University of South Carolina Libraries
^V\VVSVWV\\V^WN r \v- '-r " 'rv v- -r<5 ..? J* > BETHIA & * > % >> \ > x \%>> There will be preaching at Bethia very Sunday afternoon at 3:30 'clock by the pastor, Rev. J. B. ^ Branch. Misses Julia Bells Beauford and Maggie Woodhurst spent Monday - t . sight with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Beauford. The friends of Mrs. John Hall will ibe sorry to know she has been jeai'sick for the past week. Me, and Mrs. Jessie Price spent Jfo. week-end with their daughter, Mrs. Tommie Edwards of Santuc. Mr.' Hod land Sligh, of Newberry, epeirt a few days last week wdth his ister, Mrs. R. M. Pefctigrew. Kir. tFtaank Woodhurst spent Sunday with Mr. Ben Mette. *? _r t I. IS&vui iucix nui, vi upwuivui ?ts calling in this neighborhood fanday afternoon. BEusb Ruth. Beauford and D. J. Hat Inn of Grenewood, spent the week-end with . Mrs. Mattie: ,Beau3Bos JnliA lank spent ; last Week wfth.her sirter,. Mrs. Orville: "Calfcran, off Bordeaux. ' The friends ^ere of Miss Maggie Teosg, of Fairfield, are sorry to iifear of her serious illness and hope she Will soon he better. " Mr. and Mrs. Lewi^ Beauford qpsot Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Romford. I I Tie election for nerve trustees of Urtflh school 'held last Saturday, the itBowing were elected: Jas. J. Link, Mkn& WHs&n and Lewis O, ' Beau'W. A. HARRIS ' i FUNERAL SUPPLIES EMBALMING and . . . AutO Hearse Service DunMrc EVyp' " E J Pay 39S Wight 134 | ^ _ ^s ?- . ;? N* J. ' .' ' *' WANTS |?:' > V?????? ?OWm?Large Pointer dog. Apply to J)r. E. C. Fenned. Abbeville, S. C. 6, S-ltpd pr. ' LOST?One blue Bpeckled hound, {: laxge, answers to the name "Lead" SJ<- ,> v *. * c The undersigned will pay suitable J"v .: reward for return of dog or for information. Frank Hodges, Abbeville, S. C. , 6, l-3t col. - WANTED TO RENT?A six or sev' ?a room house in town. Appliy at \i Feinstein's Bargain. House/-Abbeville, S. C. $ 5, 20-tf.col. ? ? ?9 FOR RENT-r-I have several rooms that will rent very reasonable. See ax phone . S. Jones. 5,30-3tpd. X- ' ' - ^ p.. , -X IOR SALE?Best quality cream . at 60 cents a pint, also fresh eggs. Fhone 1. Mrs. D. A. Rogers. 4-ltf - 'V-.' * . {/:> r " ~ * * . . _ Rab-Mjr-TUm for Rheumatism. ' BOI'T EXPERIMENT > _ ^ m.9 With Your Eyesight X3 c zci . 3?co?tr5"> .> ? . *. ' Your eye? |re too far valatUe and preciout to rislc woariitg |Uun t?> hcteJ at random. The glatse* .we -furniih .will be . Made to your individual require* ateaU, and accurate.in every detail. Gun it a Deinstalling, dependble optical service . L. V. LI8ENBEE OPTOMETRIST TELEPHONES: 9fiee 278 Ret. 388 3 1-2 Washington St. Over McMurray Drag Co. ABBEVILLE, S. C. (Becoming Glasses Cost No More) m - V \ V DUE WEST NEWS. > v S * x. A. R. Presbyterian V Commencement begins in Du? West next Saturday evening. iMiss Janie McDill is home from her school at Chertyvillc, N. C. Miss Alberta Montgomery is home form her school in Abbeville. Miss Estelle Todd is home from her school for the summer. Rev. and Mrs. Henry Pressly were visitors in Due West last week. oAiin/) r\f onuli)i(i(r TvaIIa if iJL UC ?7VU4IU VA ffVWV*?M0 *r. , heard on the land and quite close a1 hand. '**' v Mr. W. W. Edwards is laying down material to rebuild his house on the same spot. Miss ( Georgia Wardlaw, who taught school in Dilon, S. C., the past year arrived in Due West lasl Thursday.' . Miss Virginia Redd reached home last weelc from Charlotte, her school having closed. Miss Clara Agnew who taught the past1 year, in Xndefsoo is 'at home for the vacation! ... 5 5 w 1 - Mire. Carlisle White, of Chester, S. C., and handsome little daughter, came over ast week to see friends in I-TYMA W Aaf . | ?v ff WW Miss Virginia Edwards who held a position n the Due" West High School last year, has accepted wort in the school at Greer, S. C. * (Dr. W. L. Preesly returned on Tuesday from Baltimore. He reports Mr. Martin as getting on very well, mush to the gratification of his fcinnda at. home.. The final examinations are in fu31 swing in our colleges. The close up Thursday 'of this week. Examination week is a hard and taxing time vu ovuuciiio tmv* j.ovu&wjr. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Stuart of Bartow, Fia., will/reach Due West Saturday and will take In the commence meat to tl^e gratification of their friends. * - Mr. Meek Boyce of Gastonia was a visitor in .Due West last week, a guest of Mrs. James Boyce, for a shgrt space of. time. His .t^o daughters, who have been pending a couple of weeks in Due West as the guest of Mrs. Boyce and Miss Estelle McsDill, returned with their father to Gastonia. One of these young ladies expects to be -in the Woman's College next year. ^ Mr. Allen Martin was taken to the hospital last week in Baltimore. He was supposed to have cancer oi the stomach. Dr. W. L. Pressly accompanied him to John Hopkins Hospital. The operation took place shftvtihr aftAr T?&chms' the ho?mital. He waa reported: as resting weH. 01 course friends are quite apprehensive, as .to the outcome but are hopng for the best." . ...... "* -i ^ v. . * It was a pleasure to friends of Br. R. L. Robinson to see him on our streets again last week. He wae looking as well as usual. He went from Oharjotte to Greensboro with the committee to examine a dormitory building at Greensboro. Dr. T^nnoc^l** 1 liiiw ?vi mui yrci UJ Charlotte and said that he could make the trip. The doctors now think ithat it is a form of toxin e poisoning caused from something he ate. ' . : ) PREACHING AT' v d- - ; ' CALHOUN FALLS Df. J. G. Solomon will fill his pulpit Sunday June &th. His theme at the morning hour will be, "Where Shall the Heathen Appear Without the-Gospel?" At the evening hour his theme will be, "A Great Salvation, if Neglected, What then?" - The church at Calhoun Palis is making great strides forward undei ?r. Solomon'3 leadership. Members are coming in at every service. The Sunday School has grown from sixtj to over two hundred. The people every wxrcic win rcctzivu a warm wc come to our ehuirch at all services.. Rub-My-Titm ki)U pain. NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS. All persons indebted to the estate of Albert Henry, deceased, are hereby notified to make settlemenl at once 'with the undersigned; and all persons holding claims against his estate must present their accounts duty attested, or required by law, oi be barred. W. A. Calvert, David H. Henry, Adm'rs. | May 25th, 1921 3 wks-cg WORKERS LEAVE POSTS Si IN TEXTILE PLANTS 1 ' Unon Officials Say That At' Least | Nine Thousand Have Walked I Out in Cotton Mil!s jfj Charlotte, N. C., June 2.?State- |] 1 ments of union officials and repre- |] 3entatives of the mill owners to- [| ! night agreed that at least 9,000 tex- |j tile workers in more than 20 plants ij 1 at Charlotte, Concord and Kannapo- @ Hs, N. C., and Rock Hill, S. C., jfj ! walked out today as the beginning |a \ of the general strike of Southern op- s ! eratives authorized in an order is- ? : sued by official? of the United Tex- s tiie Workers of the World several ? > weeks ago. >}a !! (No dplfionmation was obtained j| I tonight from Thomtiaa McMahon, vice s * president of the national org&niza- |j 1 tion nor other union officials as to | any other plants to be included, further than reiteration of former @ ! statements that it is 'up to' the local re} ' unions. Mr. McMahon said seveiral a days ago that once the strike started j| ! it might "spread like wild fire." ! N? disorder had been reported to- g nio?K+ frnm vo-xtj nf 43m aJfaototfl mill (3 > communities. Union officials report- ? ? ed later today to Commissioner of |j 1 Public Safety Hunnicutt and Chief |l of Police Orr that "peaceful picket- a ' ingr" would begin at the Savona mill f| 1 here tomorrow morning and that || : trouble might develop as consider- j| able Reeling had been reported. On- i 1 ly a part of the operatives walked gj 1 out of that mill today, the others ji ? remaining at work. 1 The mills affected^ today include | ' three large chains of plants, the | 1 Ohadwiek-floskinA; Charlotte, ifee' | 1 Highand Park Mills here and at g Rock Hill, and the Cannon mills at g Concord and Kannapolis. Several gj other independent mills also were a closed down by the walkout. At Con- jg cord ten mills closed down, at Kan- |j napolia, two, at Rock Hall, one and |j and at Charlotte eight besides the gj Savona plant. All the mills are spin- |j 1 ning and weaving plants, no .knitting ja plants being affected. ' i'j Mr. McMahon said tonight in re- ?j ply to an inquiry that all the local s unions involved, through thedr repre- ? 1 semtatives several weeks ago waived ? their rights to weekly benefits from e funds of the national organizations. & The attitude of the milU executives p_ 1 and owners as expressed tonight by David Clark, editor of the Southern ~ 1 Textile Bulletin, recognized spokes- ^ man for t!he employers, is that of indifference. Mr. Clark dedwed that, while the H 1 mill owners did not welcome a ( strike, they were perfectly willing to have their plants stand idle, be' cause practically none of them were ' operating at a profit and numbeis Pl of them were actually running at a w loss and on short orders. 01 ' ' " ' cc Rock Hill, June 2.?More than w ' 300 operatives of the Highland Park e* ' cotton mill here walked out in a ^ i strike this morning at 10 o'clock. ?* The operatives notified the over- ** seers of their intention when they di i entered the mill this mbrning and I cessation of work came quietly and r without disorder. So far as could be learned strikes dn other local mills ?* 1 aire not contemplated in the imme- 10 diate future The operatives" say i i- aJL. _ _ . _ wwy want caeir pay on a oasis., of t^at.paid in the North. The , cut in *c ; wages iff the "South has been about 36 per cent, they allege, from the ~ high peak as agaiinat aJwut 22 per ; cent in the North. Concord, N. C. June 2??All union operatives in the twenty mills here | azxd at Kannapolls went out on strike this morning at 10 o'clock. It l is A-stfjimatAH t-.hmf aiv mm 11 ' quit work. i Mill officials said the strikers ! made no statement to them at the r time of the walkout and nothing has t been given out by local union offll cials. as to the cause. Secretary Co-, ' zart of the local textile union said | he understood the strike would af- I feet onljr Charlotte, Concord and I Kannapolis. ' . NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND If CREDITORS. iis . All persons indebted to the es- i| ; tate of A. L. Garrison, deceased, If I must make settlement with the un- fl ; dersigned, and all persons having || claims against the said estate must jf present them, duly attested as re-Iff quired by law, or be barred. Mrs. Henrietta Garrison, jj Executrix. ; Mar. 31. 1921 3-wks-chgJjL. Rosenbei Departmi Four Stores HARIl R % * We have in stock a fe . offering them at pric Cultivators were $75 if mower McCormiick and Deei stock of repairs. Dis plete line of Blount a Another shipment < "Goodyear" Garden price.. 25 ft to 50 ft. / *' We have two shipmer : in a.few days. All ai . \ s Aii "Alaska Star" Re minimum amount of i respect and the prices Our Four connect weather shopping a j The Rosen s Phone 38. EPUBUCAN5 FAIL TO FIND AGREEMENT oum Members Adjourn After Vaia Diicaauon of Loagworth Tariff Resolution v . v' i Washington, June 2.?House RenlxKcans after heated discussion in inference tonight adjourned with it reaching an agreement on the (tirse to be followed on the Longorth resolution, which wwuld make Fective upon their introduction an ie house all rates 'Carried in the i meral tariff bill row in prepara- i on. No date was set for further < sciiaeion of the provision. _ ' Opponents of the resolution chief i ! whom was Representative Young ] ' North Dakota, the only member 1 the ways and means committee 1 i enter objection in the committee ( aimed that the failure of the mem- < (rship to act constitutes a victory i r them. Representative Longworth ^1 i a You may s cure a cu^torr with a bargai but it takes que ty to hold hirr v \ y5J5J5ISi5I5I3IB!5J5IBISrSI5Ej5JEI5f5f3JSJBIBJ5I5ii THE rg Merca ent Stores Abbevi WARE S iding Cultivate)] ;w International Riding es less than present w\ .00 last year?now $53 s, Rakes and H ring Mowers and Rake jc ^Harrows, Walkjng Ci nd Uhattanooga Flows, of Binder Twine expect Garden Hose Hose?a high grade h< -lengths. Lawn Mowers its of Mowers en route, e high grade, ball beari: Refrigerators , ifrigerator will keep yc ce. These Refrigerato 5 very reasonable, ing Stores each with El >leasure. ibergpercantile - AB of Ohio, sponsor of the proposition, declared, however, that the conference appeared in agreement on the principle but that there was a divergence of opinion on the method of applying it. The question did not reacfi a vote and motion to adjourn was made by Representative Mondell, Republican floor leader. COTTON PICKING UP Washington, o ;ie 2.?Warm sun.v.-? ??- ?i.: _v tyumj WWIW1C1 VY4J4VII . throughout most of the cotton belt enabled the cnop to make satisfactory progress during the week, although in some localities it was reported in poor to only fair condition the national weather and crop report today showed. The crop showed great improvement in the Southeast, notably in Georgia where late replanted cotton ha9 germinated very well, and an North Carolina Nothing to ?e sion, Quali . What mort ier if you are / in; about your. : pw When you livery of s give you at and you'll service we ( The Pres ntile Co. [lie, S. C. J flany Departments I ===== TORE rs , Cultivators, and are lolesale cost. These ? P.50 complete. ; ; arrows s, and a complete - lltivators, and a com- X ed tomorrow. * ' x . - ' ' >: ' v >se at a reasonable?"- ! ^ 1 :,r -.14 4. (* . .. Ire. " * 9 ?; which should arrive | ng, and easy running, . -r > j . < >ur food cold with a rs are right in every -Cana malrA knl IVVU IV A MM llimiV AlVi 21 i Company I (SEVILLE, S. C. J ? i ?r , where the plants have .shown up in better color and stand after much ' replanting. In the northwestern portion of the 'belt, the report said, ^ . .planting is about finished and germination satisfactory, while good advance was reported from the central sections. Considerable weevil activity was reported in Alabama, Georgia and ' South Carolina. . v CLASH IN TULSA ' Tulsa, Okla,, May 81.-?One -ne- * gro was killed and two whites and three negroes wounded in a race trouble here tonight, when a score or more white persons armed, clashed with about 200 armed negroes, who gathered on the vicinity of the couirt house after a negro had been arrested for an alleged attack on a white girl. Scattered firing continued at midnight, while the body, of the dead negro still lay ini the street. . '! ' y- j i, f BiimniBui?gaiMW?lWX?H? Wp??? Offer Except Precik ty, and Service.... ; : could you ask J >articular J NTING? ( ? have to havejfluwk deome printing, we can \l the speed necessary, get the same careful give every order .. O D P. I is ol oanner k*o. j , , ,1 Nil > *