University of South Carolina Libraries
V>VVVVV|S. V vuvv V ANTREVILLE NEWS V > > I >\>\>%>\?^ Mr. Frank Anderson of Clemson t college spent last Sunday with his * parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Anderi j son. ' Mr.\ R. C. Knox of Atlanta is visiting his mother, Mrs. Amanda Knox. We are very sorry to report that Mrs. D. Jj. Haddon is sick. mrs. cummie Kinningbam and daughter Meerle are spending some time with her. Missefe Ethel and Beth Anderson have returned home form a pleasant visit with relatives in Ninety Six. Mr. and Mrs. W.' J. Bowen and daughter, Harriet and Mr. R. .A Keajon attended the Drake reunion Tuesday at Donalds. -1 Protracted services are being held ? ? - -- * . v. i_ I at Shiloh Metbodist cnurcn wis * wee*. Rev. Ray Anderson of Laurens is do-, lag the preaching. , : Messrs. Elliott Stokes and Henry Erwin are spending several days in Colombia. . ) Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Callaham and children of Spartanburg, Mrs. John t Kay and son, and Mrs. Matt'e.New- ' ell of Belton spent last week-end with Mr. C. G. Kay and Mr. and Mrs < -J".'J. > isrJrj ^?> .; A.WX WVl .|1 i. C. Kay. Mr. Carl Saber is attending a house party in Troy with Mr. David ' Kennedy. */ Mr. aid Mrs. John Watson of Greenwood spent last week-with their 1 daughter, Mrs. W. A. Duckworth. ' " " ' : " : j Might Be His Chanel. , -V 1 ( ""The college graduate,!' said Pres- ' x ident Hifcben of Princeton at a iea? "the college graduate sets out from 1 college to; conquer the world. Yes, I he sets dirt with a very big opinion \ of himself, but he soon gets taken 1 down. r - **A college graduate^ the day after ' commencement swaggered' into a 1 ' bank :and asked to see the president. 1 He was told to wiit in an anteroom, 1 where a small boy was chewing gam. I{ " 'Boy/ he said; after a bit, 'do M you know if there's aan opening in the bank for a college graduate?' 1 /The boy, chewing grimly, an- 1 swered: c " 'Dere will be ifdey don't slip de 1 extra five-spot wot I'm askin' fur in 1 me next pay envelope, see?'"?Wash- * ington Star. < 1 ??????? ' * Thm Proper Audience s Washington Star! * life In the sritaxfa means fresh s air, sunshine ,health, happiness^?" Don't tell it to me,'' interrupted Mr. Croselota. "Ccxme aroaind and five the new cook and furnace man a 3 V . To meet the woxBd supply of au- 1 toanofbfle tires, American manufac r v-""* M liiSiA MUKAUIa J M - ' Free Water c 'f Hon on any mt CUY GA Abbeville? PS ^ i ' \ AUTO INSURANCE LOSSES MOUNT Risk Companies Worried at Growth In Payments?Often Exceeds Car's Value \ New York Sun. Insurance companies of New York are agitated over the question of what is to be done in the matter of issuing policies covering the loss of automobiles, in view of recent developments which tend to show that the owners of cars stolen have noj special desire to have them returned after collecting the amount of insurance, which often exceeds the value of the machine itself. In many cases it has been shown that where the manufacturers have reduced the prices of their cars the i ) i insurance companies are still carrying policies which, if compelled by reason of losa of the oar to pay, means that the company is paying more than the car is worth. In the meantime, the loss ratio is climbing higher and higher. Traffic " * ?SVI?. JwifTdM *171. congestion, irrespviiaiuic umuo, ? apprehended auto thief hands, crowded courts and increase in women drivers and over-insurance are given as few of the reasons for the tieavy losses sustained. In regard to the valued form, one of the leading underwriters on the street said today: "The so-called valued form of 'automobfle fire and theft insurance has made the situation more serious, particularly by reason of the fact that it was customary for brokers and their clients to obtain from companies the liiriipjit nossible amount they would write, and competitive conditions between companies lend aid to such efforts. 1 "The result has been an almost universal overinsurance of cars. Practically all insurance companies dis:ontihued the valued form policy writings of auto, fire and theft to the ion-valued basis, which provides an igreementin advances as to the value >? the car to continue for the term of /he policy. "The point with broken is not so nuch the discontinuance of the valled. form (admittedly a move to :onserve interest of all concerned,) is it is the imperative need right low to reduce materially in amounts he insurance in force and the writng of new policies contemplating a 'air amount of insurance is repre tenting fair reimbursement to the tssured of his loss if one should be rartained." Up*lo_Oate. Birmingham AgeJHerald. . "What wages do you want?" "Ten dollars a week mum, is the east HI work for." , "That's reasonable enough." "And $2 a week extra if I skims ;he home brew." i " 1 *: i V * V .' , . I * * . I I I refusing to quit at the end of its ft years written guarantee |. ind Inspecike battery RAGE . - S. G O GOOD KILLERS FORM TRUST New Organisation Effects Death of i Eighty*5eren. New York, Aug. 18.?'Clews that will lead to the arrest of members of i the murder trust responsible for eighty-seven killings in this city, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, etc., , have ibeen given the police by three of the seven men of the "Bonventre" band in confessions today. The men were arrested Tuesday < night and told their stories today under pressure. These revealed Specifically. Implication in or knowledge of six t vendetta murders in this city in the > past twelve months. Connection with at least 7 'sudden > deaths' in Detroit. ... I Indications of seventy-three murders in middle western cities having been instigated by the "hidden hand." A fund of half a million dollars for defense of members arrested for < murder. * The gang here is said to be orga- 1 nized in groups of fifteen. Forty members of these groups are known the police say, and the arrest of the men responsible for recent mysteri- < ous killings will be known soon. i (Police agents disguised as pusft cart peddlers and Immigrants are i swarming in "Little Italy" to pre- : vent the escape of the -suspects. i Four of the seven men under ar- i rest declare the confession of Bartolo Fontana, by which the workings i of the murder trust were disclosed is pure fabrication. Two of therm have corroborated the details. Fohtant formerly a Detroit baiter j made the disclosures in his confes- : sion of the murder ot a friend in a : lonely "wood near Avan, N. J., on July 30. He was moved by remorse; he said, ne aeciarea ne was acting under orders of "the fcood killers."' Immediately following the confession tlie police sent telegrams to the scenes of (many unsolved murders. The first arrest came in a few hours Salvatore Gigrazo, was taken at Avan, N. J., where he Is accused of conducting a murder farm. It wae here Fontant murdered his friend. The seven others under arrest are chaged with complicity in this killing although the police expect to connect them with man of the series of homicides. Detroit police consider Fontana's story the first tangible clew they have to .the wave, of bombing outrages and murders which have swept through the local Italian quarter during the last four years. They believe they are at last on the trail of the men responsible for seventy mysterious killings since 1917. Five of the victims of the saner have, already! (been identified from reports telegraphed from this city. The men under arrest were coin- , mitted to the Tomlbs to await extra- < dition to New Jersey. i Fontana has declared the gang 1 operators under orders received < from its headquarters in Italy. The ( brains of the gang on this side of the < Atlantic are said to be 'known and t their arrest is momentarily expected. 1 MASTER'S SALE ' The Stat* of South Carolina, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE!. 1 Court of Common Pleas. I C. H. TAYLOR and S. J. HESTER, ? Plaintiffs, against ^ J J (ZFirvwnw TW?Tiffant ! By authority of a decree of sale by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, in said State, made ill the above stkted case, I will offer for sale, at public outcry, at Abbeville C. H., S. C., on salesady in September, A. D. 1921, within the legal hours of sale the following described land, to wit: All that tract, piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Abbeville County, in the State aforesaid, and in the town of Calhoun Falls, more accurately described by a map of the town of Calhoun Falls Investment Company made by DesCamps and Cunningham in September 1907* and revised by C. J. DeaCamps, December 14th, 1909, said lots being shown on said map as lots three and four in Block M. and havincr a frontacre of twenty five feet each on Cox Ave., a depth j of one hundred and six feet and j having thereon two two-story brick | buildings, occupied by Mrs. Wein- j raub and by N. D. Sanders. TERMS OF SALE: CASH. Pur- j chaser to pay for papers and stamps I THOS. P. THOMSON, Master A. C., S. C. Aug. 19. 3t-oaw. 4 TRUNK IN ROW. Mrs. Obench&in Lets out Intention To Fight. . Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 18.?Arrival of a trunk her# late last night consigned from San Francisco to Mrs. Madalynne* Obenchaln, held in Jail here on a charge of murder, and the subsequent attempt of the sheriff's office to seize it as possible evidence against her, -was the signal for. a "fighting announcement" today by her attorney, Ralph R. Gbenchain, her divorced husband. The trunk, according to Mr. Obenchain's statement, belongs to him but Mrs. Gbenchain has been using it. Some propertv in it. he said, belongs to him. It is a regulation army locker trunk. "I will apply for an injunction as soon as the courts open this morning," he said, 'to prevent seizure of the trunk without warrants." ~ "I intend to show now that the defense is through with quietly \ acquiescing to every deed of the prosecution, whether it hurts the right of the defendant or not.** 1 Simultaneous with the publication in local'papers of Mr. Ofbenchain's declaration to 'begin actively his campaign for the freeing of his for mer -wife from the charge of implication in the mysterious slaying August 5 of J. Belton Kennedy, a statement is printed from Charles S. Summer, expected to be one of the star witnesses against Arthur C. Burch, college friend of Mrs. Ohenchain. Shortly after Burch's arrest and indictment for murder, Summer told the authorities he had seen Burch in a roadster on the Ocean 1 highway naar? Qorrfa Mnni/ifl tlw niirllt. nrf fhfl slaying. Late, yesterday Summer accompanied Deputy Sheriff William Bright to tlie identical suot of the declared meeting and rehearsed what he-said was the exact occurrence. , 'He said that that the meeting took place shortly after 10 o'clock the sight August 5. He and his wife were riding along when a roadster speeded down upon them, and after being :rowed to- one side of the road, and :>eing angered he said at the glare of &e undimmed lights, Summer lean>d out and "called down'* the driver yf the roadster. The driver of the roadster, whom le said Mrs. Summer also plainly jaw, was Burch, he declared. The neeting pdace was 200 yards west of jhe place where the stock of a shotjun was washed ashore and found sixteen hours after the shooting and later turned over to investigators, in the (belief that it was the one used t>y the slayer and then thrown into the ocean. ~~ _ ' \, NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING A meeting of the stockholders of Abbeville Motor Car Company, a corporation organized and existing inder and by virtue of the laws of the State of South Carolina, is callid to meet in the office of Wm. P. 3reene at Abbeville, South Carolina >n Wednesday, August 24th, 1921 it 6 o'clock, P. M. to consider a resoution then to be presented that the laid corporation go into liquidation, vind up its affairs and dissolve. All Stockholders are notified to be tresent at such meeting either in >ersoa or by proxy for the purpose ?f voting on said resolution. Wm. P. GREENE, President fuly 22, 1921 to Aug. 24. / You may i cure a cu^torr with a barga but it takes que | ty to hold hin Aa Ex-W;dow. The Arrow. An old colored mammy came in for her monthly allowance. As she could not write, she made her mark. Previously she had always made an X,. but on this occasion she made a circle. "Why, Linda," said the man in charge, "why don't you make an X as usual?" , . And Linda, replied earnestly: "Why, I done went and got married yesteray and changed any name." 1 , ERE< .== ? ? / -V John >?? Wanan . says: "If ther ness on earth I should leave s it is advertising Advertising i i y which creates s business.. Thi to increase adv ing what are times. In this way v ?by using acU ?keep their sa to normal \ ; ' C, Adverti The Press c Sells the / i ' Statio se*er How's y< in5 business di- Now's a i... look it c ready for We can ah der for Eng for every pu< The Press Low Down. Petersburg Index-Apfpeal; ' 1 Every man may have his price, but some are so cheap they give themselves away. * a A Uieleii AccMaory. New York Sun. "We have some very uke j&tfded herring," suggested the delic^tes^ep ' dealer. "Not for me," replied the man who was doing the family shopping. I "There's no pleasure in getting , ^ thirsty any more." t ... ~ . I a wen Brother? arble and ranite Co. IGNERS UFACTURERS CTORS | lairgMt and b??t equipped mono icntal mill* in the Carolina*. GEENWOOD, 3. C. J . 1 t' ?*''>- 'M ' ' | ' laker } ' ; ; ;K|| :e is one busithat a 'quitter* everely alone, is the power % ales and builds e natural time , *1 ertising is durfflrmprl "dull" . rise merchants ? ^ertising space les volume up 1 ; ' 1 ! 1 ' I sing in I md Banner '.Goods , M=SS 1 "'rf : v.-.Vjl nery .* N J our supply of > stationery? nrnnr] hmp tn ? V/V/Vl M1A4W WV J >ver and get the fall trade. 50 handle your or iuucu o ryose. i & Banner Co.