group soon will have a majority of voters of the islands." The commisisoner's report then deduces from a table of births of Japanese children about 1898 toi 1919 that 12,216 Hawaiin-born I Japanese will have become old! enough to vote by 1930; that 22,921 j more will have' been added to the! list of eligible voters by 1940, mak- ] ing a total during a 22-year period of 35,137. Deducting 13 per cent to cover possible losses by removal and death, the report estimates that by1 1940 there will.be an aggregate of Japanese voters in the territory of 30,857, including 287 now register ed. Pointing to the fact that Japa nese children in the public schools of Hawaii in 1910 were 27.72 per cent of the total enrollment and hat in 1919 this school group stood at 40.55 per cent of the whole, the report say? this "indicates that the HALF YOUR LIVING WITHOUT MONEY COS! Cotton Production Costs Can Be Cut in Half By Food And Grain Making And Saving AtJanta, Georgia?(Special.)?"High prices for cotton, such as we had a year ago cannot reasonably be expeot ed (or a long time to come. European countries that normally use half our crop are so thoroughly disorganized and paralyzed in a business way that they will not be able to take the usual quantities and pay high prices for many years to come," said H. G. Hastings, - President of the great Southeastern Fair. "This situation which we cannot | control, calls for lower costs of male | ing cotton as well as reduction in cot I T'U rt nnt^irant flofoal I iuu atioago, xuc 4uiuauov, I and most effective way to reduce cot ton making cost is to produce on one't own acres every pound of food, grain and forage needed for family, tenant* and laborers and live stock. "The situation requires chickens, hogs, milk cows and acres of corn, oats, wheat, forage and miacellane ous crops from which to feed them Last, but not least, in importance, It the home vegetable garden which is the quickest and cheapest source of food in the world. "Most folks here in the South don't take the home garden seriously and thereby make a great mistake. There i are too many of the 'lick and a prom | iso' sort of gardens and mighty few | of the real sure enough kind. "We have been told repeatedly by those who plan and prepare for a real , arden, plant it, tend it and keep it teplanted through the season, that it furnishes half the family living at nc money cost except the small amount spent for the seeds needed. ? "The garden is, or rather should be. the earliest planted. It brings food the quickest. It starts cutting store bills for food the first week anything is ready to use. A little later, half or more needed for the table comes out of the garden. "If rightly tended and replanted it supplies food all summer tfnd tall, the surplus above dally needs goes into rans nr in rlHpri fnr winter use. Yes. the right kind of garden iB a life saver, and we all need a life-saver of this kind in 1921." \ > i SHILOAH >i V Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mundy, of Greenwood, came up to see the for mer's sister Sunday, Mrs. E. H. Long, who has a very sick child. Miss Zelma Mundy, who is teach ing school near Abbeville, spent the week-end with her father, Mr. W. L. Mundy. Miss Evelyn Botts and brother, Alton Botts, of Due West,. spent last week-end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. 0. Botts. Mrs. Sam Hodges, of near Rileys, is spending a few days with her sis-1, :er, Mrs. Ernest Long. jj Mrs. G. W. Mundy was the guest ; af Mrs. Edwin Brown Saturday af ternoon. i Mrs. Ella Botts is spending some- ; time with her daughter, Mrs. J. P. Robertson in Greenwood. 1 Mrs. J. A. Stevenson and Miss ( Zelma Mundy were shopping in ( Greenwood Saturday. Mr. Joe Mundy has returned home . after spending some time in Green- , sv'ood with his son, Mr. Frank Mun- ( iy- . i Mr. G. W. Mundy was shopping in ( Greenwood Friday. place in the electorate that the Japa nese will occupy in 1930 and again in 1940 mav. indeed, be underesti mated." The concrete deduction then follows: "Whether or not the Japanese de sire to achieve political control, without doubt, within a few years, they will be in a position to do so if they choose." Interesting comparisons of the de fs'j i' . .vn'arriage ulge in by the different races In the islands next are taken up, which brings the commission to the conclusion that, < "In general, Japanese marry only Japanese. It is clear that all races, except the Koreans an 1 Japanese, are fusing rapidly through inter marriage, but that the Japanese ?L\JUJ iz> niaiiiwaiiiiii^ ko laviai uio- j tinctiveness." Honolulu, T. H., Jan. 4.?Judge Ben. B. Lindsay, famous juvenile judge' of Denevr, Colo., has accept er! an invitation to survey the juve nile delinquent situation in Hono lulu, according to an announcement' just made by Judge Janes J. Banks of the Honolulu juvenile court. Judge Bank? added that an effort will be made to have Judge Lindsay come during the legislative session, which opens February 16, and dur ing: which matters regarding the juvenile c<nirt and tho proposed' court of domestic relations are ex-j nected to corns up. \ V V COLD SPRINGS. M v \>\\\'>\>>T' > X N % N X ? Mrs. J. D. Winn left last Monday for Columbus, Miss., where she will spend some time with her sister who is ill. Mr. and Mrs. Christia Cotftran and baby, of Toney Creek, spent last week with Mr. W. B. Uldrick and family. Mr. Frank Uldrick spent Satur day and Saturday night with Mr. Tollie Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Newell and little grandson, Westfield, spent last week-end at the home of Mr. Otis Smith. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Uldrick, Jr., nnH Mr. anH Mrs. C. F. Cothran and baby, spent last Tuesday with Mr. L. T. Uldrick and family. Miss Mildred Winn spent Satur day night with Mrs. S. A. Cochran. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hagen and Miss Ruby Uldrick spent last Satur day in Abbeville with Mrs. Mattie Bowen. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Newell spent Friday night at the home of Mr. B. A. Uldrick. Miss Mattie Uldrick and little Sister, Francis, spent several days last week with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Kay. Mr. Joe Winn and sister, Miss Mil dred spent Wednesday night and Thursday at the home of Mr. T. M. Cochran. W!co Piikw rftbirnorf VinmA lUiOO X* U KfJ W?V???V1? ?V...V last Sunday after spending a few days with Mrs. F. E. Hagen and family. Mrs. J. R. McCombs and two chil dren, Rachel and Winton, spent last Saturday with Mrs; T. F. Uldrick. Miss Lula Mann, of AJbbeville, spent Saturday night with Miss Sara Uldrick. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Uldrick and daughter, Alma, spent Saturday night at he home of Mr. W. B. Ul drick. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Newell and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs". D. E. Newell. Miss Amy and Mr. Claude Uldrick spent Saturday night at Mr. W. B. Uldrick's. NO COMMISSIONS TO INDUCE TRADE Washington, Feb. 2.?Issuance of | orders requiring 35 ship chandlery and repair companies at South At lantic and Gulf ports to refrain from' giving "cash commissions and other gratuities to induce trade" was an nounced today by the Federal Trade Commission. The orders were issu ed as "consent orders" the announce ment said, the companies effected, ex pressing a willingness to discontinue the practice of giving presents and cash gratuities to the officers of ships contracting for supplies or repairs. The commission reported that it was making an investigation of the alleged practice among companies at other Atlantic ports. The House ju diciary committee now has under consideration a bill by Representa tive Sims of Tennessee making it a misdemeanor to accept or offer mon ey or other things of value in con nection with the purchase of sup plies for ships. Hearings on the bill [ will begin before the committee on February 12. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN This Gullible Gink has been Monkey- I ing with an Ouija Board until he's ! Scared himself Plum Stiff. Ain't ' science Wonderful when any Common Dub can buy a 98c weeja board at the Corner Drug Store and hold Henrt To-Heart confabs with Celebrities like William Shakespeare, Cleopatra and Gyp the Rlood? NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. Notice of Settlement and Applica tion for Final Discharge. Take Notice, That on the 31st day of January 1921, I will render a fin al account of my actings and doings as administrator of the estate of E. E. Williams, deceased, in the office of Judge of Probate for Abbeville County, and on the same day will apply for a final discharge from mv trust as such. All persons having demands a gainst said estate will present them for payment on or before that day, proven snd authenticated or be for ever barred. E. A. WILLIAMS, 1, 14?3; Administrator. CITATION FOR LETTERS OF AD MINISTRATION The State of South Carolina. County of Abbeville. Probate Court. By J. F. MILLER, Esq., Judge of Probate: Whereas, James S. Cothran hath made suit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration of the estate and effects of Wa.de S. Cothran, late of bbeville County, deceased. These Are Therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Wade S. Cothran, deceased that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Abbeville Court House, on the 2nd day of Feb. 1921, after publication hereof, atll o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause if any they have, why the said Ad ninistration should not be grahted. Given under my hand and seal of Court this 19th day of January in the year oi' our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty one and in the 145th year of American Inde pendence. Published on the 20th day of Jan., 1921 in the Press and Banner and' n the Court House door for the timf required by law. J. F. MILLER, 3t. Judge of Probate. MASTER'S SALE The State of South Carolina. County of Abbeville. Court, of Common Pleas. CARRY GARY, Plaintiff against GEORGE WILLIAMS, MARSHALL WILLIAMS and others, By authority of a Decree of Sale by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, in said State, made n the above stated case, I will offer for sale, at Public -Outcry, at Abbe ville C. H., S. C., on Salesday in February, A. D. 1921, within the le al hours of sale the following des cribed land, to wit: All that tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being !i Abbeville County, near the City )f Abbeville, in the State aforesaid, containing Fourteen (14) Acres, more or less, and bounded on all sides by land now belonging to T. A. Put nam, and being known as the Charity Pressly place and being the same land conveyed to her by Thos. C. Perrin md others. TERM OF SALE?CASH. Pur chaser to pay for stamps and papers. THOS. P. THOMSON, Master A. C.. S. C. ! I GERMANY BATTLING TO REGAIN SILESIA London, Jan. 29.?Germany and Poland are battling bitterly to win the plebescite in Upper Silesia March 15. By this plebiscite the people will determine whether they will come under German or Polish rule. Both countries want this territory because of its great coal resources. Germany, which has had to sur render the Saar Basin coal regions to France, for 15 years, says it will mean total ruin if it loses the Sile sian coal fields. roiand claims she must have them to fuel her industries. Both sides charge unair campaign methods, intimidation and violence. Though most of the people speak Polish, the territory has been under German rule for 700 years. Political leaders in Germany talk of violence if the allies award the territory to Poland, Vice versa with Polish leaders. The Polish legation announces that the Polish general staff is reor ganizing a regular army according to military standards. But it denies: That the army is being mobilized in full strength: That the Poles are concentrating troops on the Esthonian, Latvian and Rumanian frontiers; That there are prospects of re newal of warfare between Poland and Bolshevik Russia. The legation blames the Germans for the baseless mobilization report, which is to depress Polish currency and credit, to otherwise weake^i the country, and to influence the plebis cite. It reports that five classes of the army have been demobilize and that it now numbers only 300,000 men. The legation says the Polish high command expects a peace treaty to be signed with the Bolsheviki in February. In China all the land belongs to the state, and a trifling sum per acre, scarcely altered through long centuries, is paid as rent. blliUfcK TO TH1 FOR every crop you plan to I especially designed to in< soil. For prize crops of c Fertilizer. 90 to 95 bushels of acre are records established thri izer on Southern farms. They success throughout the South f has used them and he will say: PLANTERS! DOUBLES 1 For many years Planters Ferti the South's most successful farr sible to produce bigger, better < this year?GET RESULTS 1 Consult our Agent for Free Ad\ write us direct?TODAY. Itr: Planters Fertilizer MANUFA Charleston - - ? "Some people of iHfiiey by nc Tli. ..,. . nt; whn linvft at sc-Jiiii funds appreciat obscrv 11 ion. If y<r: mvc ever experie of ia ;i s short of money, con.;' >r something-? 1 > 11 i: : i ? ti Savings Accoi * abk- r ':t!g that acconi]] fiiiitit. i-i reserve. JfcT*-"r?EST PAID O i v r? ^ ranter "The Frien ABBEVI The hu-'rie of Over 1( illmwrr :xiEBZ2EBn THE SUCCESS FAMILY From the London Opinion: The father of Success is Work. The mother of Success is Ambition The oldest son is Common Sense, ome of the other boys are: Perse verence, Honesty, Thoroughness, Foresight, Enthusiasm, Co-operation. The oldest daughter is Character. Some of the sisters are: Cheerful ness, Loyalty, Courtesy, Care, Eco nomy, Sincerity, Harmony. The baby is Opportunity. Get acquainted with the "old man" and you will be able to get along pretty well with all the rest of the family. The Australian government paid ts soldiers the best salaries during the World War. COMPLAINT TO SELL LANDS TO PAY DEBTS. The State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville In Probate Court. CATO RAPLEY, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate of Nellie Greene, deceased, Plaintiff, against Fleming Rapley, Ben Rapley, Mary Rapley, Eulus Rapley, George Rap ley and Florence Rapley, Defendants. Pursuant to an order of the Pro bate court,'I will sell at public outcry at Abbeville, C. H., South Carolina, on salesday in February, 1921 next, for the payments of debts, the fol lowing described real estate, belong ing to the estate of Nellie Greene, deceased, situate in the County of Abbeville/ in the State aforesaid, to wit: All that tract or parcel of land! known as the Nellie Green place con 4-aini'nrv Ttirilim Aproa m AM fiV and being bounded by lands of Jim Klugh, Robert Jay place, Miller lands and public road. This land will be sold at the risk of the former purchaser. TERMS CASH?Purchasers to pay for stamps and papers. J. F. MILLER, 1, 21, 3t. Judge of Probate YIELDS E ACRE sow, there's a Planters Fertilizer rrease the productiveness of your Dtton, corn, truck?use Planters corn?1 to 2 bales of cotton per DUgh use of this reputable fertil have been used with unvarying or years. Ask the farmer who FERTILIZER lizcr has been the preference of ners, because it has made it pos AT'nr-TT O l,i wpo. wtijr uci v.wuiu "HAT WILL PLEASE YOU. ice, Information and Prices?or neans dollars to you. ' & Phosphate Co. CTURERS - South Carolina learn the vaue it having any." one time or other been e keenly the truth of that need the trying sensaticn , make that experience int and enjoy the comfori lanies the possession of a N SAVINGS. s Bank ,J1.T PU?L-" iuijt uaiuv LLE, S. C. DOO Bank Accounts.