University of South Carolina Libraries
Xocal I 1RCW8 : Personals : -II John Kerr of Cedar Springs, was in town Saturday. / Mrs. Albert-Power of Brownlee, I was In town Saturday. I Jesse D. Bell of Antreville, was in town Friday afternoon. Ellis Mabry is visiting friends in j Greenwood. I Miss Rebecca Cater is visiting Miss: Nellie Pressley of Cedar Springs. j ! Miss Annie Welborn left Saturday: for North, where she will teach this winter. Mrs. Sam Smith has accepted a position with the E. J. Adair Co., for the fall season. Capt W. J. Bryson is at home! after a stay of a month at Cashiers,' N. C., with his mother. Mrs. W. Joel Smith has returned from a visit to her home people in | Laurens. ; ''*3 * . . " g j Thomas Mundy left Friday for) Detroit, Mich., on business for the Arnold Garage. ? j' Mrs. George Gambrell of Cusseta, Ala., spent a few days here with rel-| atives last week". Mrs. W. L. Peebles went over to Elberton and spent the week-end with her friend, Mrs. Carter Arnold, j Lewis Laws on of Columbia, has! been in Abbeville for the past week] visiting at the home of his aunt, i Miee Nettie Russell. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Marchant and children ame down from Greenville and spent Sunday witl^Dr. and Mrs. P. B. Speed. ... Miss Nettie Russell and her moth. er, Mrs. Russell, have returned from Esmeralda, N". C., where they have spending the summer months. , . Mr. Charles R. Ballinger came down from Greer Friday and took a look at the street paving going on O'n the public square. Mrs. Rachel Minshall find Rachel . " . &^d Susan Minshsljl went up to Anderson Saturday 4o have a doctor ..look at Susan's eyes. ' Mrs. C. L. Sauls has returned to the city after an extended visit to friends at Hamlet, N. C., and several points in Virginia. w : " Mrs. J. S. Stark and Miss Fannie ' Stark came home Saturday after ' ' several weeks si>ent Dleasantlv in the mountains of North Carolina. r a Fred S. Hill, Jr., returned home ' -' Sunday after spending several weeks ' In Thomasville, N. C., with his aunt, Mrs. Wm. Elliott. Mrs. Elliott came home with him. Mr. Horace McAllister is out again after a two weeks struggle with a v sprained back. He makes his way areond with the aid of crutches, which he hopes soon to discard. ' Prof. Robert H. Coleman went down to Charleston last week to make preparationsi for moving his J- ?L r? igiiinjf uuwii in uuk iur me opening of Charleston College. . Dr. Parks, and Messrs. Calhoun and Alexander were among the Greenwood sports in Abbeville Sunday. They rode over town in a Ford and brushed up their knowledge of a first class town. Mrs. A. G. Cochran, Misses Nelle, Macie and Emma Cochran and Miss Jimmie Shelor and Master John] Cochran came down from Anderson Sunday and visited relatives. They made the trip in their car. r John Robert Nickles of Due West, j was in town Friday on business. j Tom Abies of Greenwood, was in town Friday afternoon. Mrs. J. A. Dickson of Brownlee, | was in town Thursday. Miss Lucille Stevenson of npar the ity, is teaching school this term in the Graded School at Saluda, S. G. \ Herman McDill of Raleigh, N. C., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. McDill. I Preston Speed of Greenville, spent j the week-end with his parents, Dr. j and Mrs. P. B. Speed. __ Mrs. S. E. Moragne and son, P. B. Moragne, of Bordeaux, were shopping in town Thursday. Miss Mary Quarles Link left Sunday for Spartanburg, where she will be the guest of Miss Annie Grier. Mr. "End Mrs. R. B. Smith and children of Newport, Tenn., are in! j the city visiting Mrs. W. G. Chap- j j man. n ! ? Baron Agnew, who has been with I. the Bowden-Simpson Drug Co., for!, the past three months, returned to, his home in Due West Friday. 'I ' 1 'v Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Smith, Pelzer, ^ who have b$en visiting Mrs. Smith's mother, Mrs. M. T. Coleman, have returned to their home. v Miss Bessie Murray went over to jh Atlanta Sunday to spend a few days a with relatives before returning to j i, her work in Greenville. j p ji< The many friends of Miss Lois j Shaw will be delighted to know that1 she is rapidly recovering from an operation on her eyes.?Greenville News. ; ( jii Miss Kate Haskell has returned to; a Winthrop to take up her studies in' g the senior class. Friends in Abbe- j a ville wish her a successful and pleasant year. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. McKissick came i over from Greenwood one day last i week and visited among their friends, j j They are leaving soon to make their jp home in Greenville. v i Mrs. D. H. Hill has returned to p Abbeville after an extended stay in s the mountains. The trip was pleasant j and very beneficial , to Susan, the e bright little daughter. t g Mr. W. D. Wilson,* Misses Mary v Lawson Link and Mary Quarles went t up to Spartanburg Sunday to spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Everett Mr. and Mrs. Paul Link and chil- s dren went down to Troy Saturday I and spent the night with Mr. and Mrs \ Ernest Hanvey, and went to Lin- t colnton, Ga., Sunday and spent the o day with relatives. J t T A Hill P a nndlJI iUCOOiO* V* Mt AMMM Dr. F. E. Harrison attended a birth- t day party of J. S. Fowler in Ander- I son Saturday. Mr. Fowler is a promi- t nent business man of Anderson and I is well known in Abbeville. i II Lewis Richter, Spartanburg, who ( has just returned from France, where c he was connected with the Red Cross J Communication Service, was a visitor a in Abbeville Saturday looking ov^r B the field with the idea of locating a ladies ready-to-wear store here. Mavor and Mrs. J. Moore Mars have returned from an automobile h trip through North Carolina, Tennes- p see and Kentucky, stopping a few c days at Elkhorn, Ky., before the re- t' turn trip was made. The mayor says a that he went through a moonshine ountry most of th^ way and that all testimony was to the effect that he could get all he wanted. r Another Store For Abbeville. ( 4 Abbeville is to have another store a says Albert Henry. The Phoenix n Realty Co., has agreed to buil'l a new storeroom on its property on Main c street and has already secured a tenant according to Mr. Henry. I The name of the renter and the nature of his business was not disclosed by Mr. Henry, who said that ~ the renter did not want to make the matter public as yet. . I c ( li I ? I - L1J I Don't get hung up oy *-diu Stomach. Superacidity?that is, too much acid it a disease. It causes sour stomach, heart'burn, gas, and leads on to gastric catarrh and ulcer*. Come in?let us tell you how easy it is to get rid of stomach misery. All that nature asks is to be helped?and you get that help when you take EATANIO For Your Stomach's Sake. The McMurray Drug Co Missionary Society. The LaJies Missionary Society of x>ng Cane Church will meet with Irs. S. H. Cochran Friday afternoon ,t 4 o'clock. Bridge Club. The Bridge Club will meet Friday fternoon, Sept. 19, at 5:30 o'clock irith Mrs. Lawrence Parker at her ome on Wardlaw street. Birthday Party. Little LaRue Hinson celebrated er fourth birthday last Thursday fternoon by inviting a few of - her ittle friends for the afternoon to lay and help her enjoy the candy, :e cream and cqke served. The Civic Club. The opening meeting of the Civic Jlub will be held Thursday afternoon n the Home Service Red Cross Room ,t half after five o'clock. The program for the year will be outlined :nd a full attendance is desired. Mrs. Foster McLane, President.. A Pleasant Party. I Miss Mildred Cochran was hostess Yiday afternoon at a delightful rook arty. Miss Mildred is leaving this zeek for Lander College and all her roung friends gathered to enjoy the arty and to wish her a pleasant and uccessful year. There were seven tables of playrs and the games engrossed the attention of sweet sixteen for the greater part of the afternoon, after yhich attractive plates of salad with ea were served and enjoyed. Naming The Babiea. Sabbath afternoon at jfour o'clock i service was held in the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Churcn deroted i.o the baptism of tUe babies in h?% chuich. The services wera ?<#.? lirifd by Rev. M. R. Plaxej and Rev ames P. Pressly of Due W.est, and he following children wer*> baptized, flary filler and Elizahe'.n McMihun, win daughters of Dr. and Mrs. J. E. 'ressly, James Buford and Sarah Eselle, children of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. taford, Mary Elizabeth, Robert Maroh and Walter Eugene, children of ir. and Mrs. Eugene Nance, George Charles, Robert Hemphill, and Franis, children of Mr. and Mrs. Foster I IcLane, Moffatt Ross, son of Rev. ,nd Mrs. R. Plaxco, and Jesse larion, son of Mrs. James. Painting Up. Chief Justice Eugene B. Gary is laving his home on Greenville street ainted up. The color will be a light ream and amidst the green trees in he yard*will make the house present handsome^appearance. Notice! Teachers Examination. The regular Fall Teachers Exami lation will be held in the Abbeville bounty Court House, Saturday, Oct. I, 1919. It is desired that as many is can will come and take the cxamilation, for teachers are scarce. Examination will begin at 9:00 >'clock A. M. i Come prepared with pencil and >aper. W. J. Evans, 1 Co. Supt. of Ed. Engraved cards and wedding inviations af rress and Banner Co. ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL. Columbia, Sept., 14.?Former Governor Richard I. Manning and former Governor Dlincan C. Heyward have accepted appointments as honorary vice chairmen of the Roosevelt memorial campaign in South Carolina, acording to an announcement made here. Other well known South Carolinians will be connected with the campaign committee which will have in charge the conduct of tne campaign for South Carolina's quota of the fund to be raised with which to erect a memorial to the former President. This state's quota is $20,000. T. H. Wannamaker of Columbia, is state chairman. Following an address In Columbia last Wednesday by Col. W. H. Robbyns, intimate friend of the late Col. Roosevelt, plans were launched for the conduct of the campaign in this State. Every state in the Union is to asked to contribute to the memorial. The campaign will be non-partisan. Some of the foremost Democrats of the South are on the national campaign committee. Some of the Democratic leaders in other sections are also connected with the campaign management. Former Senator Luke Lea of Nashville, Tenn., who was a colonel in the Thirtieth Division, is a member of the committee. Alton B. Parker, one time Democratic presidential candidate is another. Luke E. Wright, of Tennessee, former Governor General of the Philippines is another. John M. Parker, now a Democratic candidate for Governor of Louisiana, is another. r The purpose/ of the Roosevelt Memorial campaign as set forth by Col. William Boyce Thompson, chairman, is as follows: "The Roosevelt Memorial Association has been formed to ac^as an agency in erecting a memorial to Theodore Roosevelt, which shall keep alive in America for all time the stimulus to right living, high ideals, and noble patriotism which flowed from his deeds and teachings. It is our task to raise a fund of $10,000^000 for that purpose from millions of subscribers, Hfie proceeds to go to build a monument in Washington, the one city which belongs to all America, which was so long the scene j of Roosevelt's great labors for the | public welfare, aiul -..o create at Oyster Bav which mav ultimately in-j elude Sagamore Hill to bo preserved like Mount Vernon and the Lincoln Homestead." m CAROLINA INSISTS ON OLD BOUNDARY ! Columbia, Sept. 12.?Samuel M. Wolfe, Attorney Genera' of South Carolina, has made a return to the complaint jC the State of Georgia, filed with tfn United Stat^ Supreme Court, to: hearing October 6, that there :-h>a 1 b'? & reoliicntfon of U;e boundary ifne between th^ rw%? Stales along the me of the Savanif.v. rive.*. The State of Georgia cla:>n; that the correct boundary should begin at the North Carolina line and should run along the ordinary mean water level on the northern or eastern banks of the Chattanooga. Tugaloo and Savannah rivers. The answer of the State of South Carolina contends that the convenr tion of Beaufort, concluded April 26, 1787, between the States of South Carolina and Georgia established the boundary *'from the most northera stream or branch of the river known as the Savannar at its entrance into the oce&n at the confluence of the ] j Tugaloo and Seneca (formerly Keo-1j wee), reserving all the islands of the |j rivers Tugaloo and Savannah up to j the most northern branch or stream j of the said Tugaloo river, namely, the Chattanooga river, to the North Carolina line on the 35th degree or north latitude, the line being low watermark at the southern shore of the most northern stream of said | rivers where the middle of the river I is broken by islands and the middle thread of the stream where rivers flow in one stream or volume. The action of the State of Georgia through its Governor, Hugh M. Dorsey, and Attorney General Clifford Walker, was brought to the United fifofaa Qnr\?rt*viA x K'vw.ww mu|/a?uic vuui k* uii instructions contained in a joint resolution of the Georgia Legislature, passed August 21, 1917. South Carolina's answer was made in the name of Governor Robert A. Cooper and At- j torney General Samuel M. Wolfe. I WILSON'S TRAIN IS LAST WORD IN TRAVEL COMFORT En Route With President Wilson,1 Sept, 5.?Speaking of royal trains,1 there was nothing like this on the! road to Rome or through England or j France when President Wilson tour-1 ed Europe. Comfort?that great desire of the American wayfarer?is! not lacking on this, the most preten-J tious train that has said "goodbye"j to the Union station in many years, j In Europe it was the president who! enjoyed the pleasures -of a private lounging car and private dining car,) whtte members of his party got along as best they could with war-time ac-j commodations. But the size of the; train on which Mr. Wilson is" stump-! ing the country on behalf of the peace treaty was not determined by' him, but by the retinue of corres-j pondents, secret service men, secretaries and attaches. The president and Mrs. Wilson and Private Secretary Tumulty and Admiral Grayson, physician, constitute the main presidential party, an un-, usually email number, but there are at least seventy-five people whose business it is to accompany Mr. Wil-: son?those who are charged by law' unfVi fVio ivrof?/?firtn nf Hi<l llfp flriH those who are sent by the newspapers' of the United States and Europe to1 tell the world what soyt of reception! Mr. Wilson gets and what he says; on his series of speeches. Eight Car* on Train. Messrs. Taft and Roosevelt took correspondents along, too, but on none of those trips did the news-1 papers send as many reporters asj are going along today?they repre-j sent newspapers of every shade of political opinion. Their railroad fare^ and expenses are of course paid by; the 'individual newspapers so that! in no sense are they gu:sts of either! the government or Mr. Wilson. Eight j cars seemed to have been needed to( take care of the whole party for thirty days of travel on the ten-: thousand-mile itinerary. Inasmuch as the correspondents J must do most of their work between, stations, compartment cars were leased by them and a walk along the corridors sees them pounding typewriters incessantly. The newspaper: msn h::ve two cotnpartment cars, the! secret service men another and the White House staff of secretaries and stenographers a fourth car. The president and Mrs. Wilson have a || Opera l^liSSSSmm I Today? See Boards f tui "THE REI AFTERNOON 10c. - | | Wedn I MARION "Getting Mi She Wanted to man -want her to marry I ' her to marry anothi pes Abo a STA 10c. - Thu) VIVIAN VIVl'l A PARMOUI Abo a STRA ~~ COM Thursday, m CAPT. 1RVI HICKOR (30th Division i H MATINEE A Thursday, In 1 The Best of C irivate car in which they dine pri? vately and there is a dining car for the other members of the party. - > "I Spend a $1 on Rat-Snap and Saved the Price of a Hog.". ' - ? James McGuire, tamoua Hog Raiser of New Jersey says, ."I advise every farmer troubled with rata to use RATS-NAP. Tried everything to get rid of rats. ?>pent $1 on RAT-SNAP. v Figured the rats it killed, saved the price of a hog." RAT-SNAP comes in cake form. No mixing with other food. Cats or dogs won't touch it Three sizes, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold and guaranteed by The Rosenberg Mercantile Co., and P. B. Speed.?-Adv. V (vx STATE OF SOUTH CAROLlwt, County of Abbeville. PrviKota flmrrf . I Citation for Letters of i Adminhtrt- f tkm. By J. P. MILLER, Esq., Judge of ProbAte: -5 Whereas, Mrs. Ella C. Cromer v v hath made suit to me, to grant her Letters of Administration of the Es- \ '.;A tate and effects of Mrs. Annie E. Cox, late of Abbeville County, deceased. These are Therefore, to cite and J * admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Mrs. Annie E. Cox, deceased, that they be \ ^ and appear before me, in the Court . ~ \-tfl DX/NUf/% V*A A ltltiMllllA Q vi x ivuavc, vv wc u^iu av auuctiuc . v Court House, on Thursday, the 25th * ' 4 day of September, 1919, after publication hereof, at 11 /o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal of the Court, this 12th day of September, in the year of our Lord one ? thousand nine hundred and nine- , v;>teen and in the 144th year of American Independence. ' 'm Published on the 16th day of September, 1919, in the Press and Ban- ' >$?j ner and on the Court House door for the time required by law. J. P. MILLER, 9-16-2t.-2w. , Judge of Probate. ( McMurray > Drug Co, House ( ?? i nw^iiiiPi|''| ^ |: j: -luesoay I t. jy or Title Fea- jj so SI > GLOVE . i ?: AND NIGIlT. jjj . . . 20c. g| esday | DA VIES 8 | >w U j if *v%t y HIM. They didn't is rilM. They wanted sr^HIM. What Hap j?? R COMEDY. jvj day MARTIN | ETTE" I N i ribiunt ND COMEDY. . - - 20c. IING Sept. 25th, NG O'HAY'S Y NUTS \mu>ement Co.) ND NIGHT. Sept. 25th. I?11 tood Pictures |