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l $ , S ? ffi J . ffi W | | Saturday Nij gj so far as our |j Monday A ] I Stock to Gr( 1 r i' jj SPECIAL! {j 100 Dozen O. N. T. ] ! j 20c Value while i 11 : Limit?12 Balls to i} Palm Olive Soap 15 i I Limit. I We do not [juv TWO YEARS' SLEEP [i ENDS SUDDENLY i i |f Wisconsin Woman Restored To I Consciousness s ? r Waukesha, Wis., Aug. 21.?Mrs. 1* Clara Jorgenson, Racine, who has' been asleep at the county asylum I" for more than two years, has re- D pained consciousness. . A sister-in-law of Mrs. Jorgenson ^ visited the institution, bringing]!3 with her, her six year old son. It is r thought the child awakened the memories in the woman's mind that,c restored her to a normal condition. jn It has been necessary to feed and P care for Mrs. Jorgenson as if she j were a helpless babe, according to g Mrs. Peters, matron of the institu- g tion. Yesterday she walked, used r< table utensils and fed herself with s] $ase. She walked a short distance! ffcout the ward, but returned to her.ti invalid's chair, exhausted from the ($ exextion. jir "I could not, no matter how I tried, break the spell which seemed | ,, i to ;<oep me Douna in anotner woria i in which i lived," said Mrs. Jorgenson in an interview. She said that although she could not open her eyes, utter a word or move a muscle, she knew each day's events and heard each word spoken to her. In an attempt to describe the sen-' sation of awakening, Mrs. Jorgenson could only say, "It just happened naturally." She could not feel in advance that the power to see and to speak was about o return to her, she explain?d. J Mrs. Jorgenson clearly remembered world war events, knew of C relatives who had been in the ser- 1 - - - _ - r j.1 I vice, told the names 01 muse wmu had remained on the battlefields of 1 France, where hey fell, and knew some had returned home safely and ^ the dates of their arrivals. , i SOME PRICES LOWER ] Washington, Aug. 21.?Potatoes ? % Besure yoi let thi glit August 28t Dry Goods Stc horning Aug. 21 jenwood. Make the rem SPECIAL! B. 4 Crochet Cotton t lasts I3c Ball. a Customer, c size?9c Cake. No want to move L AN BiMiociciDianaiaoci I nan ddd ij bdddi3dci ind fruits and vegetables generally, leared the season's low price level ;o date last week, according to a de>artment of agriculture market mmmary issued today. At $3 a barel reached in New York potato irices to growers "are now lower han they ought to be considering he cost of production," the statement said. I In Western cities, potatoes are, li^ier than in the East and the rice range is from $4 to $5 a bar-i el. Onion, at 70 cents a bushel, and abbage at $20 a ton, the state-, lent said "are going at reasonable rices." ,j Ganteloupes, watermelons and reen stuffs and summer fruits enerally have "suffered a severe &action from the high market of pring and early summer." i' The first of Western boxed apples I > reach Chicago are bringing from 2.50 to $3 against a $4 price early-" i the season. ASPIRIN : 1 Name "Bayer" on Genuine i 1 /TO" "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" isjl genuine Aspirin proved safe by i nillions and prescribed by physi-.i :ians for over twenty years. Ac:ept only an unbroken "Bayer j package" which contains proper j lirections to relieve Headache, roothache, Earache, Neuralgia, j Rheumatism, Colds and Pain.1 Sandy tin box of 12 tablets cost1 tew cents. Druggists also sell larger! 'Bayer packages." Aspirin is trade ^ nark Bayer Manufacture Mono-^ iceticacidester of Salicylicacid. I wm fi einnnnnna H n 1JUUUUUMUUUUUIJL i are right s Removal :h marks the d >re is concerned 5th the trucks v aining days of c The Removal Sa Our Stores S t Augll! ? I f any of this stoc remaining days IDER tfiLjiiiHJiLrajzjnnLnimnjHJi! * COOPER NOT CALL AN EXTRA SESSION Thia MeansThat Women Will Not Participate In Voting .Of August Thirty-first?Issues a State* ment Columbia, August 22.?Governor Cooper will not call an extra session of the general assembly prior to August 31, the date for the holding of the primary election, he said yesterday. With this announcement hopes of suffragettes to participate in the primary go glimmering as it has generally been conceded that unless he election laws are changed women will not be able to qualify to vote in the primary, and without an extra session of the legislature, the election law can not be altered. Attorney General Sam M. Wolfe is out of Columbia at the present time attending a meeting in St. Louis and Morris C. Lumpkin, assistant attorrley general, said that no request for an opinion on the I nrimarv end of the suffraere aerita-1 tion has been made of him. Governor Cooper in speaking- of the calling of an extra session of! the general assembly referred to ;he statement of Thomas P. Cothran chairman of the state Democratic executive committee. Among other statements made by Mr. Cothran >vas the following: 4,I do not think that the-' 19th1 amendment was intended or is ap-l plicable to party primary elections, but if it should be so held, and the discrimination against the female sex contained in the rules should be abrogated by a certain time and the date of the election, which provisions are not discriminatory, will . . .. i stanu as msuperaoie Darners. k The suffrage amendment was be-! ing discussed in many offices and other places of public assemblage yesterday and many different views' of the probability of women being J able to qualify for voting in the i primary were advocated. It seemed i Df ] t before yoi Sale pass j ate of our last d I. ' brill mOve the reir \ >ur Removal Sal , le Closes At Both aturday Night st 28th k, so come in ai of this Sale SON fiuzniiiiiimiuarai to be the. general opinion in the'e State House that an extra session 1 ti of the legislature called for the pur-'c] pose of so amending the election'p laws as to permit women to enroll, '? | was only hope for women taking n J part in primary. The statement ofl ; governor that he would not call anj^ extra session of the legislature prior ^ to August 31 would seem to indi-j-^ cate that women will not take part 'a in the primary in 1920. ^ ADVANTAGES OF THE Oi SOUTH TOLD BY NEW YORK EDITOR st lii New York, August 22.?'-"An in- tc come of $2,000.00 in the South is If worth about twice what it is worth rj in the great industrial centers of the p< North," says the editor of The San * and New York Herald in the course n< of an editorial anent the federal in- j,, come tax law but incidentally giv- w jing the South some very valuable cj advertising as the ideal place in 'a| which to live, especially for the'^ man of moderate income. "In climates and circumstances L. :P? where housing costs are relatively !gj lnw jus in tho Snn+.lv wVior? -fnpl I ?' ? ? ~ ej bills for heating purposes are slight, m where warm, heavy and expensive clothing is not necessary and where even food is more plentiful and generally cheaper"?another extract from the same editorial. Wi What better description of the advantages of the South as a land j ^ where every prospect pleases could j be given by the most enthusiastic I booster? And all on the editorial page too, far, far away from any common- ^ place trading advertising matter_____________ ! A MOTHERHOOD H l Men have talked, poets have sung ft artists have painted, sculptors have in glorified and dignity of motherhood si and let it go at that. fa It has remained for New South b< Wales to create the first "Ministry A of Motherhood" in the world. One ft of the first acts of the newly elect- Ni Pro u decide to rou by ay of Business i lainder of our C e profitable day i EXTRA S 300 Dozen J. j& P. Co 150 Yards to Spool O 4-/-v 1 AA 1 T7"~l o v*f xvvy, v ctiue while it lasts. Limi Customer. id buy at your GO/1 / d labor government was the crea- 1 ion of such a cabinet office. * harged with the duty of making * rovision for mothers and children c 'ho are forced to enter industry to ^ take a livelihood. a ' v One of the duties of the new linistry is to administer the law en- e owing motherhood. New South 8 ^ales thinks that if a mother bears t large number of children, she has erformed the most valuable service 1 assible to the state, and she. is .to e compensated by endowment. Instead (tf talking about "race licide" and deploring small famies, New South Wales has decided > do something practical about it. not to make it worth while to lise large families, at least not to jnalize them. Definite details of the proposed ew law have not been worked out, it it is tentatively proposed that a orkingman's family having eight rildren, for instance, would have 1 but the first two subsidized in le form of an endowment paid to mother, the money for which lrpose is to be obtained from a aduated tax on incomes, to the rtent of some $25,000,000 anlally. . , It is an extension of the principle i which the public schools were .tablished?that the community is id should be responsible for the elfare of its children.?Piedmont. EGARDING LAW ENFORCEMENT.! In a recent communication to the! hicago Tribune concerning the matir of the enforcement of the 18th mendment, Ex-President William oward Taft said: "As a matter of fact, I am not in Ivor of amending the Volstead Act i respect to the amount of permisble alcohol beverages, I am not in ivor of allowing light wines and 2er to be sold under the Eighteenth mnnrlmpnt f holiavn if wntiM ft/* >at the purpose of the amendment. 3 such distinction as that between 1 riJdiafiiJEniniJiijrajnjajHfEfi .fit | n Abbeville [j h I >ry Goods ij ji ij|| PECIAL! ij ats' Spool Cotton- [ I . -all numbers from (Jr .. -.-7ct*. Spool , 11 It 12 Spools to a 11 price durins | J_ ||| bbeville, ii S.C. 1 fZfZfifZfZRRIZRfEfZfiS ight wines and beer on one hand ind spirituous liquors on the other, s practical as a ponce measure, l lid not favor national prohibition rhen it was an issue. It-has been idopted under constitutional forms >y the people' and should be enforcd in good faith. Any such loop-hole is iTght wines and beer would make he amendment a laughing stock.'" / Dysentery i can be checked and the pain relieved by the use of Anti-Ferment. Take a dose every three or four hours until relieved. Directions with each bottle. "Ask Those Who H a vp II If" I Campbell's ANTI-FERMENT For Mild Disorders of the Stomach a?d Bowels. i ' H^r WmBT SEALED TINS ONLY M|W AT YOUR GOOCECS Maxwell house , coffee ?