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RIDING IN A NEW CAR. Col. H. N. Cochran, of the Star Route, is riding in a new Chandler'/] car which he recently purchased from j the Abbeville Motor Company. I !, HE WILL BE CHAIRMAN OF E THE GREAT AGRICULTURAL ( COMMITTEE. Senator Smith will A i be the chairman of the great agricul- ^ turai committee of the next congress ' if re-elected. Can South Carolina af- ( ford to miss this chance to head this important committee? The answer is j ?VOTE FOR SMITH.?adv. ' i . i The Passing Of The Faithful Aunt Liizzie .r oster, a iaitmui ; colored woman of the county and ^ one who had many friends amqng < the white people, "died suddenly , Friday and was buried Monday. Aunt Hannah Taylor, for many years a servant in the home of Mr. George W. Syfan, died Thursday' night. VISITORS FROM TEXAS A Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hicks and family, of Howe, Texas, are visiting Mr. ? and Mr?. L. C. Hicks near Due West.'* They also have the following visitors * from Anderson: Mr. and Mrs. II. M.,"* Hicks and children, Mr. and Mrs. D.j Owens and son and Mrs. M. J. Hicks. ( NATIONAL WOMAN'S ' !? PARTY TO ADOPT j1 PLATFORM PLANKS,3' t Washington, Sept. 6.?Proposals |k being considered by the executive^ committee of the national woman's j* party now in session in New York,e range all the way from the nomina- * tion of women candidates for president and vice president to espousal of the Socialist cause with Debs for^ president. These facts leaked back'e to the party headquarters here to- j o day." jt Owing to the lack of time it is t hadly likely that the woman's party b will put its own presidential candidates in the field, or run women candidates for president except c those'already nominated. It is prob- I able, however, that neither the Re- e publican nor Democratic party willc be endorsed, though women voters s will be urged to remember friends [a if suffrage. | > Certain planks that will form the^ basis of the platform are known, s though many 'are still the subject of contention. Among the most important planks will be: A universal eight-hour day for women workers. Abolition of child labor. Uniform marriage and divorce laws, with a single standard of ? morals. , j Opening of' all political offices, ( even the highest to women candi- 1 dates on the same terms with men. ^ Pnimi n?v fnr men and women < "n-4" workers in the same classes of in- < dustry. < A uniform mothers' pension law. 1 A referendum before war can be ] declared on any foreign nation. < More strict enforcement of the ] prohibition law. ( SCHOOL Ok, 3?<3dy. ,1oo\??^ look 4l Ki'm! I y Ml ihoit lovelv cu>lv- J | $i 6k-you! 1 couli I | (] t Simply stable (k? %?^y I 1 ? gtit*r<? T,"i^ ou4'of^0u'/ \ tftotfcey* SViifcneiJ *afel?t ! I \ Ir Irr?p! ?<~r Veiled OTJIOO ? ji, V ????? GENERAL NEWS Great Britam will repay $250,100,000, plus $12,500,000 current nterest to the Treasury departnent at Washington on October 15. This gigantic sum, which repreients Britain's half of the $500,)00,000 Anglo-French loan of 1915, vill be made up largely of the halfpennies of British school children ind the sixpences of British factory aborers. Candidate Franklin D. Roosevell ias been sinvited to Greenville tc nake the Glassy Mountain boys i speech. Clerk of Court N. L. Bennett oJ Spartanburg County has gone int< :he sheep raising business and ha: stocked his farm on the Tiger Rivei vith sixty-four thoroughbreds. \ A severe hail storm visited the ;own of. Saluda last Friday. Considerable damage was done, the stones being large enough to breal vindow panes. Timmonsville sold four hundred md fifty-eight thousand pounds of obacco one day last week for $115,>00,. There is still one hundred and 'ifty thousand pounds on the floor. The International church film Corporation, a concern to dissemiite information concerning the Bible through the medium of movng pictures, will make Spartanburg he distributing point for North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Florila. C. P. Hammond is a director in he corporation and it is through his interprise that they come to Sparanburg. Solicitor Smith, who has just been ro.nlon+iATi KQC roQitm. icicaucu XVA JLV-WVVVAVit I4MU - .. d and Leon W. Harris comes at ince into his office. Solicitor Marin of Greenville and Assistant Atorney General Lumpkin of Colum?ia will assist the young solicitor. At a meeting of the State Board f Education in Columbia last week, )ctober 1st was set * as the date foi ixamination of teachers in every ounty in the state, women on the ohool boards were approved and an ippropriation of two million dollars nil be asked of the next legislaure, for work in the public school ystem. ro HONOR MEMORY OF JENNY LINE Moted Singer of Days Gone By Tc Be Fittingly Recalled By Anniversary. New York, Sept. 5.?America will pay tribute to Jenny-Lind on Octobei 3, the one-hundredth anniversary oi :he birth of the Swedish Nightingale vhom P. T. Barnum brought to this country in 1850 on her sjpectaculai :oncert tour of nearly two years. The centennial is to be commemorated throughout the music-loving world [n Sweden, in England and in ethei countries where she sang, fitting plans are under way to honor the greatest singer in her time?the lone^ n a vci I i L/n i u | Jfiy J)ic\ ^ hijji ,u or V?u* I i 11 r(f'? 6? n? Alt'tlw* ( j j Mr* ^>?^M CUfti C?*t 1 J- IKff 1 ,. I Ik I've * iofi?3 1 I /r to -while .you ? EtcX - j I jl f ly tfflg Copyright, | t noble-hearted woman whose charit was as rare as her art. Her admirers in New York cit will celebrate the event in a uniqu way. They will give an historic; concert?reproduce the first concei Jenny Lind gave in this countr; . bringing back the stage picture an , atmosphere of that memorab! night of September 11 1850. Th i same program will be given. Tl > proceeds of the concert will be give to the same charitable institutions 1 which Jenny Lind gave the proceet - of the original concert. > Frieda Hempel will appear in tl i role of her famous predecessor. SI will wear an exact copy of the gov, worn by the ninteenth century div ' j will sing the same arias and pis > her own accompaniments to the san 31 group of songs on the same pia* i Jenny Lind playevd then?a piar autographed by the Swedish Nigh ingale -on the night of her debut. i j The centennial concert will I given in Carnegie Hall on the evei ing of October 6. Castle Garden," tl : scene of Jenny Lind's first America triumph, has been transformed, inl I the Aquarium and thus is deprive [ j of the honor of housing another mi : mcrable audience. Itjs contemplated to hold a cei 1 tennial exhibit, however, in the o] ! circular building in Battery Pai from October 1 to October 10. Man i of Jenny Lind's personal belonginf and interesting relics associated wit ijher tour here will be shown. The ol j concert grand piano will have il :i place of honor. j On the afternoon of October i ' the park commissioners of New Yox ; J City will present to the Aquarium 1 marble bust of Jenny Lind and ' portrait of the famous singer, bot made for her when she was in th country. Other American cities where Jei ' ny Lind sang are arranging to cell ; brate the day. i TAnnw T in/1 woe Knrr) in j of humble parents. She sang froi I childhood and famous teachers bi canic interested in her. At 22, ht voice entirely failed. Four years h ter it came back and her remarkabl '! career began. Her first operatic rol j was Aljce in Meyerbeer's "Robert ] Diable." Having been acclaimed i her own country and in Norway, si carried her conquests to the cont 1 nent and to England. She was probably the most talke< of person in public life in all Euroj when Barnum., without having bee her or heard her, persuaded her t ( make a tour of the United Sate I No sooner was the contract signe , I than the new impressario accordin to his autobiography, "began 1 prepare the public mind for the r< ception of the great songstress." ' I The steamer Atlantic that brougl r her to this country, was saluted i Sandy Hook and again as she playe up the Narrows. Forty thousan 5 people assembled at the landing an : on the surrounding piers to gre< ! her. Triumphal arches marked h< I pathway. Crowds surged aroun her hotel and clamored for her a] ' pearance. Auctions for the sale < tickets brought thousands.of buyer siGenin a hatter?"a Mad Hatter1 " they called him?paid $25 for tl ! first New York ticket. His unheal of extravagance made him famou The highest price paid for a sing ticket was in Providence, where tl bit of pasteboard was knocked do\? to Colonel Ross for $650. The Nightingale gave about 12 concerts in this country?more tha 35 in New York City. Everywhei audiences foueht to eain entrance 1 the concert halls. Everywhere the stormed her with applause?and e erywhere admirers and charity see! ers besieged her. Extra concer had to be given to satisfy the thronj ?and Jenny Lind herself added mo: extra concerts for charity. People prominent in public li: paid her great honors. Mayors ai , governors presented their compl j ments in person. Jenny Lind broke her contra with Barnum with 55 concerts y to sing?but the great showman ai the Nightingale parted friends. Whi visiting in Boston she was marrii to Otto Goldschimdt, composer ai pianist and shortly thereafter r turned to Europe. In 1858 she to< up her residence in England, whe she died in 1887. There is no record of Jenny Line ' voice. But the journals of her tir and few living people who heard h and those to whom the memory h been handed down all tell the ssr j story?"It was wonderful." *j PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN j The Tramp isn't So Common a Sigh >e 1n the Small Towns as he Used to be ttJ What with Food so High and vlllag I cops Hardboileder than Ever. Tinn iei was when he could Panhandle a Fee* in and a Shot of Hootch In an Hour am :o' Spend the Day Pleasantly Snoozinj !(j! down by the Water Tank, but not Ni ? More. eGALVANIZED ROOFING l-| I have cav :oad of Galvanize Rcofiing in tr.~r.sit that I am offerin ^| for sale, delivery to be made on ax ?S( rival. ;hi 9-6-2tc. J. ALLEN SMITH, JR. Id | tsi - ~ ' *i Ij Beauty Chats | ai I; J *j j; By EDNA KENT FORBES j STEAM BATHS 1- TF EVERT woman vvlio thinks tha i- 1 her regular' b:i!h is keeping he: skin clean, could see the amount o: dead cuticle and dirt and oily mattei m that the masseuse In a Turkish batl B; place gets out of the skin of a "clean' s-, person?She would certainly becom< 5IJ a regular patron of these bath places J Tui'kish baths are beyond the read I of most folks, unfortunately, sine* I ouly the larger towns possess them le And the home steam cabinet is th< le' only substitute. Yet even thiS hom< nl method will open the skin as an ord I inary bath never could, and free th< pores of all the clogging waste mat ter in them; leaving the skin fre< once more to breathe, carrying of . i ninwnsf-A matter, eMns: one thi ie1 3m, -groni Tij Nothing Better for Beauty Than i | Steam Bath Every Week or So. 15 i glow and color only perfect cleanll ,n nesS can lend, and making one fee young and fresh as never before. e In some ways the bath has been th ^ salvation of Turkey and Greece. Thei >y women lead sedentary lives, spendin v- their time dressing, eating, and sleer u ing. This condition is changing as' til . countries are waking up to moder I culture, but the general fact is stil true. Lives spent like this mean tha re great layers of flesh accumulate, tha fe O ?' .j II iifuat TUC CDUIMY QAY5 lu wnHi i nu v>i 111ii/* ?n w li By NEWTON NEWKIRK. c\ "How human I '* *s t0 ron,e,n" id bpr those who je' owe us and to former those we e- I * ' jk1 re' In earlier life the former Quee j Amalie of Portugal wa*: rerov'n? 1's as an athlete and is still considere tie the most expert swimmer among th er^ women of European royalty. as -J The first automobile factory i 'Norway has just been completed. SENATOR SMITH D1 FALSE HIS O "I have just been shown a polit ren, which was published in the Ch which has no doubt been sent to th lutely false the statement that I am senate except with the people of So of my ability. "Mr. Warren, in a desperate ef tionalism in this state. THe effort i worthy of any one seeking the suffn ftiis dapr and time. What I want and votes of the united people of this st mer political affiliations. "Mr. Warren has evidently pu: as follows: On my return to my hoi the following letter to which I replii Columbia Hon. E. D. Smith, " 'Lynchburg, S. C., " 'Dear Sir:? I am reliably informed that i t tain counties of this state that I am torial campaign against your renomi "' I do not know that you can e 3 how I stand, nor that anybody else d :1 j false position, and it is for this rea: ? munication. ' " 'I am taking no part in politic I know that I shall even vote in the j frankly stated that with the present j you should be renominated, j: "I have had no conversation v g have not seen you even to speak to within the last two years, nor have 'who is interested in your campaign: I tation from any source. " 'If you wish to use it, you ma; ; good or harm, you must be the judg ? ?Very r "To which I reDlied as follows: il" 'Columbia, S. C., August 9, 1920. 1202 1-2.Main " 'Honorable Cole L. Blease, " 'Columbia, South Carolina. " 'Dear Sir: t - " 'Upon my return to Lynchbu: p have read it very carefully arid full E it i " 'I ajso appreciate your kind ] ' much for your expression as to my > ' " Very s i i "The aboye is absolutely all ar without foundation., Nothing furtti learned that Governor Blease in wri A I indorsed my candidacy. I never sa ? shown to me by George Warren, A Monck's Corner. "I know no faction in this race f , crats. If it pleases Mr. Warren to our people which no longer exist,' thi ther and charges me with any comb: CARD FR01V '1 nave just been shown a stat candidate for the United States Sen puted campaign manager of Senatoi "'I make the positive and uneq have been the campaign manager oj the contrary is absolutely false. A _ sriy deal with Mr. Blease, that also WANTS WANTED?Thee adult pppils; pr vate French lessons. Three daj weekly. 7?8 p. <m. Episcopj Rectory, Church St. 9-6-3tp< s FOR SALE?rOne brand new 6-rooi Bungalow with all modern convei iences, on Magazine Street. I"' TVi? Unnio RuiiilHiritr flnmnrntinT I See T. G. White, Pres. 9- -tf. e r WANTED?Five private pupils, a] P school subjects. Also expert hig sehool tutoring. Box 364 2 t: u ^ II WANTED?A position as clerk, e: t perienced. Reference as to honest; 1 integrity and painstaking to dutie can be furnished. Married. Ha\ 3 mall family and could not mak change before Dec or Jan. 1st ov ing to present employment. A( dress Box'42, Abbeville S C. 9-lc FOR SALE?200 bushels of Re Rust Proof Oats at $1.10 pe bushel. The L. W. White Co. 3tc /^T? Will A?\An n nranattol t*c 1^1 \J 1 IV.E.?' ?T 111 uycu a ?V pair shop at Antreville, S. C September 1st, 1920., all kinds o Black-smith work solicited, horse n shoeing a specialty. ^ Neuffer Fleming, Antreville, S d| C. 3t. pd. te : HEMSTITCHING and Picoting a tachments, works, on all sewin n machines. Price $2.00. Person! checks 10c extra. Light's Mail 0 \ ENOUNCES AS < | PPONENT'S CHARGES N . i ;ical advertisement of Mr. George Wararleston American of this date and e press generally. I denounce as absoin any combination in my race for the "v iuth Carolina to serve them to the best ' Port to win, is attempting to revive fac- , svill be rebuked by our people as unage of the people of South Carolina at will get is the great majority' of the ate, whatever may have been their for- ^ rposely , distorted the facts. They are ne in Lynchburg August 9, I received ^ ed as given below: , S. C., August 6, 1920. 'M i -} J ? t :s being consistently circulated m certaking ah interest in the present senaination. e very much about the matter as to ' ; loes, but I do not care to be put in* a son that I am addressing you this com- ? :s for or against anybody, and I do not coming primary. When asked I have t senatorial candidates, in my opinion, * >* i *; with you within the last few years, and you, only to shake hands with you once 1 I had any communication from anyone ; therefore, this letter is without soliciy do 30, as to whether it will do you any e. r> espectfully, , ? . " 'Cole L. Blease..' 9 l Street. ^ I , . ' '*$iB _-JU rg I found your letter of August 6. I R ly appreciate the motive that prompted 8 " ' I permission to use it. I thank you very* fl candidacy. fl lincerely yours, * \ Bj " 'E, D. Smith.' B id any statement to the contrary is H er passed between us. J subsequently jfl ting a letter to a number of his friends H w a copy of this letter until it was "^B gust 26, at the' campaign meeting at fl and I appreciate the votes of all Demoattempt to revive antagonism amongst it is his privilege, but when he goes furination, I repeat, it is absolutely false. "E. D. Smith.'" t I MR. WESTON < ement issued by Mr. George Warren, a ate, in which he refers to me as the re: Smith. uivocal statement that I am not no> t Senator Smith and any statement to s to the implication that I negotiated is absolutely false. v 1 "TRANCIS H. WESTON." ' ; ' ' - der House, Box 127, Birmingham, Ala. 8-27.-9te? $ \ - LOST?Monday morning on Greeni ville .Street, pair dark rimmed eye's glasses. Finder please return to il Mrs. W. H. White. 9-6-ltc i. n MONEY TO LOAN at 6 per cent j. Simple Interest on Abbeville City improved residential property on ! a 50 per cent, appraised valuation c basis, for 10 years or less time. R. L. DARGAN, 703 Allen-Law ^ [1 Bldg., Spartanburg, S. C 8-27-4tc . h ' i. - WANTED?Young women, ages 18 c- to 30, to take nurses' training. ^ ' Board, room, laundry, tuition and !S $10.00 per month. Graduates eligie ble for State Board Examinations. e Aaaress: superintendent, St. M| j. Mary's Hospital, Athens, Ga. ( 1- 9-6?2wks.c * , . ?? FUEL OF SWEDEN. d Hi ^ r M The peat bogs of Sweden are es- S| timated to cover 10,000,000 acres, 3H ~ with an average depth of 6.6 feet, * and every acre is stated to produce EH ? nearly 1,000 tons of prepared peat Pjj| fuel. For several years the state rail- H| ways have been operating a factory < produiing peat powder and tests of. jBH this are reported to have been giving - 1 satisfaction for steam-making on lo- 99 t-j comotives. A private railway of 256 ^ MB ig{ miles, one of the others that have al been trying peat fuel, has had such r-: encouraging results that the company | is likely to discard coal altogether. ? IH Mfl