I. 55i f, .'.;;4. , r ' 4 , .t}. t "'' ,Firl ' S ; i' J _{{ k '.S t . t' '9. :' y . , t }{' ,z 7 n 7{ t:. i/tTM .'Ly x' 1 t ' 7" 1 4 tP 'S. .t', . ', Iri'. . -,s. 1.1hr; y 5 r t"tai;./."flQ..'tt;C ir'r.il.. J ir: t J "t.tvyli"''ti . : .i .l i .t ,It.r_ r, .ty, .A ; .)1 r 'fitp ,t ;tt. .i F' ,t:< / t I Rl t t J f 'f' ti': K Or14' 'DICKENS--THE GEM . r 'bF THE FOQTHILLS 1 nw r .++ F +" VOLUME 51-NUMBER 20 PICKENS, S. C., 13EP'1'EMBER, 8, 1921 EDUCATIONAl, GAINS MO Although the adult school work has passe' for this year, yet we hear from all parts of the county commene con.erning the w& rk done. For the Information -it all the follow king will probably be of some interest: This past summer we had ten adult schools running. It had been hoped that many more than this num ber would have been organized, but on account of limited funds it was impossible to have' more. Should the legislature this coming session appropriate more money for this pur pose it will be possible next summer to do a greater amount of good along this line. In the ten schools organized the total enrollment ,was 186, with an average attendance of 105. This is an average of t7 per cent of the enrollment and plainly shows the in terest in the work. When 57 per cent of 186 grown people take an active interest in improving them selves it seems that this is the only reccommendation that our legislature should want to govern their making the necessary appropriation for the furtherance of this work Another interesting feature of the werk was that of this en:ollment 48 were taught to road and 48 were taught to write. -This means that there will be 48 fewer marks on the 1922 club roll. It means that *there will be 48 more people signing hteir own checks. It means that 48 more people in Pickens will be able to able to read their own newspaper -and also their Bible. Can we place too much importance on this work? Can we with this - ' work expect to have a better citi zenship or a worse one? Are peo ple who can read for themselves more capable of intelligent thinking than those who cannot read? While Pickens county is on the top rung of the educational ladder as compared with her sister counties, we cannot stop now and sit idly by, while others mte striving and push ing ahead. Will the people oP Pick ens&allcw our county to be surpassed by other counties mnov that we are at the head? Let the representatives of our grand old county pause and reflect on this thing. Let them in the depths of their hearts seriously consider ev ery part of this work and at the next session of the legislature wvork ae cording to the dlictates of an awvak ened conscience. H-agfood school distiict did herself proudl on last Saturday when she vo 4. tedl $3500 for the purpose of building 'hgr <'hildren a school fit for them to .go to. Hagoed school, within the shadowv of the court house, should have erne of the best schools in the county, but until this summer little seems to have heen (lone abiout the matter. Nowv lagorel w hcol district *can boast of ' well couipped house and a~ieve'n months term of school. A fewv weeks ago she voted six ad ditional' mills to obtain the state *guarantee of a sevdn months school and on last Saturday she voted 26 to 0 ill favor of bonds to build. Con *gratulations to you, Hagood school district. Twvelve M likf school district says that she will not he the last in the county to do something for hea chil diren. TPhis district nowA has on foot a $2 0 -bond issue and anticipates moving her present school house out of the vale wvhere it now is and place *it m-ar the pubhllic road. There wvill be mucmh ;nterest in t'.is election, not only by those living within the dis trict but b~y friende, on thie outside of the district. Shady Grove also is planning a S new building. This will be a great Sstep forward for' Shady Grove and she is to be commended. At pres 'ent tpe school building is hard'ly good enou'gh for the children to go to, as iis almost impossible to keep It irmIn the .Win'ter nmonth~s and en. !WAKENING MENTUMHERE tirely too small and hot for summer work. The people in this district bave awakened to the need of addi tional educational facilities for their children and are going to have them. It is being planied by the depart ment of education in Pickens county, cooperating with the Federal and State departments of educatio'n, to put o'n an agricultural teacher in the four schools of Peters Creek, Dacus ville, Mica and Maynard. It is also planned to put on a similar teacher for the Pleasant Hill, Long Branch, Six Mile and Gates schools. The Federal and State departments of education will furnish three-fourths of the cost of maintaining the salary of a teacher, while the districts will be paying only one-fourth. This is a branch of study that has been sad ly neglected by, the schools. It is hoped, that present plans will mate rialize and that other schools will also take up this work. The enrollment in the futy-two schools run'iing in Pickens county this summer will be about 15 per cent greater than last year. This in crease is probably due in great part to the new compulsory education law. The average attendance, which has in past years bee, about 60 per cent, will be aroond 90 per cent this sum ner. This is beyond all expectations snd goes to show the increased in terest in school work. New Town and Rock school dis tricts voted down the proposition to consolidate and build a large central school house. The vote was 28 for and 58 against; many ladies voting for the first time. 'Leaders of the oplpositon to the consolidation plan state that to consolidate the districts would make the new district too large and leave many of the children too far away from the school house. The Pickens high school has re mcdeled its old building, doing away entirely with the auditorium and con converting it into class rooms. Thirty six new desks have been ordered and will be installed this week. The trus tees have added the eleventh grade, adding two more teachers. They have also ordered about $300.00 worth of :hemical and physical apparatus for the science department of the high school which will increase its efficien :.y 100 per cent. The people of the city >f Pickens will be called on to assist the trustees in paying for this equip nent. The method to be used in rais ng this money will be means of the theatre. The management of the Alexander Theatre has decided to put n some real pictures for this pur pose and give 60 per cent of the pro seeds to this cause. Thue first picture to be presentedl will be "Daddy Lohig legs" , followved by the "Miracle ManV. ft is hoped that all interested. in the iadvanccment of the high school will lo .all in their powver to make these pictures pay, thereby assisting in a innterial way the Pickens high school. LIBERTY SCHOOE ENROLLS OVER 400. Liberty, Sept. L-.-The Liber ty ligh andl graded school opened for ;he fall tern- this morning wvith an nollment of approximately 400 stu tents, which is saidl to be the largest mnrollment in the history of the Achool. The nuumber enrolled in the high chool de&partment on opednintg day was larger than the total number en rolled last year in the high school. It is also expected that this number will be considlerably increased before the close of the term. T1hec faculty for the present term consists of 1 4 teachers, with Prof.- L. N. lFoy as superintendentt. Prof. F'oy comes to hiberty from Si mpsonville, where lhe madec a successful record as beadl' of the school. The 'Opening this morning was the first held: in the new school building and because of this and other en couraging factors was saidl by those present to be the moset auspicious opening in the school's history. The twvo mill schools here have been consolidatedl with the central school and all pupils in town w.ill at tend the Liberty school, this being the first term that this had been done., It is expected that the enroll ment will keach 500 before ejh close of the tem - New Woad Will Ope A staff correspondent of the Green ville Daily News recently visited Pickens county and wrote the follow ing article about the Pickens-Bre yard highway for his paper: One of the richest and most pie turesque sections of South Carolina is soon to be opened to the outside world with the construction of the road through Eastatoe Gap connecting Pickens a'nd Brevard. The highway commission of Tran sylvania county this week informed County Supervisor J. T. McKinney that the North Carolina county would meet' the road already started by Pickens county thus giving a top soiled road thru the mountains. Until this week no assurance had been received from the North Carolina authorities that they would complete their part of the road, although the Pickens county officials were acting under that assumption. Had the North Carolina county not been wil ing to co-operate the object of the road would have been defeated and the new highway would have been of local benefit only. As matters now stand, when the highway is completed it will give a through route from the lower part of the state to Weitern North Carolina. Lake Toxaway will be approximately 60 miles from Gi eenville, by way of Pickens. But of even more importance than the construction of a highway con necting the states of North a'nd South Carolina is the development of a sec tion of the state yhich long has been held back because of joor road facili ties. This is not said in a sense of reflection upon any of the officials of this county or of Transylvania, but it is a known fzict that this sec tion has never seen the' kind and type of roads with which other sec tions have been blessed. The few roads in the mountains were poorly laid off, for the most part, and very aften could scarcely be traveled be :ause of mud. The route taken through the Blue Ridge mountains is the same surveyed many years ago for the Cumberland railroad, which it was proposed to uild through the mountains to Knox ville. The survey was made beifore the Civil War a'nd many other surveys have been made since that time but thie route chosen by the originrl suir veyor, whose name is unknown to the majority of pyresent (lay res idlents of Pickens county, has never been improvedl upon. It called for the crossing of the Blue Ridge moun- i tainis by the Eastatoe Gap route and< more than a half a century later civ'ili engineers selected the sapie route. Rl. T. THORNTON OF EASLEY DEAD. Our towvn wvas shocked by the an iouncemniat Tuesday~, afternoon that ur fellow townsman, Mr. R. T. Tlhorn ton, was dleadl. Words can not express our sorrowv in the loss tif this good man. Mr. Thornton wras born andl rearedl near Hartwell, Ga. and~ was 55 years old1. Before hie came' :o Easley he was' agent of the lilue Ridge Railroadl at Anider son for sonme tirne. Trwenty years ago he camve to Easley and assocemt adl himself with Mr. W. W. Robinson n the miercaintile business, buying )ut the interest of Mr. W. M. Ha.. ood, Sr. Mr. Thornton was one of ar very best citiz~ens andl wil Ibe reatl~v. missedl by our petole. Po.. *ite, cullturedl, accommodlating, al.. ways wvith an smile he would greet his friends. Hie served as school trusitee for s;everal years, and (lid much to build up th'e schools of the ::ity. For some time he has been a ruling elder in the Presbyterian church of our' city. Mr. Thornton leaves his widowv, who was a Miss Goodleit, of Spartan bwrg, S. C., before her marriage, and the 'following children: Mrs. Paul McDonald, of Geoigetown, S. C.; Mrs. Harry Savage, of Easley; Mr. Goodlet Thornton, of Greenville, S. C.; R1. T. Thornton,,Jr., and Ben, of Enulav. n Up New Country TO BREVARD 30 MILES The distance from I3revard to Pick ens is slightly more than 30 miles, 22 of which are in Pickens county. i'he first eight miles of the route from Pickens has been put in good condi tion except for two bridges over the Twelve Mile creek. For beauty of scenery the new route cannot be surpassed i'n South Carolina. It opens up a country com paratively new, and where the pic uresque beauty of the mountains has rot been destroyed by advancing civ- l ilization. Mount Pinnacle, the highest point in South Carolina, is in plain view From the new highway but the en ineers very carefully avoided its steep sides, the roadway winding ibout through the adjoinir.g valleys. While Mount Pinnacle is compara ively well known throughout the 'est of the state, not so in this see ion. Not one inhabitant in ten in Eastatoe township knows Mount Pin mle by that name. It is known loe illy as "Bald Rock" or " Bald Knob." >ecause of the barren, rocky surface l )n the southern and eastern side of ;he mountain. The fertile Oolenoy valley is to the right of the new highway and it is thickly populated by industrious people. The head waters' of 'T'welve Mile creelk are also crossed while some of the tributaries of Saluda river are but a short distance away. Eastatoe township has one distinc tion which perhaps no other township in South Carolina can claim. There is )ut one family of negroes in the en ire townshp and, as might be expect 'd, there are no families of foreign )irth:. The population is 100 per cent 4mericdn and the majority of them -an date tJieir ancestry back to the r lays when Daniel Boone would sling it mis rifle across his shoulder and come v r visiting his kin hereabouts. e Mayor C. L. Cureton, (;f 'ie:enus. vho accompanied this 4orreispondent )ver so much of the new highway as ms been completed, is enthusiastic as :o the possibilitiesg of the new hIitch vay. It will mean much to 'i kens md Pickens county, he thinks but nost of all he. is glad of the oppor unity it ,will give the residents of he Eastatoe sect i<:n to have eaisy ommiunication wvith the out 'ide vorld. Thie road should be comleltedl he ore next summer and unless all in lications are wrong many tour'ists 1 vill next year enter the Sapphire t 2ountr'y by the Eastatee Ga p r'ead(. We cannot undlerstandh wthy one' 5->) vell prepared to live and1( serve and l mjoy lif'2 should be cut down in the' >rime of his manhood and leakve hiis amily w~ho will miss him so much, mdi( leave his church and bus res', vhere everybody had the ltmosMt onfidlence in him as an.man :r.:d aI 'hristianm. But God's ways ar'o ike our wvayr, 'Not niow, but in the comn g :'r , I It may be in the~ better land,. Ne('ll i'ead the meianling of' our1 :ev s And then, soime(timne, we'll ind'e' F"uneral services for' Mr. Thh',rnton v~ill he held at the residene ' a X 'clock this afternoon, XV Wedn esda ) mad the body will be laid 10 rest in hWest Viewv cemetery. T1hme ser'vie 1(r vill b cnuducted by his nastor, llv. t D). WV. IH. TABERNACLE MEETING. Tfhe Compton taberncie mee'ting vill begin in Pickenms iiext Sunday I niorning at 11:001 o'ecok wi~h Mr.i '30mptonm preaching at the first serv-i cc. lDr. Miller, tho Bible teacher, .vill arrive Tuesday, and Uu'ele Char- 1 ie will he here for the entire meet- I ng. - i The tabernacle has recently been eepairedl and made as comfortable as I iossible and the grounds cleaned off, a People from all sections are expect ud ito attend the meetings a PICKENS COUN' CitOP FAR_Al NEWSY CENTRAL LETTER chol Opens Next Monday - Local and Personal Items Central, Sept. 5.-Mrs. Alice Mer 'itt of Townville spent several days fst week with Prof. and Mrs. Geo. VeI'oorn. F. Van Clayton of Pickens spent few hours last Wednesday with omefolks here while looking after ome of the schools in this section. The Ramseur-Pinson"tKelley lake vhich has recently been -built near lere by these gentleme'n is now ready or service. These men have spent nuch time and money in making this lake and they have a beautiful lake n the edge of town. The water will ie about twelve feet deep in the (e"p st place, and then it will be shall av nough in some places for the little Iirilden. Therei are no I'ouugh plaees a the lake and it will be a very de irable place to spend sonic time in he water. Rates may be had by ap lying to either of the owners. Mr. C. B. Smith of Greer spent mo'nday night of lasts week with hi is ld friends, Mr. and Mts. B. .J. .John ton. f Mr. R. G. Gaines. the man who aves foxhunting, .had same fun one ay last week chasing a fox near the nlottltains above Pickens. Mr. and;' Mrs;. .J. D. Buall of- E ast )range, N. J., returned to their home aist week after spending several days here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Hall. Ir ceder tlend .hanies 1laFoy of An de."son are visiting 'Capt. and Mi:". W. E. Hyde this week. Mrs. 13. E. Allen and Mrs. F. B. Morgan motore( to Greenville last Thursday oni a shopping trip anl to 'isit some frends. Mrs. L. T. Earlo has been in the ity hospital in Greenville since last ;aturd'cay wveek. She underw(ent an i I wper'ation last. 'l'hursday and the last. cport from her bedside was that she 4 doing well. 11er son W. TI. Earl~et .as with her at the time of the up- l ration. Her i many friends in tils crtion wish h'r a speedy re--overy. t Messrs. J. - . lom, 0. 1). hpps and I V. Ii. \lartih, sa!l of Amler-ron toun . ere in ('eitral shojpinu last Sat. rday. 'omit againgen t!tenr; we re always rhIad to see you. Quit, a number of the ('nt;-al pe . le att''ndrd the Norris- l"ranc.' wed. - ing which took place at the home f the bride's parents. Mr. ;e" .\l 'ris, on North t re'.t in ie en ville last Tluesday (veining. The c ride has many friends in (Cen tral I 'ho wvish them a len'" and happy lif'. Next M ouday, September 12, w il h e' a red let'.er day in Centai ia hat is the day of the oingii of the' I hool here. Hundreli'tds of hi -:: andtn irls w.ill get up thiro baoo;k< acrnin I op of' the hlder of knowledge. TIb ' i'trniing~ to whi;-h all the parents, pa r< ns andl friend s of' the sch oolI are Rlev. and Mirs. l.ting of (;istoia, N. t., have been'a visiting thiro parients, h lr. and Mrs. Mroem Mmt in, hI -i Rev~'ivalI sr'v ics w.ill beg~rin at thi r Ilethod'(ist c hurch nu'xt Su nday:.. Iev ~ t' V. S. G ood'wini the past- r. will be '-s istedt by* te v. .\Ir. Iaisi . pa stor -i I f the I 'resbyt eriani i hurch at. (Cm-t on ('*ollegt. All are cordicially iie ited to it tendt thelse serv ices andc hel p lake ( 'e nra a better- place in wvhL'-h a live, :as good rev'ivals always help Man'y of' the Sunday scool wa r's of Centlral are planning to .' end the' l'iekenas (ounit y Souny chool cnvention at C'atech~ee ne(xt y aturday andi Sunday.h The banks here wr'e el 'sed last i londay on acc'(ounit of l.abor Dayv nd1( the hankers got one dlays' rest. . tankers only get a few holidays dun 'ing the year ned th('y feel like rest-- { ng when oneC ('omes. Rew'. Mr'. Ander'ison,. of Easley', I >reached at the First Baptist church si ore last Sunday afternoon at his egular appointment. Mr. Anderwvo n Ioesn't fail to get ypu toldI. and al hose who miss hearing him rasisn a h, strong , radical sermon. el The hot weatdhe' in this sectior, p nd no taka has dIamnued the cot ton PY COTTON OVE AVERAG Pickens county not only stands the top of South Carolina dou'ntic. in the percentage of its people wh can reaad and write and at the to, in percentage of whiter population, but the latest government cotton re pert says Pickens tounty has the best eotton crop of'any county in the state save Cherokee. The eondition of the cotton crop in the cotton growing stats on August 25 was a little less than 50 per cent )f a perfect crop. fn South Carolina :he cndition was 50 per cent. In Thtvkce county it was 70 per cent mnd in Pickens ecunlty it was 67 per ent. Oconv). was next wit h (+O per ent. This means that the cotton crop n Pickens county is as good as usual nd far better than the average broughcut the state. This erop was nade at the very smallest possible 'peinse and if the fleecy stal.le sells or ar"iound Twenty cents a po:und it v ll leanl a good profit for the far n!r and many will regain their loss if last year. Twenty-c.''t ctt< 1 anA 1 1wnorn l e;-'p will Put (;url county" in .ool financiarl shaipe. Not enly is the cotton etrc h d Pickens county good, but the r erop is the fmiest in year nd otlleri (e s msl i:(cld in mt1st of tit ) counl~ty. With all crops bringin_ 01) ) c(s this will m11ea ) much to) ur icllou n ty, anid cu' people ire v'er',y up: pim is tie. Not only is Pickens county at th .op in education anti farm irig, but t is right. around the top in good 'oads, and is at the very top in goid, aiw-itqiding and c.hristian citizenship. Our people arcv awakened and olil ickens county has begun its drive o attain the undisputed topmost eak amniong South Carolina counities 1 things that count for something oward mua king this world a better he.r t. live" in. Tlu se tuing; are not. matters that e shr'uld I.ast Cf, but ratmrher cause or grr3:t. Iuln(s..s and thank r.sgiving, 1(1 an3 inspiration to Split' uis oniWar(. V SPAPElt A P VEltI'ISING OK'd UV l'U:jtNI''URE EN Sirn ' raneisco.---Newspape' adver ising, fol lowedi up by attravt ive win Ow dila~~ys, is the best anitidlote. for 11ump~ing:4sr ales, decla red S. lE. (Cony case, <.f Lanrrcas-ter, Pa3., in ani tc a reOFs to: delegtates to the Nat i-mal~ 'minitur ie I earle rs' conivent ion w h ich iet hc(tI. I" was estino3)t d thnat ali rex imiateuly I ,000 deilegates wer in3 Ittendlanet,. O thlr spesakersi~ ni clurde'd lE. Kon ' o! Denver and II. F Dud y.r Og-:i DEATH1 O1" A GOOD) MOTII'ER Mis. Agnes I ,it tle Etred died at her ome near Central 03n Augu:.t 20th. 1' ann iounlc'men t (of her dleaith car. ind Sor)row to a l arge cir' le of re ives and fr iendls. She wasC. a dauh (er of Je~e anid l'Inmeale little Oni )eember 2.1, 1 558 she wasv~~ mrr ied o WVilliamr iEbed. She leux ('ighit c host <.f rehitives aj'f I frind to niOu~rn her dea th. Tw'~o children pre ed her)) to thet3) CIneV a number~' of '(ears. She wasrr a kind andi' lovinig vife 131 and othiei r hvin~g ai Smile for 1I with whion, sh cam (lin contaeCii~t. ~he had been a sufferer fromi app~o lexy for th< !ast tw'~o years, but bore er j)acrn with<.at aI muirmur, pro'cfess ng faith in IHim who loieth all things elI. Shec will be( greatly moissed,. ropj verIy mluch in the last eight or en days. There are marny stailks ojf Otton3 now~ that have ni z a green afr on 'them. Young co is also :afferi'ng. A mad dlog passed thru Central one ight last wecek and bit severail dogs nd killed one little pup. All who ave (logs hadi better watch them 6sely for the next two weeks. Many eople here have killed their (logs. Central Reporter,