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AROUSING THE INTEREST OF PARENTS NEXT GREAT NEED 1 , New York Times. In common with the thousands of ycmr readers of the teaching profession, the undersigned read with great 1 interest your inspiring editorial en- > titled "A Great Civic Event" in the ' morning's Times. It is indeed grati- 1 fying that your representative paper calls attention in so interesting a 1 manner to the re-opening of the puib- 1 lie schools. We . ibelieve that, as never be- 1 fore, our New York teachers and : ? principals are fully alive to their full . duty, not only as instructors in the various scholastic subjects of our ! curriculum, but in the very important patriotic duty of developing 1 Americans not only among the 938,000 pupils, but among the parents ' of these children also.. As Superintendent Ettinger so well expressed it 1 our teachers must be "saturated with 5 a public spirit." We whose duty it is * to serve in sections" having schools 3 attended by pupils of foreign birth, I know how fully the teaching force 1 is measuring up to their full respon- 1 sibilty. 1 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. < Bids will be received by the A'd- ( beville County Highway Commis- j sioners until 12 o'clock noon, Thursrday, September 22nd, 1921, at the ] office of L. W. Keller, Superivsor for * the construction of 7.57 miles of top * soil road in Abbeville County from the city limits of Abbeville to the { Greenwood county line, better known < as the Abbeville-Greenwood road. * The work will consist of the nec- ( essary clearing and grubbing, excat vation, culvert pipe, headwalls, top- " soil, surfacing, and such other work ? or material as may be necessary to ? complete the work according to the c plans and specifications of the Coun- I ty engineer. 1 i , t Further information as to quantises and class of work to be done will be furnished by H. B. Humbert, County Engineer. Bids will be sealed and on the prescribed form, and must be accom- ^ panied by a certified check or a corporate form, and must be accompanied by a, certified rfheck or a corporate surety bond in the sum of one ? thousand dollars, made payable to J. 3. Stark, Chairman, as a guarantee ^ . that the bidder will, if awarded the . c' contract vithin ten days after no- 1 tice of award enter into written con- . tract and execute satisfatcory bond 1 for the performance thereof in the sum of one third the contract price. Oftrnmianinn Bidders must sauBiy mo ^ | of fliekr ability to perform the work. The right is expressly reserved to reject any or all bids. Done at Abbeville, S. C. this 3rd f day of September, 1921. I % J. S. STARK, Chairman, L. W. KELLER, Secretary. < Sept. 7, 3vka. s - o II I III! Ml M II II t I Motor h | Transfer Station 1 ( I Phone 414 | | IP YOU WANT TO MOVE 1 1 | OB IF YOU' WANT ANY- g I THINC^ HAULED. | PRICES REASONABLE. * f %BBBEEfi0iaBBEE@c!EI5EefflaBIBigE ? - n COTTON j o i: Stocks and Grain iji a ; ; UNITS 10 BALES UP. j|: d Rom Sc Sons Private Wire !|! ^ :!: i!:'b iji M. C. Smith, Mgr. ij < !|! 204 Commercial Bank Building ij! L GREENWOOD, S. C. | h t: m ENGKAV1NU t: 11 of all kinds. I * I Office equipment 11 jl And supplies. I p Books .. Stationery? I RED FREW Ba H Stationer and Office Outfitter,t J GREENWOOD, S. C. jj EbhhhhbhhhbB 9 \ LET GOOD WORK INCREASE F1 i \ Prohibition Agent JCilla Self After "*** w New York, Sept. 9.?A spectacuar raid hv nrohifbition officers on the steamship King Alexander, in Brooklyn, was climaxed today by the suicide of one of the raiders. al After taking part in the gun bat- jn tie in which seven members of the t,, 9teamer's crew were wounded and b liquor and drugs seized, Frank J. ct Fitzpatrick shot himself in the wash pj room of a ferry house, according to th police. hi Other prohibition agents were y( standing with Fitzpatrick, wh came g( here from Bridgeport, Conn., ac- as cording to policeman. Investigation li, bo learn the reason for his suicide te was started immediately. g. Liquor valued at $50,000 and ,\x drugs valued at $75,000 were con- r fiscated. The King Alexander parti- a cipated in a midnight race to port th from beyond the three-mile limit on ec September 1, in an effort to make to sure that the immigrants oh board ec would be admitted to the country a under the monthly quota regula- ^ :ions. gj< More than a score of shots were exchanged by the crew and fifteen jrohibition agents. None of the pro- }n libition agents mas hurt In order to obtain evidence, the j. >rohilbiton agents said, two of them . irranged on Wednesday with mefm- rpj >ers of the crew to pay $14,000 on ju ;he vessel toay for the liquor and ti< irugs. These two went on a vessel , ilone. Meanwhile a member of the m :rw noticed a launch with the other ca igents approaching. He warned his ^ :omrades and the battle began. The shooting attracted custom gj< fuards and police reserves who sur- g[ ound^d the pier to prevent the ^ :rew from fleeing. The prohibition ar igents said, however, that an offlcer ^i( >f the vessel to whom they were to j ij>a >ay the/money had vanished. The w] vounded members of the crew were ja aken to a hospital under arrest. cj5 hy THE FIRST STRIKE. ! th ,fo . The, Prodigal Son spent all his ] pe noney in riotous living; then when ie came home his father ran, fell on ^ lis neck, kissed him, gave him the ^ iest robe, a ring for his finger, and hoe3 for his feet, and killed the fat- . ed calf. S * 18 When the eldeT son came from the ields and heard the music and dancng he refused to go in. go And that is where the strike orignated.?Ex. . . tel CLEMSON ANSWERS ^ P<J _ ggj Slack Bli?ter Beetles on GabbafS And Eff Plant*. CO I am sending you some bugs ^ ound on tomato, cabbage and egg ce >iants.?N. F. S. ac Black Blister Beetles. They be- ?* :ome destructive in spots occasion* un illy. On small areas, in case of hill be ?r row plants, jar into pans cenaining kerosene, early in the morn- ro ting. If this is not practical, dust or ho urav thorouchlv with arsenate of tor ead in the regular way. he . va STATION FOR LETTERS OF AD- tu MINISTRATION. * wt 1? State of South Carolina, ^ COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE on Probate Court. ^ \j J. F. Miliar, Esq., Judge of Probate: an Whereas, Brown Bowie hath aade suit to me, to grant him letters f administration of the estate and ffects of Mrs. Nancy J. Agnew, late Ja f Abbeville County, deceased. These are therefore, to cite and ha dmonish all and singular the kinxt on' ICU aim ticuituis ui tuc amu IUIO, -*r fancy J. Agnew, deceased, that they mi e and appear before me, in the /ourt of Probate, to be held at Ab- su eville Court House, on the 24th day f September 1921, after publication do lereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, ^ o show cause, if any they have, why 4,0 he said Administration should not be UP ranted. Given under my hand and seal of b? he Court this 10th day of Sept. in he year of our Lord one thousand so: lii^e hundred and tewnty-one and in wc he 146th year of American Inde- co: endence. m( Published on the 12th day of Sep- th< ember 1921 in the Press and Banner st< nd on the Court House door for the dn ime required by law. of J. F. MILLER, ish ,12-3t. Judge of Probate. laT IRST BATH TUB st BY CINCINNATI ttAN f< al T ra? Once Condemned by Medical ^ Authority, and Outlawed in jj Boston t ? tl That the bathtub was once gener- s< ly condemned by medical authority f i the United States and that all ^ ithing was pronounced illegal in a oston by legislative authority, "ex*pt for medicinal purposes," will robalbly surprise some who think p tat the regulation of our private e' iibits has reached its maximum in ^ . 4 r* n i it _ T - J r\! C' jar or ?yzi, says tne .Literary ui;st. Such, however, are the facts, i related by the writer of "An Out- n ne History of Tubbing," contriibu-> Cl id to Gas Logic (New York, Au- * ist). According to him, the first B( ithtub to 'be btfUt and used in the C) epublic was perpetrated by one e! dam Thompson, of Cincinnati, in b ie year 1842. The word "perpetrat1" is used advisedly, we are ei Id, for Mr. Thompson's tub appear- w I as a serious misdemeanor, if not Ic high crime, in the eye3 of the ai ess, the public, the medical profes- o; t>n and the legislatures of the day. fi e goes on: C "We have no record that it was veighed against (by the clergy, but was roundly denounced in the pulb- si : prints as subversive of democrat- w simplicity and pioneer hardihood, tl ie good doctors averred that so UI xurious a form of bathing, prac- U1 :ed in winter, would lead to m hthisis, rheumatic fevers, inflamation of the lungs, and the whole tegory of. zymotic diseases.' To e: event any such disaster, the Com- ai on Council of Philadelphia con- ai iered but failed to pass by a mar- tl n of two votes, a measure making thing illegal between November 1 e^ id March 15. Viriginia by legisla- ti :e action laid a tax of $30 on all m ithtubs, while Boston went to the bi lole hog by making 'bathing unlaw- ju nrfnl aova An fVio nf o rvViTrcri- oi in. Be it said in extenuation of the n< gienic condition of the Bostonese d< at the ordinance was never en- 1( reed and that in 1852 it was re- iu aled' . ' et "President iFillmore braved the afts of ridicule of 1851 and had a ~ thtub installed in the White House jj d report says that this action so ( r destroyed the prejudice that by J 30 every hotel in New York had a j thtub, and some of them two or j ree, a fact which must have to j me extent lessened the Saturday * fht congestion in these latter hos Iric. During the sixty years since J is event progress has reached, the int of '1,000 rooms?1,000 baths,' bool baths, public baths, Senatorial K ,ths, soon to be reopened, and even I mpulsory baths. The last, it is I ae, operate only with respect to | rtain clases, cr we might with more { curacy say conditions, of men, one | whom perhaps not unjustifiably | iderstood lys thirty-day sentence to | for "fmgrancy." ? "While tile and porcelain bath- | oms, with unlimited supplies of | t water always available from au- g matically regulated gas water aters, may be a long step in ad- j -J If- fflL -- ? I nee 01 mr, x aumpavu a taanvgauy . b lined with sheet lead, or its im-j J sdiate copper-lined successors, J J lose water emanated from the 8 ?hen stove via the tea-kettle, it is | ly ip the mechanical apparatus of K a bath that we have surpassed the [ thing arrangements of other ages | d other races. Socially and sani-'| rily speaking, we have yet seme go before reaching the standards I -i V ancient jrersia or ivome ana ox Pan- |( "The luxury of Egyptian baths I a been duly exploited by a well- J | own soap manufacturer, and the | lendor of the great Roman ther- | le, club houses, theaters, gymnasia, | raries and baths in one, has been jj ng by historians and archeologjsts f Km the time of their erection * wn. The age-old, daily hot4)ath . bits of the Japanese cause them ! look with the scorn of the elect on the unwashed who aTe so un- | rilized as to omit the daily hot I th. E "The heating devices of these and J me older and simpler baths are K >rthy of notice and interesting in I ! mnarison wth modern arrange- | | snts for the same purpose. One of ? 2 simplest methods was to heat J >nes to firebricks and place these ? ectly in the bath vessel. Remains ? a primitivs prototype of the Turk-' f i 'bath have been discovered in Ire- p id in the form of a hiveshaped O one hut, with an opening at the top >r the head of the bather and one k the side for entrance and egress, his ibath was warmed up by burnig peat inside it. When a sufficientr high temperature had been atlined the peat was raked out ajid le bather took his place on a stone I ;at, indubitably a rather warm one, | friend closed the door and bank-! ; up with sod, closed the aperture bout the bather's neck ifrith a neck ice 01 ine same, ana lert tne umoranate to sweat it out, after which rocess the victim ptdbaibly scamperd home and to bed without any furler cooling down or rubbing off eremonies. "Japanese baths are heated allost to the boiling point by pipes antaining hot charcoal immersed irectly in the end of the tub, to the jrious detriment of unwary Cauasian toes when long-legged forigners are initiated into the native ath masteries. "The Roman thermae were heati by a gTeat hypocaust, or furnace, hich sent hot air through the hol>w walls of the various chambers nd also brought up the temperature f successive reservoirs of water om cold to temperate and hot. harcoal or wood was the fuel. "The .Russian and Turkish vapor aths, which were adaptations and lAAAceAva 4-V*A D/MMAW iW?4-W? iwstwvio vx vuv? iwuiau ui J j ere not infrequently produced by ie simple process of pouring water j pon hot stones or bricks or directly E>on a charcoal stove. The immeorially time-honored morning bath I "Merrie Englande' dispenses with ie heating problem by ihe simple cpedient of ignoring it. Cold baths *e said to have been the fashion nong the Angles and Saxons, and ie fashion has never changed. % "Not all the baths of history, howrer, were remarkable for temperaire or the lack of it. There were ud,^ sand, wine, milk and veal broth iths. Perfumes, pomades, the lices and effiusions of strange henbs id plants added to the baths of ited personages. One beau of Lonm was said to hare the yolks of )0 eggs put into his baths, truly va xurious bath to the modern markmind." * 1 SKIRTS 1 I All of the very latest I _ * i colors and patterns %r ? J $6.00 to $12.50 ] There is no doubt ab j Winter supply of Drj 1 merchandise and we ] before the recent sha j is all worth much mc I tinue to go higher an J age of our exceeding See our prices a save you a tidy sum. for yourself what we DRE8S QINGHI Good quality 27 in. Gingh Best quality 27 in. Gingha Best quality 32 in. Gingha ' PERCALE Best Quality Percale Ligl 36 in. dark percale 36 in light Percale ... . 36 in Percale shirt stripe MADRA8 8HIRTI Shirt Madras In White am the Very Best Qu 36 in. white shirt Madras, t 36 in. white shirt Madras g ity 36 in. Stripe shirt Madra quality i 36 in. strine CreDe shirtin; I " ? ' j We have a complete I . h | A full line of ^ i Children's Hoae I il m E for School wear VMi/ iBJHIBJHJEfEIEIEfHIEfEJEn I Keeping The Ft I s.\ Train of Refrigerator Cars of the Fru: being re-iced at Potomac Yards, Virgii THE public lacks reliable infor- s mation on what it actually i< means to take an orange, a 1 grapefruit, a head of cabbage or let- t tuce, a bunch of celery or a box of f strawberries from the warm South- f era climate > the table of the Northern con^-mer and put it there r in as fresh a; 1 edible condition as h though grown in thi Northern man's h own back yard. ' v Realizing' this lack of knowledge, j. certaip officials of the companies j, engaged in transportation under re- t frlgeration are seeking an official inquiry by the Interstate Commerce Commission so that the farmer who raises and ships his crop and the >l! man in New York who buys' the y fruit and out-of-season vegetables * may know whether they are paying 0 fair charges for refrigeration en 4 route to market, and whether the transportation companies can give t proper services on the charges al- t lowed by the Federal Commission. 1 It required over 600.000,000 pounds ? of ice. costing over $1,700 5 0 to re- i frigerate 25,713 carloa ** by one < transportation agency m moving 1 perishable fruits and ve'^fables t . from Florida alone in the 1920-21 1 ish Bargain out it, NOW is the time to r Goods., We now h&ve a are receiving more every .rp advances in the wholes ?re than we paid for it. D: id you had better come in ly low prices. i nd goods before you buy. Read over this list and can do for you. kM ( am . . . 1SC. All ^alnna in fh " " " " nil v/i/ivi a aaa v*a' ,m .... 20c. Outing ... .m .... 25c. y it and Dprk We have lots of r Prices ... .. 20c. 20c. WO! 2X>C' Men's Work Shi INQ Special .. d Stripes of UN a,ity- Ladies^ and Mer >est quality fleece . lin< 35c. ment . . . ood qual.. ... 25c. LAI s, best Ladies' Cotton } 35c. Ladies' best Lisl 5 25c. Ladies' Silk Hos line of Noti >ns. Many o\ aven't room to mention. h Bargain Stc ' "On the Square" injEizrajEfZJEfEniJiJiiJLrajEr uit Crop Cool . .' ' ra L-L ^| it Growers Express from the South ilia, on its way to Northern Markets | oason, to Northern markets. This s in addition to the movement of 0,000 cars of Georgia peaches, and * / -J housands of other cars of small ruits and vegetables under ice, rom the Carolinas and Virginia. In order to insure a sufficient and egular supply of ice for these cars. uge new ice manufacturing plants ave recently been built at Jackson- ,* ille, Miami, Haines City and Lake?nd, Florida, and large modern Ice lants also have been constructed In he Carolinas and Virginia. The volume of shipments under . efrigeration out of Florida alone, ist year, was six times that pt nine ears ago, and twice that of two ears ago. indicating the Importance ' '< f the question for the future both o producers and consumers. In the near future the transporta- e ion companies will make an effort o have the Commission throw the ^ ight of publicity on the actual op>r4ttons and all the costs involved n protecting the products of South>rn fruit and vegetable growers 'rom their farms and plantations to ;he tables of consumers iu the *orth. ' . _ V cI-"* 5 CORSETS j J 1^^ We recommend the W. J B. Nuform Corsets for J * comfort and style | mmm $'i.so to $3.50 | j buy your Fall and- j ] complete-stock of I J day. We bought {I sale markets and it lj ty Goods will con- [l and take advant- IJ ' We know we can I j then come and see j i ; a HTTINO ] I e very best quality 11 20c. | I LANKET8 'j j New Blankets at Special ! j $2.00 to $8.00 RK SHIRTS | 2 rts worth today $1.50? I B $1.00 | I DERWEAR j ] i's heavy Underwear, } | ?d, special per gar- , j i 60c to $1.00 J j HES' HOSE [ 1 lose .... 10c and 18c. K j e Hose . 50c. ( j e 50c to $1.50 { J i E tlher Bargains we [ _ - _ Children's school Hj k mJB 14a If M Dresses at very [ ' low price*. [ j EmrarErafararaiHigiaim