The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, June 21, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
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Miss Ruth Crowther has returne
home from Winthrop College
where she went to attend the shor
course.
Mrs. J. H. Ferguson and Mis
Lavinia McCarter represented ou
missionary societies at Winnsbor
last week.. They brought back
snlendid reDort.
Mrs. Summie Kinnigham, am
> -daughter, Merle, of Jefferson, Ga.
are spending sometime with the for
mer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. I
Haddon.
Mr. Paul Hayes, of Birmingham
Ala., visited at the home of Mr. an<
Mrs.E. L. Bell last week-end.
Miss Ellen Bagley, of Richland
is the guest of Mrs. Ernest Mc
Carter. A delightful party wa
given in her honor last Saturda;
evening. '
? Miss Zula Suber is visiting Mi
and Mrs. Frank Suber in Piedmont
Mr. and Mrs. Motte Keaton, an
! daughter, Pearl, of Canon, Ga
nriH Mrs .T Cheatham
and son, Archie of Abbeville, spen
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. A
Keaton.
Miss Margaret Cook, of Latimer
is the guest of heV aunt, Mrs. S. J
Wakefield.
The Ladies Missionary Societ;
entertained the Young People's sc
ciety at a silver tea last * Saturda;
afternoon. Games were played, af
ter which delicious cream and cak
-was served.
Misses Hazel and Myrtie Crowthc
who have been away teaching, ar
^ at home for vacation. *
Miss Esther Fleming, who ht
been teaching in Orangeburg, is a
home for the summer.
KILL ALL F
For our Customers t
and now has in stoc
TALC!
SODIUM
TO KILL PC
This is a specially pr
ide, prepared with a
convenient and rea(
beled with the U. S.
culture's directions
easy to give, inexpe
lice, both old and :
young which are ha
present on the fowl
/ ?
35 CENTS PI
THE McMURRA
Attention
We Are Now In F
Make of Battery.
We are Agents Fo
j BATTERY With
For 18 Months.
Drive By For a !
Water.
City
UHIBIII?IIJimiUlMIIIIIIIMMII ?
GREENWOOD B!
Greenwi
Our Business is To
TITO cfr* n Qn
i-j\jii t waoi/C unc uu
this time in prepari:
in the early fall. "W
woriderful courses
Bookkeeping, Shor
ing. The courses
and the cost to you
j t c* n
us toaay ior miorir
GREENWOOD Bl
Greenw
(
9
* J. Leander Carwile, of the Uni-,
I versity of North Carolina, and j
George Gray, of Erskine, are at
home for vacation.
t' Mr. Frank Anderson, of Clemson
d College, spent the week-end with
> his parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Andt
erson.
j Miss Lucia Vandiver entertained
s the following young ladies Sunday
r |to dinner: Misses Edna Prince,
oj Elizabeth Suber and Mary Bell.
a Mr. and Mrs. Langdon Erwin
and children, Langdon, Jr., and Ella
d Busby, are visiting relatives in
> Sharon and Wagener.
Miss Elizabeth McCarter has
'"been selected to represent our Sunday
school at the training course at
, I -rrr J O-ll 1 K OS
l? w onoru v^uncgc nvm xv-*.v
^ Mr. Prue Bell, of Abbeville,
spent the week-end with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bell.
Mr. Archie Keaton, Jr., and
s Archie Cheatham spent Monday in
V Canon, Ga.
' COAL SHORTAGE
' COMING IN YEAR
d
> Washington, June 19.?A coal
'? shortage next winter which ' may
curtail production of iron and steel
andseriously, affect other industries
is foreseen by the federal re',
serve boards in its report received
, j /
. tonight of business ,indutsrial and
j financial conditions for tlie month
y' of May.
>- The situation, already is acute in
y j some districts, according to the
>j board. Production in many lines is
e being held down chiefly as a reJ
suit of _thes hortage of cars, the reir
serve board reports.
e J Labor difficulties, while compli'
eating the situation are considered
is by the board as only a minor cause
,t1 of reducel coal production.
' No reduction of coal prices is in
I
/
?Ol/LTRY LICE
:his Store has procured
k a limited supply of
IMIZED
FLUORIDE
ULTRY LICE
ocessed Sodium Fluor
, suitable light base in a
ly-to-use form. It is laDepartment
of Agrifor
administering. It is
nsive and kills all the
young, including the
tched from . the eggs
at time of treatment.
iR CAN.
Y DRUG COMPANY
?
Car Owners
'osition to Repair Any
r the EVER-READY
Written Guarantee
Free Inspection and
Garage
JSINESS COLLEGE
Dod, S. C.
Train for SUCCESS.
mmer months.! Spend
ng for a good position
re are now arranging
for Summer study in
thand and Typewritare
all guaranteed
is very small. Write
_ _ j
lauon.
JSINESS COLLEGE
ood,. S. C.
CLE!
South Carol
NEXT SEJ
EQUIPMENT AND COU
College Lands?1560 Acres,
Value College Plant?$2,00
Teachers, Officers, Assistant
Enrollment 1919-1920?101'
Ten Degree Couriei in: Agi
Architecture, Chemistry, 1
Engineering, Civil Eng
' __ Electrical Engineering, Mi
Engineering, Textile Indu
dustrial Education,
Science.
Short Courses in Agriculti
Textiles.
SUMMER SCHOOL
June 14 ? July 24
Agricultural Teachers
6 weeks course?June 14
4 weeks course?June 28
Cotton Grading Cowrie
Begins June 14 and conti
about four weeks.
College Make-up Courses
| Courses for Removal Entrai
ditions
June 14?July 24.
Club Boy's Courses
July 13?July 23.
SECOND HOME COM
July 30, 31, and Augus
All graduates and ex-stu(
urged to attend this gathe
"Tigers" at the old Lair!
be quartered in Barracks, s
sheets, towels, etc., as you i
you were a acdet.
We can accomodate only
Barracks and will reserve s
order of ?the application rec
For Full Infori
DO NOT DELAY, YOU I
I * . .sight,
the board says.
Commenting on the far reaching
effect of the car shortage and
freight congestion the board states
that reports of its agents indicate
that the "transportatiQn tie up k
largely the result of the railorad
strike which still continues over a
large section of the country." The
GOVERNMENT WANTS
TO REMOVE PARR
SHOALS DAM
Columbia, S. C., June 17.?Proceedings
in the United States court
to force the removal from the
Broad river of the Parr Shoals darn,
above Columbia, were ordered by
the Attorney General in Washing/
congestion is further accentuated,
according to the board by local
strikes of other groups of transport
workers.
Sporadic strikes in industry, especially
textiles and an acute shortage
of farm labor is reported.
Considerable interruption tc
business resulted during May from
labor and railorad difficulties, the
board states, and the out look has
been such as to cause a severe curtailment
in the column of stock anc
securities transactions.
DEAD MAN'S CLUB
TO BE FORMED
Akron, Ohio, June' 19.?A deac
man's club, composed exclusivelj
of ex-service men now living, bul
listed officially as killed in actioT
overseas, is the latest kind of fraternal
organization suggested bj
William Wirt, of this city.
Wirt is having a hard time trying
to convince the government that h<
isn't dead and buried in France
His name is now being chiselec
from the bronze tablet recentlj
erected here in a memorial building.
Wirt estimates there are nearlj
2,000 ex-service men now living
whom the War Department records
show as killed and buried overseas
He also declared that court records
show about 900 men declared offi
cially dead who are still alive. He
suggests they organize a "Deac
Man's Club" and adopt the slogar
"We may dead, but i we won't lie
down."
THE ORIGIN OF "YOU ALL"
Would-be purists in language
often criticize the South for th<
expression "you all," but th<
South has the highest authority or
earth for its use. Paul, in his epistlt
to the Phillippians, wrote "you all,'
and no hgher authority than the
Bible need be looked for.~ Paul
knew full well the strength and
force of "you all."?Manufacturer?
Record.
MSON
ina's College of i
5SION OPENS WEDN)
rses Value of Colle
0,000.00. There was never a tin
J 120. edge was so-highly prize
ricultufe, peilSftted.
Chemical High wages for uritra
ineenng, .
echanicai many a young man to d]
utry, in- college education. But s
General resenting the work of fo
ire and ly as an investment of t
equal in earning capacit
than $50,000.
What estate comparal
T,,1,r OA I _ i.
t i 9T parein 01 average mean
"uy ' to his. son? What youni
inues for much value in the same
ness?
ace Con- Education fits one for
ties are limited only by 1
acter. Eventually for
awaits the slavery of igr
ing effort.
lents are Clemson College brin,
ringS ao? every young man in Sou
You will and possibilities of a te
;o bring Clemson College a boy fi
did when ;n soutjj Carolina can p
1000 in high place in the service
space in -yy ]yj
eived. _
wxifiAM . r??? Wiyfl
iliauuil' VTA TI 1IVI
MAY BE CROWDED OUT. APPLI
ton. according to the district at
> torneys office here oday. The Parr
^ Shoals company furnishes electric
power to Columbia and many cities^
. in ithe state. The dam is alleged to j1
I be an obstruction in a navigable js
' stream. The outcome of the case | ^
1 it is said at the district attorney's :
? office here, Will affect other water'
1 power companies of the country. (
? *
II
The poblii
to know c
i
{ "
Why do you suppose i
while others look like
side street loft in Nev
ing and marketing h
I However, we insist
RAME
That's why a Ramey ;
dressed.
WE HANDLE ONL1
LINE.
Suits: Palm Beach,
I Oxfords, Straw Ha
and Silk.
3i Neckwear of the \
|I Styles.
a I BOYS' WASH SUIT
I" | TY STYLES?Tl
j RAM
| "tVtK
i
COLL
Agriculture and
ESDAY, SEPTEMBEF
ge Education.
Fertili
when expert knovvl- insect
id and so highly comined
labor will tempt Hog c
iscount the value of a Live s
uch an education, repur
years, viewed mere- pe? d?
ime and of money, is
y to an estate of more Goa,u
pit
ble with this can the ance.
s hope to give or leave scho
g man can acquire that
time at any other busi- The
J year s
nrvH T
a life whose possibili-' toleer
lis capacity and char- ship u
' the untrained there tl0?^h(
lorant and undirected tions <
houses
gs within the reach of schola
th Carolina the bene^s next s
chnical education. At th^ho
rom the humblest home enter
repare himself fof^' a stand
of his state and nation. JfJe' C*
. RIGGS, President. be gi\
the co
????????-T
The Registrar, Clemso
CATIONS WILL BE CON8IDER
RAISE FOODSTUFFS
Foodstuffs will be. very high next
printer, and unless the South raises
its own food,supply and some to
spare for less favored sections, high
prices for cotton will be offset by
still higher prices for food.
Wherever possible,, a market garlen
should be planted; poultry
c realy ougl
ibout this I?
. . /
/# *
)
t . 1
tome men look so nice ii
they'd slept in them?
7 York and elsewhere ta
ot weather Suits for M<
on our Summer Suits 1
Y & GILLIAM ST;
7
and Gilliam-Clothed M
r THE BEST OF EVEF
, Cool Cloth, Mohair, Fh
its, Leghorns, Milans, !
J /
rery Best Makes and La
S IN BEAUTIFUL PAT
ley don't Fade and Shrii
i
v
Y & GIL
ifTHING A MAN WE;
E G E
, s
Engineering
t, 8, 1920.
____________ ;*
PUBLIC SERVICE ->
zer Analysis and Inspection
and Plant Disease Control^*.
iltural Research '*
iltural Extension
Gemson College, S. C. v' .
eradication
Iholera. Control
itock Sanitary Work
Liberty National Bank Bldcr., "
Columbia, S. C.
ee Experiment Station - i ' .y.?
Florence, S. C. ' &!
lI, Plain Experiment Station , ' .
Summerville, S. C. r ; v ;
" ' $ . r*
on theae agencies for asiut
" ' ' ;
LARSHIPS AND EXAMINATIONS
College maintains 170 lour- r ,, ' \v
cholarships in th? Agricultural '
extile Courses,- and 52 in the
fear Agricultural Course (Oc- v- K\ j .r ,
1 to June 1.) Each scholar-? ' . ':/
i worth $100.00 and free tui- ,'
olarship and entrance examina- . ;rj': ,
are held at the county court .
( at 9 A. M., July 9th. Write
11 information in regard to the
rships open to your county
ession, and the laws governing .
iward. *
se who are not seeking t^,??' j
on scholarships are advised td *" uf
examinations on July 9th, '
than wait until they come to
>llege in - the fall. Credit will j f> .
ren for examinations passed at
unty seat. %
???
11 College, S. C.
!EO IN ORDER RECEIVED .
' :
====5 ;v
should be raised in abundance for
' W
egg and'meat supply, sweet and
white potatoes should be grown to
'
the ytmost extent possible by fcav- ing
late summer and fall crops to
supplant wheat bread, for wheat
will be scarce and high and there jp
also danger that the same will app^r iVVi
to corn.
i their Summer Suits ' ;>
Listen! Every little
ikes a whack at mak
aemg made up .to ra
\NDARD I
an always looks well I
IYTHING IN OUR I
n
innel, Serge Worsted gj
Shirts, Both Madras gj
test Colorings and a
rTERNS AND NIF- 1 !
tik. I
MAM
KJA1 ?ll? |
IRS." I