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Why man we mad cigarett Jf! < Camels ,n *20" ine-pap ^^HBHhws^ n< Jjj^ycrtricfcfc'yWty^ supply f FRESH AND GREEN An Alumna of Abbeville High Tells What it Feels Like to be A Freshman?Sociology, Proctors and Chickens (Proper Gander.) Some are born to trouble. Some achieve trouble. And some go to col lege. I walked into my sociology class, * room the other day and sat down, calm in the assurance of work well done, for had I not in my notebook a theme brought forth amid much agony of spirit and unwonted sacrifice, having bribed the proctor of our hall with half a box of Huyler's to | let me stay up and write it an hour after light bell the night before? The old Fogy who piously said "To labor ia to pray" evidently never went to college. If he had he would have said "To labor is to pay." To labor on a theme is either to pay for it by getting reported (for one never by any chance is through when the light bell rings) or else to pay the proctor to go conveniently down tne oiner end of the hall while one burns the' midnight electricity. Student govern-' emnt is a thing fearfully and wonder-; fully made. The proctor of our hall has the face of a St. Cecilia, the' I watchfulness of a bird-dog and the tongue of a Mrs. Rip Van Winkle.! Ifs gotten to be part of the daily; schedule for her to come in and re-j prove us for something. If we happen not to have been doing what she! thinks "we have it really makes no difffference?we are sure to have( been doing something else, and it's all the same to her. She isn't particu-| lar what she reports us for. Ethel and Sophie and I share one room. The president of the college says a girl's room ought to be her sanctum sanctorum. I've no objection to ours being anything he sees fit to call it, though sanctum sanctorum mn oif Kn T ofin frtl* Koof all I know. Just at present our room is a sanctum weeporum, for Ethel and SrvnViio npnrlv ween me out of exist ence. If I had been sugar I'd have long ago dissolved in their tears. Ethel cried up all her handkerchiefs, and when I locked mine up in my trunk she hung a towel over the back of her bed and every night when she tries herself to sleep she uses it to catch her tears. Our room looks out on the kitchen, and we always know just what we're going to have for the next meal, because we see the cooks getting it ^1 > J I V^AMELS I sires so ( thev were m u " RflHEr Unique fla |mT low-mild-boc HL ity and exper ish and choi !/ JjTv are a revelati Camel blend smoked strai With Garr without tirii leave no unp ^ JjflH taste; no un| Ta <Yflf O Hi you so com . puff-for-puff are ao/a everywhere * SSr^SlS: the world at rf-ctive,-r:J carton. We fer quality Xi fly recommend this ZXES&S" k J- REYNOLDS 1 PLANT SOME WHEAT * . THIS FALL Clemson College, October 7.?It is very likely that the Live-at-Homc idea will be of great important next year, especially in the bol weevil sections of the state, sine* farmersmvho do not make a sue cessful crop of wheat may have dif ficulty in finding cash crops witl wihch to buy supplies for thei: families. Under these circumstance it seems wise for each farmer t< plant wheat enough to supply thi needs of his family and his tenants suggests rof. C. P. Blackwell, Agro nomist. Wheat is not a very profit able crop in South Carolina excep for home consumption. But enoug] should be raised to supply honai needs to avoid buying high pricei flour from other states. Anothe good advantage in raising wheat i that it can be followed by a crop o peanuts, cowpeas ,or soy beans, thu securing two crops from the land ii one year. Then, too, the wheat wil serves as a good cover crop dur ing the winter, and save a grea deal of fertility. Extensie preparation of the lan< is not necesary for planting wheat It is generally very satisfactory t< fclant in cotton middles or afte corn. If the land is plowed at all, i should be plowed very shallow, fo wheat will not grow well on a loos< seed bed. From 300<to 400 pound of 8-2-2 fertilizer, applied at tinv of planting will be satisfactory with seventy-five to one hundrei pounds of soda per acre about thi first of March. Wheat may be plant ed from the middle of October t< the first of December very satis factorily, but the sooner after th , first killing of frost, the better. Th , seed should be sown at the rate o four to six pecks per acre. The fol lowing varieties will give good re suits: Red May, Fultz, Fulcastei Blue Stem, Leap's Prolific, an Dietz Mediterranean. Legal Blanks for Sale Here. |The Press and Banner Company. j ready. Every Saturday afternoon w j have the cheerful prospect of seein the execution of the chickens we ai to eat for Sunday's dinner. But for all that, we are having splendid time, and we do enjoy co lege. Even with proctors, sociolog and the executed chickens, we thin Anderson College is a pretty goo port of place, and it's all in the day work. We couldn't imagine any be tor luck for the present elevent grade than for all the girls to com jto Anderson next year. G. B. 1 be M |||j^|j5ES5pE3^^lfr T fit your cigarette de- a completely you'll agree c ade to meet your taste! ?c vor, fragrance and mel- t] iy due to Camels qual- t( t blend of choice Turk- ti ice Domestic tobaccos a on! You will prefer the ri to either kind of tobacco ght! lels you can go the limit \ T i2r vour taste. They ileasant cigaretty after- ti feasant cigaretty odor! ( t] ne on why Camels win is pletely compare them with any cigarette in any price. You'll pre) coupons or premiums! a TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. y ; AN INDIAN LEGEND f i * ! /< ? * > * 5 ' ~! N h (Proper Gander.) Long, long ago, in the northern '' i part of Georgia lived an Indian chief J r who was very powerful. This Indian I s was chief over a large tribe. He had E ' | > n beautiful and ItinH Hfluchte*. whose I e name was "Bright Star." She was ? loved by all the people of her tribe. |[ Not far from where this tribe of E " Indians dwelt, there wei*e also on- | other tribe of Indians almost as large.1 J ^ The chief of this tribe was tall, strong e and very har.dsome. Tnesc two great P * chiefs were good friends and helped ? r each uthor fight his e i?mies. jj s Now, Swift Arrow i the young f * chief, fell in love with Bright Star, jj s They loved each other very, very > 1 nuch and were goi-ig to be married * if Bright Star's father gave his con-'? ?*?ni. This, her father would'not do. ji t r He said to the young chief, "'we 5 have always been friends, bu; now we * are enemies. If you can conquer me J in battle, I will freely giv?i you my L 5 daughter." |E r "Very well," replied the oun? chief | Not long after, the'two great chiefs 1 r fought a great battle. And after a E e long struggle, the older chief won. ? s He captured the young chief, Swift a ' I * Arrow, and prepared to put him to ' death. Poor little Bright Star asked ^ her father not to put to death her e lover. But her father refused her request. ' ? When the day came for the In-' j dians to put to death Swift Arrow, Bright Star dressed in her finest robe. ^ She was standing by the block o?* I stone, on which they were to cut the chiefs head off, when two Indians brought Swift Arrow in. The old chief commanded the Indians to lower the axe gradually. When the axe was about two feet above the young chief's head, Bright Star screamed and fell on Swift Arrow. The axe fell before the Indians could stop it, and ,e cut the heads off both Swift Arrow g and Bright Star. The chief grieved .J bitterly for his daughter, for he knew that he was the cause of her a death. i 1. The Indians of her tribe said with y! sorrow, "The Bright Star has fallen." j i-l ?L. L. IX. i I d ! s Industrial arbitration originated! t- i in France in 1806. h ie Cider when first made in England was called wine. tft m SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE Court of Common Pleas. !. L. Hill, Raymond Hall, Eunice Knight, Lewis Hall, and the minor plaintiffs Bertie Hill, Herbert Hill, Jodie Lee Hill, Frank Hill, Lonnie Saxon, Lidia Saxon, Bessie Saxon, Henry Hall, Furman Hall, Ernest Hall, Bennie Carlton Hall, by their guardian ad litem J. F. Miller, Plaintiffs, against trs. B. L. Morrison, H. T. Morrison, B. R. Morrison, J. H. Morrison, J W. Morrison, Mrs. Corrie Monroe Ida E. Saxon, J. L. Morrison, Defendants* o the Defendants above named: You Are Hereby Summoned and jquired to answer the Complaint in lis action of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve copy of your answer to the said omplaint on the subscriber at his ffice at Abbeville Court House, South arolina, within twenty days after le service hereof, exclusive of the ay of such service; and if you fail ) answer the Complaint within the me aforesaid, the plaintiff in this ction will apply to the Court for the elief demanded in the Complaint. une 29th, 1920. J. HOWARD MOORE, Plaintiff's Attorney, 'o the absent defendant, J. L.Morrison: ' Take Notice tliat the complaint in tiis action has this day been filed in le office of the Clerk of the Court of !omipon Pleas at Abbeville, where if i now on file. J. HOWARD MOORE, Plaintiffs Attorney, ept. 24, 1920. . 3t-Friday "Here is a nice cake, Eddie," said mother to her.5-year-old son, "and ou just divide it honorably, with our little sister." "What's honorably, mamma?" askd Eddie. "It means that you must give her he largest piece," was the reply. "Oh," said the little fellow, "then 'd rather you gave it to sister and et her divide it honorably." giaiiUiiTiirami^ 1 1 i Horse 3 I ONE ARLO 3 1 ! ALL j FINE i i I Qoa Thom R U Utt 111 VIM V tTG ? Abbeville I raiaiuimiifaraiararajiira * N V DUE WEST. \ \ > Mt. and Mrs. R. S. Ellis returned from 'their honeymoon last Monday. Miss Clara Agnew was a visitor in Due West last week. Miss Mildred Nance, who is taking a business course in Greenwood came home Friday and spent the Sabbath in Due West. . ? Rev. P. A. Pressly is'condu#ting a meeting for Rev. M. R. Plaxco at Abbeville. A number of friends from Due West expect ' to go down to hear him during the course of meeting... Mr. Perry Nair of Clifton rorge,. Va., joined Mrs. Nair in Due West last week. Mrs. Nair has been spending some weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Brooks. Rev. C. B. Wililams, filled the pulpit in the Due West A. R. P. church last Sabbath morning and Mr. Neill Baird of the Seminaiy Sabbath evening. Mr. Clifton Davis, son of Mr. W. TT r? * _ ? XL!. -1- 1%A/. jti. uavis ui juus s piaue, wnu iias been clerking in Abbeville for J. Allen Smith, Jr., left last Friday for Oklahoma to work in the oil fields. .The teachers of the Woman's College were entertained by Mrs. R. C. Brownlee and Mrs. 0. Y. Brownlee on last Monday evening.. A refresh.ment course was, served and a very pleasant evening was spent. The fall in the price of cotton of nearly 100 per cent has paralyzed business in the South. We hope this is only temnorarv. Cotton men think that the market will go back up. Very little cotton is being sold. Men are ginning and storing. Miss Annie Cain, who has been spending some days as the guest of Prof, and Mrs. Galloway left early Saturday morning for Macon, Ga. After a visit there with he? brother, Mr. Eddie Cain, she goes ^o Memphis, Tenn., where she wit\ spend the winter. Captain R. H. Armstrong returnturned a few days ago from a visit to firends and kindred in Lincoln County, Tenn. He was away about five weeks. Captain Armstrong ,was in Dyersburg when a representative ?????? ??g??Mgr BBBBBBHHHBiaaa TENNESSEE is I 1ULE IAD NOffATl SOUND c CONDITK iefore They Are LWH TRINITY STREET , Sc KjytiyyyyyyHBZfia AN EXPERT OUTA. (Proper Gander.) In a school on thte East Side of New York, attended almost exclusive- . ly by foreign-born children, a teach- . er of one of the lower grades was endeavoring not long ago to ascertain certain facts pertaining to the family histories of her young charges for her official records^ To each child she gave a blang to be Allied in with the proper answers. One ragged little girl gave lengthy consideration-to this sentence: "State your father's business.*' Then in the space provided she wrote the one word: "Outa." " The teacher, after collecting the forms, struck this particular word and puzzled long to make out its meaning. "Rachel," she asked at length, "what does this mean?" . v "My papa is outa business," explained the child, "so I writes it down Outa.'" j "But doesn't he ever'work?" insisted the teacher. x ^ "No, ma'am," said the child sadly; "he don't never work?he strikes!" ?Saturday Evening Post. r~: * **\v\vvv\\x * ? * ** ' V ?S E E? V V H U M O R E S Q U E V L. PDTnAV C A TTTT?n A V V "v "v r ivxi/n i anu _ V CHILDREN 15cts. V V ADULTS 35cts. V ** . r 'A of the Presbyterian passed through that place in an auto.* Sorry we did not know of his presence. Lincoln county is the birthplace of Capt. Armstrong and he has many kindred in that county. \ Rev. J. L. Boyd of Brigton, Tenn., conducted a week's meeting for Rev. R. R. Caldwell. On his return Brother Boyd came by Due West and spent a day. Brother Boyd has a ^ daughter in Erskine College. Several young men from his congregation are students of Erskine. He attended chapel exercises in Erskine. Mr. t??.j o ?nmKai> nf wars as a * X)UjU spcxiu <* 11 ? citizen of Due West. Our people are fond'of Mr. Boyd. He is a very genial man. tfinriMmrwnnnnn flares !i [j S I ii MY STABLE ! =? Ij md in | DN.... j| . I ricked Over | DTE >. Carolina | i -