The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, March 22, 1920, Image 3
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J $1 Worth
(Big line of Re
this sale. Also at
chandise will go '
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| PROMPT
I is the only serv
the name.
I In the matter o
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| farm
borrowers' r<
promptly cons
are speedily r
modations giv<
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In inviting yo
needs, we assui
of expeditious
tention.
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11
jj PLANTE
II
Abbevi
The Progi
if
sing (
SALE
itire Dry Good:
, Discount for
Of Merchandis
ady-to-Wear and Mil
)out $7,000 worth of
n this Closing Out Sal<
Anders
RY GOODS ST<
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Loans
squirements are
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and efficient at:rs
bank f
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NOTICE OF ELECTION
State of South Carolina,
County of Abbeville.
Notice is hereby given that a special
election will be held at the voting precincts
prescribed by the law in said
j county, on Saturday, April the 3rd 1920
At said election qualified electors .
will vote upon the question of issuing
bonds to the amount of Four (450,000,- ,
00) hundred and fifty thousand dollars ]
the proceeds of which will be used to ]
improve the said highways of the coun- ^
try which are to be graded and topsoiled
,not over $5,000.00 to be spent \
on the average per mile. Said bonds ]
to be issued to bear not more than 5 ;
1-2 per cent and a levy necessary to
pay interest and establish a sinking
fund will be added by the Auditor If
a majority vote in favor of the issue of
the said issue the Board
of Highway Commissioners will be
[I J. A. Smith, Sr. J. S. Stark, J. A.
|j Gilliam. Joseph Hicks. T. 0. Kirkpat|
rick. S. J. Wakefield. A. S. Kennedy,
j R. L. Barmore, J. C. Ashley, J. R.
I Lomax. The Supervisor shall be Secre1
tary and ex-officio a member of the
I Board. The members of the Board;
| shall receive no compensation except
actual expenses.
The qualification for suffrage.
.Managers of election shall require
of every elector offering to vote at
any election before allowing him to
vote, the production of his registration
certificates and proof of the payment
of all taxes, including poll tax.
assessed against him and collectable
I during the previous year. The pro
I duction of a certificate or of the re|
ceipt of the officer authorized to colI
lect such taxes, shall be conclusive
] proof of the payment thereof.
| Section 237 Code of 1912 as amend!
ed bytAct No. 6. special session of
! 1914. '
| On all special question Ihe ballot'
| shall state? the questions, or questions
1 and shall thereafter have (he words'
I "Yes" and "N'o" inserted so tMt the!
| voter may indicate his vote by strik-|
| ing out one or the other of such.
I words on said ballot, the word nn so
|j stricken out to bo counted.
}| Tloforo the hour fixer! for opening
; me pons. .Managers i*.!ifi imitks ninsi
( >!-"> rrrl rnl'sfrib'" the Constitutional
n;i(h. The Chairman of the Hoard
r?f Managers can j.dminisler the oath
in the otli?>r members and i<? tii"
Clerk: . Notary Public must administer
tln'oath to the ch^lrnv'
*" The Managers elect tbeir ekairmmi
and Clerk.
Polls at each voting place must be t
opened at To'clock a. m. and closed;!
n.' 4 p. m. c:;cept in the city of Char- '
- * vi. ! they shall be opened at
7 a. . anu closed at fi r. iv. 5
r:".o -nn.-rers have t:.o power to.
fill a vacancy, and if none of the| j
M;:::;isers attend the citizens can ap-j <
frc-m anvv,T thr- mr.'iled vot j<
ers the Managers who. after beingj <
svnrn can conduct the election. ! t
.At the close of the election, the
Managers and Clerk must proceed' .
publicly to open the ballot boxes and
count the ballots therein, and con- - .
tinue without adjournment until the;
same is completed, and make a state-!]
ment of the result for each office and|
sign the same. Within three daysj;
thereafter the Chairman of the Board i
or some one designated by the Board j;
must deliver to the Commissioners
of Election the poll list, the boxes j
containing the ballots and written j
statements of the results of the elec- i
tton.
The following are the roads specifi
ed in the bill to be improved:
1. Abbeville to McCormick Co'unt>
line by way of J, A. Gilliam, R. W
Knox, known as Island Ford road.
2. Gilliam's Gin House to McCor
mick County line by way of Lebano |
/~<U.. _?V. IT /-I ,M. /N-J.
isuuri;ii, iviis. uiucii ,ui. ouciaiu,
place, known as Calhoun MiU road. I
3. Fork of road at Hill piace to McCormick
County line by way of Davgj
Wardlaw^ Norman Cason to Cla'-'
worthy's Cross Roads, known as Snake
Road.
4. Abbeville to Greenwood County,
line at Cedar Spring House, known as
Dr. Presslev place, by way of L. A.!
Jackson. Mrs. R. L. Winn. .T. F.1
Southerland. known as Cedar Spring
Road. j
5. Abbeville to Greenwood County
line either by way of W. A. Stevenson
or Frank McCord.
6. Abbtville to Greenwood County
line by way of J. R. Lomax, George
Mundy .Buzzard Roost, known 93
Hodges Road.
7. Abbeville to Greenwood County
line by way of R. H. and J. H. Stevenson.
Richardson place. W. L.
fnonn A. FV Calvert T)laCP.
known as Douglas Mill Road.
8. Abbeville to Due West, by way
of R. B. Ferguson, Long Cane church
W. J. Milford, Buck Stand. Ellis
Brothers, known as Due West Road.
9. W. L. Dawson to Douglas mill
by way of Pierce Bowen, T. W. McCord
and W. W. L. Keller.
10. Due West to Donalds by way or
James Todd place.
11. Donalds to Anderson County line
paralled with Southern Railroad. j
12. Donalds to Greenwood County
line by way of John Dunn and William
Singleton.
13. Donalds to Greenwood County
line near Ware Shoals by way of R. L.
Barmore, Razor place, James Cork 1
place.
14. Maddox place to Anderson Coun-j
ty line at J.R. Black place by way of 1
Watt Johnson's place. James Williams
and Rev. R. W. Burts.
15. Due West Anderson County line
near Honea Path by way of James:
Pruitt. The Hook. Ashley Store. J. R.J :
Pruitt and J. A. Brock and Kay, '
place. j:
16. W. J. Milford to Anderson Counj
ty line by way of Cold Spring School
House, R. W. Crawford, Pratt place,
Bryant's Cross Roads, Robinson
Brothers, known as Fair Bridge Road.
17. Abbeville to Anderson County;
line at L. 0. Robinson placeby way of j
Martins Mill, Carwford's Store, R. A. j
Keaton( Antreville, r. J. A. Ander-j
son. known as Antreville and Trail j
Roads.
18. Crawford's Store to Lowndes-!
ville by way of J. H. Hill. J. W.I'
Bradberry, Bell's Chapel. Midway
Church, Campbell's School House )
Foster Wright place and Frank's!
place.
19. Lowndesville to McCalla by way]
of W. H. Hardin, S. S. Boles, John
McCalla.
20. Frank's place to Calhoun Falls.
21. Abbeville to Calhoun Falls by^
way of County Farm, Wardlaw's
Bdidge. J. F. Clinkscales. Smith
Cross Roads. Glowing Springs.
22. Calhoun Falls to McCormick
County line by way of Hest^l-'s Store
23. From forks of road near J. F.
Clinkscales to .Martin's Store by way!
of J. M. Bell, Cunningham place.
24. Shaw place to Irwin's Mill, by
way of R. A. Coleman.
" r-_i? _r ?_ .1 I
in. r ruui iui ks ui ruau ii?jui a?h >.
T. P. Eakin to Anderson County line,
by way of F. K. Ashley's shop and
Zarline Bridge.
2ti. From .Melrose Cemetery to
Lowndesville Road by way of Andrew
Stone. A. J. Ferguson. Albert Uenrv!
land. P. A. Cheatham land. Hamlin!
Hridsre. Willie WMI'-mur. Mrs. A. P.
Rodgers. Mack Williams. Ross Pric*.
Add Hill and intorpeftinc tbo Lown-i
desville Road and known as Hamlin
Bridge Road.
'.'7. From Rrvar.tV Cross Roads m
Ihe Hook. Prom CIrj!>!?.>".-= Store to A:rtorsoji
Comity line, iiin-r First Cn,rt1;
k'iinrt b. ard from Hue \V?st t<? Pr;>"7
S:!!!*" I<y wi'y mi' Tn',K'?>r'>
from f.owndcsviHe 'o \
Those favoring the issue of bonds to[
:he amount of $450.00.00 w'll vote aj
icket on which is printed or written b(
For Tlord issue of $45'M0. yea"
Ph'^e opposed "For Bor.d issue o* fjj
M50.00 no." To
Tn? following managers of election
ire hereby appointed to hold the said ta
special election at the various pre-;0l
iu luc . i itacis auu iic^" 1 tj
pessary blanks can be secured from i m
h? Supervisor on or after March 29th!m
11 r
Managers of Election
Abbeville?T. C. Seal. C. A. Botts .v
i
and J. H. Cheatham. ?n<
Antreyllie?E. L. Bell. A. M. Erwin,!"1
and Ernest McCarter. i .
hue West?A. D. Kennedy. J. C. Mc-1
Dill and Jno T. Magill. U(
Donalds?R L. Barmore, Frank Smith!
and J. J. Dunn. ;m
Lowndesville?W. C. Shaw. S S Boles i^.
and W. E. Ellis.
Magnolia?W. C. Lanier^ F. C. Nance!
and R. 0. Bell. jjg
Central?W E Morrison. A. B. Robert-jn,
son and D E Nickles.
Abbeville Cotton Mills?J W Faulknerjs<
B E Williams and J J Roche. !f<
Bryant's X Roads?F E Ellis, W W 1)1
Wilson and A F Carwile.
Keowee?John McMahan. Wes Ashley, ^
and Elmer Branyon.
Rock Springs?J R Sheffield, S. J. fc
Burts and W M Jamison.
Hampton?G E McClain. J H Cald- n
well and W M Abies. v
Gilliams Gin Ifonse?John Gibert, Jj*
R Brown and S T Hamond. ' n
'PVirt mono o'orc of nror?inr>t nnm-Mf
ed above are requested to delegate onejh
of their number to call at the County
Supervisor's offire to secure Boxes and'
Tickets for the election
J. R. McGhee, Chairman.
John M. Gambrell.
W. T. Mo gill. d
Commissioners of Election. v
FEW FOTKS HAVE ij
GRAY HAIR NOW
???
Druggist Says Ladies are Using i
Recipe of Sage Tea and *
Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and lustre, i
or when it fades, turns gTay, dull and |
lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur ,
in the hair. Our grandmother made
up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur 1
to keep her locks dark and beautiful, i I
and thousands of women and men who | s
value that even color, that beautiful j t
dark? shade of hair which is so at- 1 ,
tractive, use only this old-time recipe. ! 1
Nowadays we get this famous mix- \ .
ture improved by the addition of other 1
ingredients by asking at any drug '
store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage i
and Sulphur Compound," which dark- \
ens the hair so naturally, so evenly, |
that nobody can possibly tell it has
been applied. You just dampen a .
sponge or soft brush with it and draw
this through your hair, taking one 1
small strand at a time. By morning i
the gray hair disappears; but what i
delights the ladles with Wyeth's Sage j
and Sulphur Compound is that, be- f
sides beautifully darkening the hair 1
after a few applications, It also brings ,
back the gloss and lustre and gives It
an appearance of abundance.
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- 1
pound Is a delightful toilet requisite <
to impart color and a youthful ap- j
pearance to the hair. It is not in- \
tended for the ccre, mitigation or pre- j
vention of disease. ,
| Sta.. Tomorrow I !
j and Keep It Up If:
r ~v Morning j
Cr: . i.-.jit of drinking a
fc.a... v^r hot water beforo
breakfast.
We're not here long, so let's make
our stay agreeable. Let us live well,
eat well, digest well, work well, sleep
well, and look well, what a glorious
condition to attain, and yet, how very
easy it is if one will only adopt the
morning inside bath.
Folks who are accustomed to feel
dull and heavy when they arise, split
ting headache, stuiiy trom a com, ioui
tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach,
can, instead, feel as fresh as i daisy
by opening the sluices of the system ?
each morning and flushing out the i
whole of the internal poisonous stag- !
nant matter. ]
Everyone, whether ailing, sick or ;
well, should, each morning, before | <
breakfast, drink a glass of real hot <
water wi!h a tenspoonful of limestone <
phosphate i:i it to wash from the
stomach. ]rvr and bowels the previous day's
indigestible waste, sour bile
aa4 por.-onons toxins; thus cleansing,
swi'eio:::::.? and purifying the entire
alimentary r:.:tai before putting morr
food into };? stomach. The action of
hot water and liniestoue phosphate 0:1
an empiy stomach is wonderfully invigorating.
It clear" out all the sour
fermentations, gases, waste and i
acidity and gives one a splen-'.i!
appetite for breakfast. While you av<*
enjoying your breakfast tlie watvr
and phosphate is quietly extracting!
a large volume of water front tl'.o
blood and getting ready for a j
thorough flushing ot all the inside
organs.
The millions of people who rr;*|
bothered with constipation, bilious j
spells, stomach trouble; others who
have sallow skins, blood disorders and
sickly complexions :ire nrned to ?t,'f a
quarter pound of limestone phosphate i
froui the drusj store. This will cost*)
very little, but is suiiicient lo in.."
anyoue a pronounced crank on
subjcct of iasidc-tathin^ befovo ' ;
Agreement With f-Mrikew.
London. Mar. 20.?The deliberations
itween the government at Berlin
id the strike committee continued
iroughout the night, says a Berlin
sp:i-ch to the liondon Times. The
llowing convention was signed in.
e early morning:
First?The government's representees
will intervene with the variis
political parties in order to rerm
the same. Prussian cabinet
inisters will be nominated by agreeent
between the parties and the
ade unionists.
Second?The labor organizations
ill have a decisive influence in these
jminations. respecting, however, the
ghts of parliament. <
Third?Punishment of the leaders
f the recent coup, including all offials
and civil servants who support1
the Kapp regime.
Fourth?Democratization of all adinistrations.
and the dismissal of all
ho proved disloyal to the con'stituon.
Extend Social Laws.
Fifth?Immediate extension of exting
social laws and the framing of
ew laws.
Sixth and seventh?The immediate
jcialization of all industries; there)re
nationalization of the coal and
otash syndicates.
Eighth?Confiscation of agricultural
roducts and confiscation of land imroperly
and unintensively cultivated.
Ninth?Dissolution of relchswehr
irmations not loyal to the constitpon
and their replacement by worklen,
and teachers.
Tenth?The resignation or uustav
oske and Dr. Karl Heine.
The strike was proclaimed off at
lidday and the correspondent adds,
is n#t likely work will be resumed
efore .Monday. The state of siege is
laintained. but public meetings above
ecisions were announced, were perlitted
this afternoon
Mrs. Florence Bannister, county auitor
of Codington county, is the only
. oman in South Dakota holding such
position.
W WWHEN
KIDNEYS BOTHER
take a glass of Salts before breakfast
if your Back hurts or Bladder
is troubling you.
No man or woman who eats meat re gnarly
can make a mistake by flushing the
ridneys occasionally, eays a well-known
luthority. Meat forma uric acid which
ixcitea the kidneys, they become overworked
from the strain, get sluggish and
ail to filter the waste and poisons from
;he blood, then we get sick. Nearly all
heumatism, headaches, liver trouble,
lervousneee, dizziness, sleeplessness and
irinary disorders come from sluggish
ridneys.
The moment you feel a dull ache in the
ridneys or your back hurts or if the
irine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedinent,
irregular of passage or attended by
i sensation of scalding, stop eating meat
ind get about four ounces of Jad
Salts from any pharmacy; take a
tablespoonful in a glass of water before
ireakfast and in a few days your kidneys
will act fine. This famous salts is made
From the acid of grapes and lemon juice,
sombined with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flush and stimulate
the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids
in urine so it no longer causes irritation,
thus eiKling Diaaaer weakness.
? Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot
injure; makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water drink which everyone
should take now and then to keep the
kidneys clean and active and the blood
pure,* thereby avoiding serious kidney
complications.
ASPIRIN FOR COLDS
Name "Bayer" is on Genuioa
Aspirin?say Beyer
Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
in a "Bayer package," containing propel
directions for Colds, Pain, Headache,
Neuralgia, lumbago, and Rheumatism.
Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspiria
prescribed by physicians for nineteen
years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets
cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark
Df Bayer Manufacture of Mon~aceticuidefiter
of Salicylicacid.
Jliller'a Antiseptic Oil. Known ua
Gh?Iia fill
viiane vii
W-.I Poaitirely Iteliove Pain in iFcw
Minutes
Trr It rlcht iiotv for Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Iaiinhayo. soiv, stiff r.nil swollen
joints, pain in tin.- liead, o.i< k and
limits, orus. bunions. e!AtVr one
application paiu usually disappears as
ii liv magic.
A new remedy used externally for
Coughs, Colds. Croup. Iiitlu<-ii::a. Sore
Throat, I'iphthfria and Totisiliiis.
Tins oil js f.'iH cti.-tl to l<o Hi" moct
poiit-tr.itinmanly known. Its prouipe
::ml imiiic>H.at>' t'l'tVct in rolii'xin-; p.ila
i-. (Iiii* :,) the fa> t t!i.:t it. priiH rates t->
the affected pruts :it on?-i\ As an ill' s1
ration. pti'ir !?-ti ilrops <>n tin.1 t' '
J : ? t.f .- !. n-athor ami it w.I! :
1 .vil^'ntu'e through ami t'.i
i". I'nci' minute*.
.iAi'ci !>t no substitute. This jj'y. _,fj
i u ! 11 :i 2'cil color only, Manni'i..;.I
hy ii-jiU Juico Medicine Co. ouly. Oct
McMurray Diu^ Co.