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THINKS COTTON GOODS I WILL SOON BE HIGHER Financial Writer of Atlanta Georgian Say* Industry hat Struck Bottom and Predicts Rebound (By Victor Barron, Financial Editor of The Georgian.) The inevitable has happened. The cotton goods industry has, struck bottom and is on the rebound j to recovery. This cheering news came Monday when Atlanta wholesale dry goods merchants received announcement by the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, one of the oldest and largest manufacturers of colored cotton goods in the country, of an advance of 10 to 20 per cent in the price of various lines of 32-inch ginghams for the spring of 1922. The prices of staple ginghams for fall was: Staple ginghams, 12 cents; utility, 16 cents and A. F. C., 17 1-2 cents. The new prices, effective Mon day, are: Staple ginghams, 14 1-4 cents; utility ginghams 18 cents and A. F. C. ginghams 20 1-2 cents. The new prices represent an upward revision of 2 to 3 cents a yard. . Deliveries, are from November to April, and selection of styles must be made on a basis of not less than 25 per cent plains and stripes. Retailers in Atlanta have not been notified of the advance and when informed of the rise by The Georgian Monday morning, a leading White hall street merchant aeciarea mat V the advance was not surprising, because certain lines of cottons have been scarce and manufacturers have been holding production down. . "It's one of the surest signs that the cotton goods market has seen its worst and is now on its feet," he |> said. . "It will inspire a revival of heavy buying by both jobbers and retailers throughout the country and should y prove a stimulating factor in the cotton market for both future contracts and raw materials." Commenting on the advance, R. V DomKn nf TrtVin fiilvpr nnrl flnm.! pany said that nothing could have happened so certain to bring about a / resumption of buying and new confidence in the business world as the upward revision. "It shows that cotton goods have( ' _ passed the worst and now on the fv road to recovery. "The advance will send jobbers to market in droves for fall and spring purchases, as well as bring about a big revival of purchases by retailers. ^'Slocks throughout the country are low. Now that prices have turned upward, merchants can not afford to continue their hand to mouth policy, and consumers also will start buying again. f'j .. "We are in position to buy about $225,000 worth of material. Our uuvcia auuu win leave ivi luaizvcu H i Orders from our traveling men are beginning to increase, but this advance in ginghams will start business going at full tilt. "Other manufacturers will follow Amoskeag. "The silk industry was the first to collapse. It made its comeback a few months ago. Cotton was the next .0 break and now it is on an upward end. ~~"With the cotton crops small, big buying of goods inevitable, big exports in sight, all the country needs is a little more confidence, and we will see cotton improve in price. "It looks like cotton will bring 15 or 18 cents this fall, which will mean decidedly better business in all lines." / IT IS NOT EASY It. To apologize, To begin over, To "be unselfish, To take advice, To admit error, To face a sneer, , To be charitable. To keep on trying. To be considerate, To avoid mistakes, To endure success, To keep out ocf the rut, To think and then act, To forgive and forget, To make the 'best of little, To stfbdue an unruly temper, To maintain a high standard, To shoulder a deserved "blame, To recognize the silver lining, But it always pays. ?Ohio Educational Monthly. ? -J . . 60 YEARS OLD AND NEVER SAW MOVIES Columbia, July 28.?Within the city limits of Columbia there lives a man sixty-odd years old who has never ridden in an automobile and who has never seen a moving picture, but he will probably soon have his desires in these two regards satisfied. His name is Dan Murphy. He is a lifetimer in the state penitentiary. Col. A. K. Sanders, superintendent of the state penitentiary, told Dan Murphy yesterday that he would take him for a ride in his automobile some of these days soon and take him to a movie show. Of course Dan will fmvp fn b5+. hi>t.wepn Col. Sanders and a guard from the Bastile soldiery. A man with Dan's record could not be sent out as a trusty, but Col. Sanders says he believes it will do the old man good and will probably put a note of hop^ in the old breast that for almost thirty years has had all of its ambitions and likes, its memories and its hopes, confined to the area enclosed within the walls of the state prison. Dan is interested in the baseball games that are played on the diamond in- the penitentiary walls. He runs a little store at the prison, from which he sells nick nacks to the other prisoners for pennies. He has seen automobiles through the prison gates; he has heard them chug. He has read newspaper stories of mov ing pictures, but he can't imagine how the two wonderful things are possible or how they impress the senses. "Colonel, I never rode in one of them automobiles and I never seen a movie," the old prisoner said to the prison superintendent. "Well, Dan, I expect I can take you up town in my car soon and take yod to one of the moving piture shows." And the words of the colonel inspired the old man of the cage. Col. Sanders believes that the law of love is the best rule for prisoners. He hks worked wonders at the state prison and is one of the state's best officials. ?-r . - jLsau iTxui^xij was UUIIVU;LCU UI muxder and sentenced to hang, for the killing of County Treasurer Copes of Orangeburg, about thirty years ago. Governor Ellerbe commuted his sentence to life imprisonment. He escaped and enlisted in the United States cavalry, in the Philippines. Serving his term there he came back to the states and got in trouble in Georgia and landed on the gang. From there he was returned to Columbia and for the last quarter of a century he has slept, ate, and worked in the state prison. He is a workman in the chair factory. Dan insists to this day that he did not kill Mr. Copes. He says he was in Au-j gusta at that time, but his alleged alibi has never been proven. His record is not clear enough to allow him to see the movies except under heavily armed prison guards. . . WALLACE HARRIS LAWYER Room 204 CITY HALL PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN TlACMm Wf~ Observe, Young Feller, what a Lifetime of Saving will do to jroul The Hard Saver has Nothing But dollars and he's grown So Used to Clinging to Them that h? can't even Loosen Up for a Few Comforts of Life In his Old Age. But his Heirs* will goon take the Old Man's Dollars out and Give thtina Air. I GOLF MADE CO-RESPONDENT IN WIFE'S DIVORCE SUI1 Newark, N. J., July 28.?The an cient and honaralble gaime of golf ii "co-respondent" in a divorce suil filed by Mrs. Rachel B. Heyward a! Mont Glair, against Sterling P. Hay ward. In affidavits filed with Vice Chancellor Fielder yesterday, Mrs. Hayward declared the game took sc much of her husband's leisure v thai she scarcely ever saw him; that hex lack of interest in golf caused him tc be cruel to her and that he spenl money in pursuit of his hobby thai he should have spent maintaining her and their two children. Mr. Hayward's answer denied thai golf is responsible for their marital difficulty which he attributes to difficulties with Mrs. Hayward's relatives and to her discovery that he was not as wealthy as she had believed. Bad Man Captured Chicago, July 28.?Thomas (Tommy) O'Conner, Chicago %ad man'1 for whom a wide search has been made has been caught in St. Paul, Minn., acocrding to word received iby the Chicago police Thursday. The elusive "Tommy" was identified when he tried to hold up a Chicago Great Western passenger trail in the St. Paul yards, according tc the message. He carried three guns, A reward of $1,000 was offered foi 0'Conner's arrest. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING { A meeting of the stockholders of j Abbeville Motor Car Company, s I corporation organized and existing under and by virtue o^the laws oi the State of South Carolina, is called to meet in the office of Wm. P Greene at Abbeville, South Carolina on Wednesday, August 24th, 1921 ' at 6 o'clock, P. M. to consider a reso j lution then to be presented that the ! said corporation go into liquidation | wind up its affairs and dissolve. ? All Stockholders are notified to be present at such meeting either ic person or by proxy for the purpose of voting on said resolution. Wm. P. GREENE, President, July 22, 1921 to Aug. 24 i STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE Prolate Court. Citation for Letters of Administration. By J. F. Miller, Esq., Judge of Probate: WHEREAS, H. L. Johnson hath made suit to me, to grant him*letters of administration of the estate and effects of Benjamin Franklin Walker, late of Abbeville County, deceased. These are therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Benjamin Franklin Walker, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Abbeville Court House, on the 5th day of Aug. 1921, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal of the Court this 21st day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty one and in the 146th vear of American Inde pendence. Published on the 25th day of July 1921 in the Press and Banner and on the Court House door for the time required by law. J. F. MILLER, Judge of Probate. NOTICE OF LAND SALE l By virtue of the authority vested in me by a certain deed of Trust, I will sell at public auction, on the 1st day of August 1921 at Abbeville Court House, S. C., at 11 A. M., or as soon thereafter as practicable, the following described real estate: All that lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the City of Abbeville, in the Conuty of Abbeville, In the State of South Carolina, fac ing on short street leading from Magazine Street to Jail Street, and being bounded by lot of Jim Buchannan, by lot of Harriet Vance, by lot of Thomas Culbreth, and by Street separating this lot from lot of G. A. Harrison. Terms of Sale: Cash, purchaser to pay for papers and Btamps. D. H. HILL, Trustee. June 20th, 1921. 6-22- 3t. WORST WINTER IN 15 YEAR Salvation Army Head Predict* Ha Season Ahead. 3 i New York, July 28.?Commanc I Evangeline Booth, head of the S - vation Army in the United Stat says that the country is facing t worst winter industrially it 1 - known in 15 years. > "In New York city alone," s t declared yesterday, "we are rece ing an average o? 800 registered t > plications a week for regular c ; ployment. That is less than oi ; third of the actual number applyi ; because we do not register t transient or unskilled men; nor dc ; it include the hundreds who coome 1 us daily for food and lodging. Of t applications ior work today 34 we really professional men whose ci i dentials entitled them to good payi positions. "Judging from the applicatio made to us, more than 60 per cent the applicants come from outsi New York. Every time there is ' business depression outside of N i York many of those out of wo , came to New York. New York cs 1 not take care of her own. The: fore, how can she take care of t : thousands who flock here? "Most of the men who apply to i for relief are young men under f< > ty, who are willing to work, I xl : J J.l_ - T - , mere are no jods ior uiem. i_ii ' week we had 84 families to care i with little children who were actu <ly starving. Eviction because 1 rent money was lacking was imi nent to most of them." , Court Decides Question l > Macon ,Ga., July 28.?Judge B< erly Evans of the federal court in " bill of exceptions filed in the coi Thursday will be called on to det< ? mine whether revenue officers ha the right to arrest a man without ' warrant, carry him to a moonshi J still, destroy it and then conv ? him for making liquor because i still was on his farm. The appeal was filed in the case i l Dave and Andrew Causey and L. Neese, recently convicted and giv jail sentences. Dave Causey vi given six months in jail. All plead not guilty. Attorney John Coop filed the appeal. r -J : 1 OFF! i j|| 1 i|: Typewriter Paper i: Carbon Paper 8 Second Sheet* AND AW Prompt S SHER1D/ 1 "Q | GREENWOOD, ^niiiimtnMiititttimiwmnuurtniiiim>uiummiuumm?io?Htnmiui?othmw?w? You may cure a cu^tc with a barg but it takes qi ty to hold hi (I ~^??~ II fi !j-=^^BSBBSSBSSSBS s r~-?????-?11 rd Owe ier II' Marl * ft M, Grar he DESIGNEF mS MANUFAC he / ERECTORI IV- '^e ip_ :^-;v;:;v.:-/.-;pS mental ieng ??? he '.. >es g|gj2jgjgjgj3jgjg|3j3jsjsjsj2jsjgj2j3jgjgjgjgjgjgjgjgjgjgjgf[ hi I 1837 ERSKINECOl )Te I DUE WEST, S re_ ra ng gj Eighty -four years of continuous 6 j Unwavering Adherence to CI ns S thorough Scholarship. of g Courses: A. B., B. S., M. A., Pre <j 1 Literary Societies Emphasized. i a [a Intercollegiate Contests in Debai ^ S worthy of comparison. j_ fa A^pnuiif? THnninnfionf. unH TilnHnwr in- |] Board in College Home at Cost. fa Moderate. s g For catalogue and Application Bh ERSKINE CO] US 1 DUE WEST, S. ar- g| >ut aiEfSI2ISIBJSEI3rSJ3J2ISJSI3J3JSISJSJSJSJSJSOJ5ISJSI3ISfS ist , or Plumbing : and Heating : a S5S5SS5SSSS55SSSSS ine REASONABLE Cal PRICES i \ of ! Ralph T ? * * . ' 'j ICE SUPPL CALL ON US FOR Typewriter I Rubber Stain A flrlin/* AT1UVI1 fTHING NEEDED IN THE Shipment?We Pay the P lN PRINTING G01 iUALITY AND SERVICE" Station* se,mer How s youi ain'? business sta nali- . Nnw s a o( * 1 W ? f W W ^ im... look it ov< > ready for th We can also I der for EngraOi for every puryos The Press & n Brothers ble and lite Co. | ts TURERS 5 : and beat equipped monv mills in the Carolina*. 1ENWOOD, S. C. SjSJSJSISISISISISJSISEMSEJSEEIBIE?^ LLEGE 1921 | ervice. IS iristian Character and jfj -Medical, Special. ' te, Oratory and Athletics jl Dent. H Price in Private Houses s, ank, write to ? LLEGE, I I F ; PHONE 265 r % vert Building ienna Street urner IES ^ Gibbons ips ine Paper OFFICE . < ???????- < , ostage. MPANY .. s. c. I ; r nmmn mm wrati ery r supply of itionery? >od time to " ?r and get jl e fall trade. If II ft landle your ored stock \P C. |f ? 5 II Banner Co. Il , 5