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Spoiled By Prosperity. ? ' She?When we first went to house keeping you were glad to help wipe the dishes. He?I know, but that was when we had only two dishes to be wiped. * ?Boston Transcript. Not In Vain A tall, gaunt individual of the sort 1 ?_ .i Known in some pans ui wie ovaw aa "poor white trash," was ordered by the Judge of a certain. police court to stand up. ' "You are," said his Honor, "accused of profanity in a public place." "I jeckon I did it, Jedge," said the cracker. "A negro was tryin' to steal my hoss." ut you should know better than s * to take the name of the Lord in * vain." "It wasn't in vain, Jedge. You^ jest oughter seen that black man rnn!"?Philadelphia Ledegr. Younf Enterprise "I made a pocny, papa," said Harry. ? "TVi o+'a yiorVif mtr hnv I like to I ^ V A u 446?7 ? * ^ - -a see traits of industry in the young. How did you make it?" "That boy next doorxbet me a penny I couldn't take my fifteen dollar watch to piece?,."?Pearson's Weekly (London.) , % ' .. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OP ABBEVILLE Probate Court ' . Citation for Loiter* of Adminiatra/ ? ^ ' i tion. ' . By J. F. Miller, Esq., Judge of Probate: WHEREAS, Jennie Elizabeth Botts hntb made smit to me. to prant her letters of administration of the estate and effects of Thomas fi. Botts, late of Abbeville County, deceased. , These Are Therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kinw dred and creditors of the said Thomas H. Botts, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court - of Probate, to be held at Abbeville Court House, on the 23rd day of August 1921, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they-have, why the said Administration Bbould not ' be granted. Given under my hand and seal of the Court this 9th day of Aug. in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty one and in the 146th year of American Indey v | yvuuvuwi , v ' Published on the 10th day of Aug. 1921 in the Press and Banner and on V the Court House door for the time required by law. . ~ J. F. MILLER, 3t Judge of Probate. I EXPERTR Lots ol after t it righ work cheap] the sti mainti If you you ca ' be rea we ret | \workn 1 ness a PARTS?OL] / , We ha tied fc well c pared users ( We hi good j rolet ] prepai Nneea. Abbeville home, the former President's improvement since he left the White 1 House has been phenomenal. On March 4, he had no use . of the left 1 arm and leg. He could not lift nlmself from the chair. When he walked i from the White House door to the < automobile that took him and his J successor to the Capitol, his at- < tendants had to place his foot on every step. < Now he is using his left hand and < visitors describe his rising to greet i them without assistance and without 1 apparent effort. Mr. Wilson is devoting his time to ^ his family, his library and his health. 1 For recreation he drives and goes to ' the theatre. ' < * r MANY COURT CASES < NOW AWAIT TRIAL ;' ] Spartanlburg, Aug. 19.?Solicitor 0 i j x.J : J i. Biacicwooa xoaay requesieu Governor Cooper to call an extra ^ term of court to relieve the congestet condition of the criminal docket ( which has more than 100 cases brought over from the last term. There are eigth or nine murder cases the most import^t of \vhich is T. E. Lanford, the Southern railway engineer, whq is charged with killing 1 Guy McDowell and Glenn Poster the two taxi drivers near Gamp Wads- ' worth, during the" winter while they < were presumably out hunting hidden j whjskey., A mistrial was ordered be- ] cause of the illness of one of the < inrniM was taken with leakaore i of the heart near the close of the t taking of testimony. Windell Cosey, who was convicted s with a recommendation of mercy for t the killing of Whitmore near Woodruff, and who, was subsequently giv- t en a new trial will also be tried. The docket has been congested all j this year. i Teneriffe, a mountain peak in the j Canary Islands, throws a shadow 50 mile6 across the sea. The present price reduction on no fewer than 120 American-made motor cars from roadsters to limousines, is between $15 and $1400. PAIRING I m f people do repairing, 8 i fashion. But we do 9 t. We do efficient || : as promptly and p| [y as is consistent with B mdard of service we m arin. m i ivfl leave your car here m in rest assured it will I, dy for service when I urn it to you. Our I IrnAur tkoii* KllOl., H >1^/11 IUI1V?T U1VA* nd take care to do it. D AND NEW Lve recently disman>ur second hand Maxars, and we are preto furnish parts to of this car. * * * ive on hand also a gs supply of New Chev- B parts, which we are B red to install at your g Motor Co. 1 evrolet Cars. B n i i WILSON NOT TO LEAVE, 1 CAPITAL THIS SUMMER Washington, Aug. 20.?Senator Lee S. Overman (N. C.). was notified < today by John Randolph Boiling, J acting secretary to former President i Wilson, that Mr. Wilson had declined an invitation of S. D. Hodges 1 of Hendersonvlle, N. C., to spend < the rest of the summer at Lake ' Kanuga, a resort in the Blue Ridge ] Mountains; near Asheville. Mr. Boiling was directed to say Mr. Wilson 1 was improving nicely at his S Street 1 home and would remain there. According to recent visitors to his ' WOMEN WANT TO LIFT SCALP OF AUNT ALICE I ? Washington, Aug. 20.?The wom?n are out after the scalp of Miss yice Robertson, the only woman member of Congress. The lady congreaman from Oklaloma raised a hornet's nest when she declared not a single woman in the United States qualified to sit in the President's disarmament conference. Other remarks "uncomplimentary io her sex have incited the indignation of suffrage leaders and my, my, the things they are saying about 'Miss Alice!" Comes Miss Sue White of Nashville, Tenn., official of the Women's World Disarmament Committee, and kfce National Party, , in a statement rhuTsday declaring the only woman member of Congress, is a "cat's paw and mouthpiece of the Republican leaders to say the things about women they don't dare to say." "When she said a woman was not qualified to sit in the disarmament :onferenpe she was merely expressing the attitude of the Republican i ?? -- : J ?*: Trn.:i? itroucia, roiu iuc? ty iiii-c. "The men of her party are using tier to make the holding of offices by women unpopular. They don't want i woman in the disarmament conference, but they don't dare to tell the women thait, so they use Miss Robertson to make it knoflm. "The women of the country will aold the Republican leaders responsible for her utterances. She is a Republican before she is a woman. Her chief concern is the Republican party, not the interests of the wornav oritr rwfVnr nl a ata ^ \ en va on jr vuijci tiaoo. Youth, The Radical Admiral Sims said at a dinner par;y in New York:N "Youth is always an extremist, rake, for instance, the battleship question. We middle-aged sailors are iust now asking ourselves exactly low much the submarine has impaired the value of the battleship, bul fouth has got the question settled foi jood and all. " 'What is tjie value of the battleship to-day?' I said to a naval cadet ^t a luncheon. s - . ', " 'No damned value at all,' he anjwered. "Then he thought a moment and idded: " 'Of course, she's got a very nice deck for dancing.' "?Detroit Free Press. ?Watch-the label on ronr oaoer ant renew your subscription promptly. W.A.HARRIS FUNERAL SUPPLIE8 EMBALMING and . \ Auto Hearse Service PHONES Day 395 Night 134 MASTER'S SALE The State of South Carolina, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. Court of Common Pleas. C. H. TAYLOR and S. J. HESTER, Plaintiffs against J. J. GEORGE, Defendant. By authority of a decree of sal( by the Court of Common Pleas foi Abbeville County, in said State made in the above stated case, I wil offer for sale, at public outcry, ai Abbeville C. H., S. C., on salesadj in September, A. D. 1921, within th< legal hours of sale the following des cribed land, to wit: Ail that tract piece or parcel of land situate, lyinf and being in Abbeville County, ii the State aforesaid, and in the towi of Calhoun Falls, more accurately described by a map of the town o: Calhoun Falls Investment Company made by DesCamps and Cunninghan in September 1907, and revised b: C. J. DesCamps, December 14th 1909, said lots being shown on sai< map as lots three and four in Blocl M, and having a frontage of twenty five feet each on Cox A\?., a deptl of one hundred and six feet .an< having thereon two two-story bricl buildings, occupied by Mrs. Wein raub and by N. D. Sanders. TERMS OF SALE: CASH. Pur chaser to pay for papers and stamps THOS. P. THOMSON, Master A. C., S. C. Aug. 19. 3t-oaw. camels < 7 ^ i S\ T1 smo( they !Perf CIG 1 ' > ^ wani D) r-^l in r v. ' RUM SHIP SEIZED Law of 1799 Used as Basis For Act. Much Liquor Aboard. I 1 . / New York Times. 5 The Henry L. Marshall, a rum1 laden schooner captured beyond the three-mild limit on August 2, while flying the British flag formally I was seized by the Treasury Department on Friday night, it was announced yesterday, when three writs - against the schooner and its cargo were filed in the office of the Clerk of the United States District Court. The cargo consists of 1,400 cases of whiskey. The writs of libel will be served by publication in one or more newspapers and possibly upon Charles S. Hyde, counsel for the four members of the rum ship's crew,, who were held ,as material witnesses when the schooner was overhauled by the " Coast Guard Cubter Seneca off New Jersey. The Maritime act of 1799, fixing twelve miles at sea as the limit of approach for vessels engaged in fraudulent pursuits was (invoked against the Marshall. Major John > Holly Clark, Assistant United States j^iiimiiiiiiiitiiitiiimioiiiiumuiiiiituititiiMiiitrmMiitttMimfiHiiimiiituiiiiimnijiiiiiiJMimMitiinu J =5 . ! | i| You may | cure a cu^ton ;| with a barga x is ' but it takps qu; 11 i ' II ty to hold hin i: J 11 ? ~" If . If 1 = 1 are made foi hink for The: lch folks know real quafity?; ley prefer Camels because Car jthest, mellowest smoke they love the mild, rich flavor of ectly blended?and because 1 ARETTY APTF.PT A STTC ke every man who does his < t fine tobacco in your cigarett amels. id, mind you, no flashy packa sxtra wrappers! No cosily fri t improve the smoke any mo: mpons. it QUALITY! Listen! That1 i ;.;'am r. #UU1\ U. S. TIRED OF ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE ACTION, HE SAYS York Beach, Maine, Aug 20.?The s United States is tired of the fantical I dictatorship of the Anti-Saloon c League, Senaor George H. Moses of .* New Hampshire asserted Thursday ? upon a visit here. He said that in no other way could he explain the large e vote cast against the anti-be^r bill, c by thp Senate, which bill, the senator a fcaid would be more properly describ- i ed as a bill to make Congress the t censor of the medical profession and i to put Congress into every kitchen <1 to analyze the flavoring extracts < used by housewives. t Senator Moses said he had high hopes for the coming disarmament, but that he would oppose any convention which would rob the United States of its relative naval i strength. He said the conference could accomplish helpful results if it would approach thw question from the standpoint of the taxpayer. i District Attorney in charge of the investigation, said that the owners of the schooner had not yet been identified. 1 ! iiihiiiitiiiiMiitiuMiiiiHinifiiiftiaiimiinnwtiiMita* NiiiiMdiimitMiiiiiHiiiiiNiiMiiiiiMiiiiiiMMiMiiniiumwi rnmmmmmmmmummmmmmmmmmmmmt iiifniiiiiiMiiUHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwtnnmriiinnmHitMittuii II ... Static seier How's y( business ali- Now's a r? look it o Ll? ready for We. can ah der for Eng for every pui The Press ^'rnnrmwrimS * iiuiuiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNuiuHiui<itfTii y , i c-i M M 1 . " v- * j| ; > J Men who 1 m selves and DEMAND it nels give them the can buy?because choicest tobaccos, . Camels leaye NO >wn thinking, you es. You'll find it ige just for show. , 1 fjj ills! These things re than premium^ s CAMELS I 1 If *1 P 'L J. UTIOLM TU.c? C* ~1 LION HUNTERS M When, the late President Roosevelt _ . I riH Via qati TT<*nmilt: wATi/f. trv "RiritWh Sast Africa in 1909, they were ac- 1 tfmipanied on their hunting trip by he late F. C. SelouB, one of the l 1 jreatedt old hunters that ever lived. Setous was particularly anxious to recnre? a specimen of?the Bast Afri:an black maned lion, but on the vhole trip he never even got a shot it one. But Theodore Roosevelt got ihree and Kermit Roosevelt eight? ind neither one of them h&d ever ' )een on an African game hunting expedition before.?rBig Game Hun;er in London Daily Mail. *, . . .. 4 I ENGRAVING 1 H of all kinds. H I Office equipment |? I and supplies. ffl Books .. StationeryB B RED FREW E s I nery i Dur supply of -i-i-* r-\ i StclLlUllciyr I good time to j >ver and get i the fall trade. j o handle your or- | raved stock yose. & Banner Co. | iiiinniiiu;>winniimmrt>upiifmnimnfniinu?ao???????^ IIIMJ m l*OflMft u a UJJITn