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SLIGHT HOPE FOR GORDON AS CAMP Washington, July 24.?:There is slight hope that Camp Gordon will be selected as the one southern camp under the economy program of the war department which calls for the abandonment of six camps and the retention of only three in the. entire country. Secretary Weeks announced Saturday the intention of the depart ment to abandon six 01 trie nine camps now in existence. He intii mated that Camp Dix, New York, and Camp Lewis, Washington, would be retained. The third camp, he said, would be located either in the middle west or in the south- There is a possibility of action favoring the south because of climatic conditions, i?i j-i.~ TXToat- is nnlllnc for i/Uls UIJ.C Wiuuiv vvvv* .v rr ? _ recognition and it would not surprise observers here to see the war department designate Camp Grant, near Chicago, as the third camp. The chief competitor of Camp Gordon is Camp Jackson, at Columbia, S. C. The Atlanta camp now is In process of dismantling. The Columbia camp is retained and just now is the headquarters of the Fifth division. ! v An impartial survey of the situation this afternoon Indicates that Jackson rather than Gordon will be retained as the southern camp if the south wins out over the middle west. Undoubtedly Caimp Gordon possesses superior advantages, particularly in transportation facilities, ~ 1' " over the ssoutn <jarouna. tamp, uuo it must be taken into account that J Gordon has been allowed to "run down" and the dismantling is under way. So far, members of the Geor' gia. delegation have been unable to get approval for its use even as a hospitalization site. ' The Public Health Service has decided to retain the " hospital which it now is leasing at Augusta, Ga., for sick soldiers. It plans to ibuy this hospital. There is a tentative plan for establishing a site either in Georgia or South Carolina for the housing of incapicitated soldiers of the negro race. Camp Gordon might ?mmmm???? I ? S3 Mm j ' - Sale Starte .... ' nr Iw e ar j gui Furnishings, We have a $ Furnish or be Our reason fc ready cash to ' /' I \ I n Jthi CHARGE A CONSPIRACY F IN COAL MINE CASE Washington, July 21.?'Counsel for coal operators in the Mingo, W. ^ Va., fields sought to show at today's w hearings before the Senate investi- a] gating committee that (mine owners e] in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Western Pennsylvtania, had conspired w with miners in an effort to unionize West Virginia mines to "destroy their competitive advantage." A. M. Belcher, for the, operators in charged that a conspiracy was enter- hi ed into 23 years ago, had existed h since and culminated a year ago in gj the strike, accompanied by disorders m in the Mingo non-union field. Opera- n tors employing union miners in the b four nearby states, Mr. Belcher contended became alarmed because w I West Vrginia coal was being mined g< ' cheaper and cutting into their mark-1 w ets. uy encouraging uuiuuuiuk ux j_, the West Virginia fields, he charged, n they hoped to increase cost of pro- j duction there, with the possibility al- o; so that output might be cut down by a recurrence of strikes. _ . c< Thomas L. Lewis, secretary of the f< New River, W. Va., Coal Operators cl Association, testified that at joint b conferences (between Union Miners la and operators competing wifh West Virginia non-union mines, the devel- a; opment of the West Virginia proper- S ties was viewed with alarm. It was tl deemed imperative, he said, that the d mines should be unionized. L be used for that, although there is ^ no real agitation behind such a sug- a gestion. Members of the Georgia ^ delegation expressed today their in- c. tentioa to ^follow closely the camp ^ situation and impress the advan- ^ tages of Camp Gordon if Secretary g Weeks decides to retain one camp p in the southern states. However, statements imade by Secretary Weeks to newspaper men and members of; congress interested indicated that the three surviving o: camps most likely ?will be located in ei the east, the middle west and on the N Pacific coast and if a southern r< * | camp is selected Camp Jackson, in (P< I South Carolina, today has the ad- e? vantage over Camp Gordon. ' P< Off T Thurj / d Wednesday Mo I ng to sell our c Less Edison Phoi OOO ofnrL- nf F -/ V/jV/W OIVV1V V/A M. ;autify your home )r making this saci i satisfy our credit* } SALE IS STF i Remember 01 ii**e *4 a \r Ul OUWJ I Prices C . ? L, KLf % ' \ RENCH TROOPS ENTRAIN FOR UPPER SILESIA < Paris, July 23.?A whole French ivision on a complete war footing ] ith heavy and light guns, airplanes < id tanks received orders tonight to < itrain for Upper Silesia. ] The orer came from Marshal Foch j ho telephoned to Premier Briand >llowing the latter's three hour < >eech on the crisis. The premier 1 >oke at an important cabinet meet- 1 tg which was held at the summer ( ome of President Mi'llerand, the otel Rambouillet. Following the jeech the ministers decided unaniicusly, that immediate action was j ecessary, without waiting for the ] ritish. Meanwhile the London and Paris ire was kept open all day while a >rt of "telephone supreme council" as going on between Briand and loyd George. Neither the French i or British Premier showed the | sast sign of giving in to the other ti their respective viewpoints. T,afo, t/vniorVit. it wm that, ft I >mpromise hovered over the horizon j >llowing the visit of the British j tiarge d'affaires to Quai d'Orsay ringing (Great Britain's "absolute ist word." According to reports Great Britain freed to haVe experts study the': ilesian question and also to have 'i le supreme council meet in the mid-' i le of August, thus "breaking in on 1 iloyd George's cherished vacation, ji Despite the French jubliancy at \ lis apparent capitulation experts J re agreed that the Franco-British I ifferences are as wide as ever, be- j ause the trouble is based on the ; andamental fact that?' England j I 'ants Germany to have Upper ilesia while France is championing ' oland. / 1 I; Much Sugar Burn*. j Beaumont, Texas, JuUy 21.?Fire .] f undetermined oigtin has destroy- 1 i the Morshan Sugar factory near;j ew Tberia, La., according to word1: jceived here. About one million I I >unds of sugar was burned with an' j rtimated loss'o^ $350,000, the re-'j art said. ' ^ If nree. sday, Fridaj I rning July 27; jntire stock of lographs and R urniture, Stoves, that will go in tl rifice is that we 1 l >rs. UCTLY SPOT Jy Three More Friday !ut Half in twc IK r l 20 - 22 - 24 i SEABOARD BUILDS STATION Chester News. The Seaboard Air Line Railway :ias let the contract for the erection >f the new passenger station after so long a time and erection of the building is expected to commence at in early date. Seaboard officials who were in Chester last Monday pleading for time evidently got an inkling that unless Chester got her new depot soon me aoove mentioned ranroaa ivas going to lose some nice business. The business men of Chester have acted in good faith with the Seaboard and granted them considerable time in the erection of the new station but they had gotten tired of being put off and numbers of them had made up their minds to take their business away from the Seaboard on account of the manner in .NiwnmiinwimntwnrmnwmMitwiiiimwcwwwwwiiwiMWiiiiHUiWMWii?WWHWW< It I > YOl J m a v cure a cu&or with a bargE 1 but it takes qu ty to hold hir I ,tl^2Zl n iyap j and Satur tnd will continu r / . Furniture and ecords at one 1 Rugs and any lis sale. nave got to rais \ CASH s Days e_i i-.. jaiuruay . JRN1 N. Main St. which the railroad company had be acted. The officials who visited here wi evidently found this out and the he letting of the contract was speeded ^e up. C< : th SUMMONS pi m State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. Court of Common Pleas. Ji Roy Clement, and the minors Helen j Clement and Ruth Clement byj their Guardian Ad Litem J. S. | Clement, Plaintiffs. against George Godfrey, Jim Donaldson, | t and if he be dead, then the un-l known heirs at law of Jim Don- w aldson, Defendants. g] You Are -Summoned and required G to answer the Complaint in this ac- C tion, of which a copy is herewith 1! served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscriber at his office at Ab- Ji sener' How's yc un' business: ali- Now's a n... look it o ready for We can als der for Ertg for every put The Press mmmmmmmmmmm I ? I I m il mm l inn day e through Saturd; House lalf off [rrif T?~^ 11UL iville Court House, South Carolina, ithin twenty days after the service' ireof, exclusive of the day of such rvice, and if you fail to answer the >mplaint within the time aforesaid, e plaintiffs in this action will apy to the Court for the relief deanded in the Complaint. J. HOWARD MOORE, Plaintiff's Attorney. ine 27th, 1921. 3 the absent Defendant, Jim Donalson, and if he be dead, then to the unknown tairs at law of Jim Donalson: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NO% ICE, that the complaint in this ac uu tucuucr witii (.lie ouuiuiuiia, vl I hich the foregoing is a copy, ' was j led in the office of the Clerk of ourt for Abbeville County, South aroilna, on the 27th day of Jane J. HOWARD MOORE, j Plaintiff's Attorney. ; 5j aly 11th, 1921. ltwk 4 wks. j aery 11 >ur supply of jj J stationery? j J good time to ver and get the fall trade. v| o handle uour orraced stock j'j yose. - & Banner Co. || || / i'Ll | jn ^^ 30 I CO ,\uS I