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WJiiUiNriOUAl, j [WE F1 J Anythin I lowest flive: that is mad I thing we d teed. Radiator w( Why send the] ran Qel it done [All Work S I Sadler Auto a jj D. E. SADL ?K?uiMiu?iui:iiuiiiiiMianMMUiniuiun)iutnRriiiniutiittiiiiiiiiiiiaHiiiiuimiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii 1 mini iiiiwini in mi?innn i iiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiin I| You No Doubt I it Success can be yours, new year in securing a goi jj be ready to hold a good p< If Year rolls around. ^ 5 Our New Term starts 01 II us in regard to course anc li & Greenwood Bi 326 1-2 WALLER AVE. Under Same Management }I EMANUEL BUSINESS < 1L_?????? | Austin-Pe I Cnm We are essentially jg want to emphasize 1 ?| fine line of drugs a H medicines, etc. | WE PAY SPECIA | OUR PRESCR1 . r&iiiung uuici ncii I- be mentioned: Stationery Toilet Articles { Toilet Paper g We handle a | NUNNALLY'S ? H A | Austm-r Cor laBirai i g from the ip r to the best f' e, and any-1* o is guaran-r BjSp Drk a specialty. i* m off when you jci, : at home? \ I 1 trictly.Cash L Jth nd Tractor Co. C ,ERy Manager | B HnnBBHHHHHBia W I* hl ill j!iw Aspire to Succeed jji^ y* you will spend part of the jji^ od business training you can f!i Dsition before another New I! tl id ) I 1 January 5. Will you write fji I rates? usiness College, jfj GREENWOOD, S. C. jh 0 COLLEGE, Asheville, N. C. 0 0 iiittiiitiiiYtiiitiiMirittiiminiiiitiiitiiiiitiiiiiuiiitirftttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitifiiitiittiiifiiitiiiiiftiiinitiiiit? ! llil1|1ltllltlllllllllMlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllliUlttllltllllllllllllllMI1IIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIMIIIINII|l|ll||i|||it|. . T"| r i" !l!ll!!I!!llllllll!ll!llllll!!l!!!!ll!llllll!l!lii!ll fi rrin Drug |j> ipany | i a drug store and we g o that fact. We carry a m v nd medicines, patent gg a Hi n mt L ATTENTION TO r PTION TRADE. j" is that we carry might g 1 ____! ( Books Cigars 3'j Tobaccos H1 cigarettes ||i complete line of Kg < CANDIES?FRESH |; ernn Drug |: npany g: LONG CANE. k vvvvvwvvs vvu Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Cromer spcr he week-end with Mr. and Mr irthur Ervvin. Mr. W. D. Beauford and J. I ieauford spent Sunday with Mi ohn Beauford. who has moved nea le city. Messrs. J. A. Stevenson and R. H tevenson were business visitors t le city Monday. Mr. Clarence Kay was a busines sitor to the city Wednesday. Mrs. W. S. Bosler and children tent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. L Finley. Mr. Tom Mcllwaine and son iwrence, were business visitors t( e city Thursday. Misses Linnie and Nina Beaufort ent Wednesday in the city with Mr id Mrs. J. M. McKellar. The farmers of this community ive been busy this week selling cot n. Born January 10, 1920 to Mr. anc rs. J. B. Beauford, a son, Josepl enry. Mr. Robert Beauford, of near th( ty, spent the week-end with Mr ither Erwin. Rev. Becket, of Glenn Springs eached a fine sermon at Long Cam inday, January 11, 1920. Mr. T. H. Botts was a business sitor to the city Wednesday. Mr. and Mi-s. Jeff Long, of neai e city spent Thursday wit*h Mr id Mrs. Luther Clamp. Misses Hattie and Eselle McCord Smithville community, spen rednesday with Mr. and Mrs. T. H otts. Mr. Sam Bruwell, of McCormick as in this community Tuesday an< Wednesday looking after his farm h as recently purchased. The farmers in this communit; ere successful in getting thei imber sawed, s Mr. R. H. Stevenso tid Mr. Eugene Miller are bot inning saw mills and are doing firs lass business. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. King attende )e Sutherland?Hall weddine Satui ay evening* For Those Who Use Telephones Knowing the proclivities of th verage person who has occasion t requently use the telephone, an aving heard some rather discourt( us remarks made over 'the line' z ne time or another, we hope that a f you who use the telephone, e: ecially, you business men whose r< utation as such may be seriousl npaired by some fresh clerk or o: ice boy misusing your phone priv ;ges, we submit these pertiner aragraphs: "A telephone is like a can c asoline, a motorcycle, or a whee arrow on a dark night. That is t ay, a very useful and satisfactor hing, if approached circumspect] nd handled intelligently. But because there are many pe< le who have not learned how t roperly use this greatest of all ii entions, there is still friction to t vercome. It goes without saying that thei nil always be the fellow who strik< match on the rim of the gasolir an, just as there will be the offic lan who "bawls out" the girl < he switchboard. XT aitf 4-Vi/i /voca1iv4a 1 - I / ? 1?- c* Kn/it* I XWW tliU HiVftO I.I mrely extemporaneous but instai nanner, and the match striker, wfr s really a dangerous man, is r noved entirely from an environmei o which he is a menace. The telephone, unfortunately annot shoot a few hundred vol nto the carcass of the "grouch rhe instument is scientifically harr ess. It has to be, in order to propc y serve the big majority of sent folks who daily use it. So the "grouch" talks roughly lis company's patrons, gives slu ing answers to polite inquirie Irives away business and imparts ;very person with whom he talks < ;he wire a series of gloomy ^hivors A fool or misanthrope with 1: ips at a transmitter may do mo lamagc to any business than 1 r.bors in other channels can produc He is a millstone around his coi nanv's neck, and if there are onoir if his sort, the company will drov in a sea of unpopularity. Watch every employee in your c ficc. Start on them when they arc c fice boys and train them to look i to the telephone a> one of the be v| "business getters" in the shop if 1 v; handled right. Teach them to smile V while they are speaking. Admonish V them to be polite to everybody ail V tne time. n if you have a fellow who won't s. learn, for goodness sake don't let him fool with a high-classed electri$. cal instrument like a telephone. Let ! . him go down to the power house and | reconnect with .a 200 horse-power | j dynamo." | [ E ? CAf IT LI PADni IMA DH AHC r? nJ jUf 1 u v/uwt-.iiin. nu/iL/j L= 0 [E E J Columbia, Jan. 1(5.?Spccial: Tt j| ' , is inconceivable to me that South j| {Carolina through its General As- ? I i & 'jsembly now in session will not join j fa 'iher sister states in the formulation j S 'of a wise policy of progressive 1 ' I road-building,, "said George R. g ' (Wheeler, Manager South Carolina g j Landowners' Association." js Mr. Wheeler has just returned j j| | from Florida and while there hej S imade a survey of the peninsular's State's superb system of hard-sur-i |] [faced highways. He gave his opinionie that the good roads of Florida had a | as much to do with attracting tour- a 1 lists to the State as its climate, andlg ! are chiefly responsible for the large S 1! numbers of substantial and oftimes,: s wealthy people who have settled |j I there. ill > Mr. Wheeler said that he believes S ; that should South Carolina emulate Florida's example and construct a'S s iState system of hard-surfaced roads IS connecting with continuous states, 'jfj r there is no reason why the thousands*[a . iof tourists traversing these high^S I ways would not be attracted to s ,! South Carolina and settle here,!? 11 some of them permanently. Mr. is . j Wheeler said that the automobiles i ^ !of 90 per cent of the tourists visit-! r :,|ing Florida are shipped there either| i by boat or rail because of the in-! e ferior roads of this section. j "You can spe," he said, "what an j y economic loss this entails on the j ' r, State of South Carolina. If it had a I nj system of hard-surfaced roads con-| h necting like highways from the East; it to the South; it would cause tour-, lists to travel by automobile through; d this section and thousands of dol-j i 1 > lars would be spent in this state bj | these tourists." , ' j " i h v p V COLD SPRINGS. V I _ ! V ^ i d|\vvvvvvv vvwv yv\| >_! Mr. D. E. Newell, Jr., and Mrs.! * I Julius Mann, of McCormick, spent 11'Saturday night and Sunday at Mr. 3_:D. E. Newell's. J Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Uldrick and yj children, spent Saturday night and f Sunday near Hodges with Mr. Bill L 1 jJAnder on and family. Mr. <">nd Mr.5. Andrew Newell, and .children, spent Saturday night and ,? Sunday at Mr. N. P. Milford's. 1_ Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hagen and Mr. ;0 and Mrs. C. C. Kay, and children ,y spent Sunday at Mr. T. F. Uldrick's. ly Miss Dessie King spent Saturday night and Sunday with Miss Addie Bowen. 0 Mrs. Christie Cothran spent the week-end with home people. )e Mis Elleh Hagen had as her guest Saturday, Misses Allie Bell and Bes,e!sie McCombs, Daisy and Vera Mc;s Mahan, Mildred and J^nie Winn, a ,e pleasant day was spent by all. Master's Sale. The State of South Carolina, ;; i County of Abbeville. Tt! Court of Common Pleas. jo EDMUND JOHNSON, Jr., Plaintiff, e_ against lt EDMUND JOHNSON, Sr., and others 'nv _ i? 3 ueienuanu*, jf I By authority of a Decree of Sale ts|by the Court of Common Pleas for ." Abbeville County, in said State, made n.[in the above stated case, I will offer r.!for sale, at Public Outcry, at Ab"belojville C. H., S. C., on Salesday in ' February, A. D., 1920, within the to!legal hours of sale the following der_ I scribed land, to wit: All that certain ,S( i lot or parcel of land situate, lying and to j being in the City of Abbeville in Ab )n ! beviiie L'ounty, m tne state aioresaia, [containing Five-Eighths (5-8) of an (is; Acre, move or less, and bounded by vol lands of Nellie J. Gallman, by lands lis i oi' J. L. Perrin, by Poplar Street and :e.1 the Augusta Road. ji- This lot of land is sold subject to j I r?'h j s>ny assessment for public improvom j meats made by the City of Abbeville, i TERMS OF SALE?CASH. Pur-| if-jchaser to pay for papers and stamps. >f-j TIIOS. P. THOMSON, up Master A. C., S. C. .?t 1-14-3t. Fish Fe TTT _ -!_ j_1_ _ 1 we are maKmg uie i year we have cTrer prodi charged with fish, and v fish this year than ever t why it is the best. It wi in Abbeville County to u goods made, 'but we d< more for it than others c It will pay you to get ii with us early, as the sup] I = Anderson Pho: Oil Com[ Anderson, W. F. FARME I ySjBjgjEJSfSJ5/5J5/SI5J5ISJBJ5/SJ5J5f5J5iS/5ISJ5JBJSJ5?BJ Out of accumulated capital hare a of industry and applied science, aU tl orations of the common lot. Upon it for the process of recoutructioa ia * i The Successfi Raises Bigg' and cuts down costs 1 labor-saving machinery. Good prices for the 1 courage new investment and greater prosperity. But the success of sl[ <\n thp. crrnw+h of railri Vii tiiV v .. v.. beasts of burden that the world's markets. The railroads?like tl their output and cut d< the c( nstant investmenl With fair prices for the tl ilroads are able to for expanding their faciJ Ra?es high enough to ?.<.11 nmirn roilmar] frrn' Will 1113111 K, 1U111 vuu gi V costly traffic congestion j results in poorer service National wealth can i j railroads grow. Poor railroad servici price. No growing coil the price of inadequa :t facilities. \ \ ' cVu's adwtbfvrnt (a <?ib sociation of dtaili Those desiring information conce tfif.ii may obtain literature by tc <'<" ? ?/ Railway Executives, 61 ?^ rtiltzer i1 Dest fertilizer this 1 v| iced; it is heavily | ye are using more J )efore, and that is j 1 I M ill pay any farmer 1 seit. It is the best 1 !'|| 3 not charge any j ;| lo for their goods, j H "'lei i communication | oly is not large, 1 .2C& ^ j )any j m s. c. i ,,ii R. See'v. 1 -f-' '. , . 1 risen all the su ceswa * be comforts uml (imelW the world must''cpead j rhich all have to share. -JAMES J. ULL jl Farmer I er Crops I| t)y investment in . 1 farmers* crops en- ; more production i I 1 ^ricultui e depends Dads?the modern haul the crops to . r | 'I <!? he farms?increase f j 3wn unit costs by t of new capital. . 1 the work they do, attract new capital ities. yield a fair return j wth, and prevent ' , which invariably at higher cost. ncrease only as our i 5 is dear at any ntry can long pay ite transportation published by the ikuj %xeadi i :c?, rning Ihe railroad siiuriting to Thr .IsmnnB road way. Sue Yrk.