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y PAGE TWO Established 1844. THE PRESS AND BANNER ABBEVILLE, S. C. The Press and Banner Company Published Tri-Weekly Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Entered as second-class matter a post office in Abbeville, S. C. Terms of Subscription: r\? $2.0 VllC xcoa Six Months Three Months $1.0i .5< Foreign Advertising Repress tativ AMERICAN ?RESS ASSOCIATION n WEDNESLa Y, FEB. 15, 1922. NEWS FROM BACK AT HOME President Harding now an nounces that "he is opposed to i bond issue for the raising of th< necessary amount to pay the sol diers' bonus. He states also that h< is opposed to raising money foi this purpose from any of the pro pose-d sources of revenue, and thai neither does he favor a restoratior of any of the taxes which congresi has gotten rid of. He opposes thf bond issue because it would raist mak-p it imnracti' UltCiCOW * t* bvvrj ??.?...? 4 cabl? to refund about six billions / of dollars of Treasury notes which must be shortly refunded, and de clares that the proposed taxes an unwise.. I President Harding has undoubt edly heard from the people back a1 home^?from the people who ar< to pay this 'bonus. The clevei scheme by men in both parties t( flirt with the the soldier vote ha: run against a snag. The tax-ridder people of this country have giver if * evidence that a mighty protest wil be raised against the proposed ex y penditure and that its echoes wil be hearfi tn the fall elections. Mer A ? v* /J ori wiin xnen ears tu tuf givuuu <?< quick to take notice of disquieting rumblings. Soldiers who know enough abou the condition of the country to ex press ax opinion in tho matter ar< as well, aware as are other peopl . that now is no time to put furthe: ^ burdens on the people of the Uni ted States for kny purpose which i not a necessary purpose. There i time to do the right thing b; tfee Meiers. Most of them wh> caj*? ifkck home and wanted jobs and wko were worthy of jobs, go tfeeaa- Ther# is no larger percentag of them out of employment than o any other class of people. Beinj without families and without de . :%7 . . Pendents, they may more easil; wait p)t recognition in a financia way than men with families and de pendents can afford to pay them i bonus. Republican Party, of coursc in t6e? ejections of 1920 pledged it self to do something for the so] diers, and so did the Democrat! party, we believe. President Hard ing now says that the Republica: party did not promise to pay th bjtt&tft at any particular time, no a time whon the interests of th whole country would suffer therebj -- IV- TT_'U?J me peopie uj uic umvcu ounc have said, and will say emphatical Jy is iJovenrfber if a bonus is noi paid, that now is not the tim& t turn the country backward when i is just beginning to get started u the hill towards a business reviva Let the bonus rest. And le everybody able to work go to wort NOMINATION RECEIVES SECONI The State nominates Hon. Harr L. Watson, of the Greenwood Inde> Journal, for trustee of the Universit bf South Carolina, should there be a election for more trustees. We set ond the nomination and join with th State in saying that ho man in Uppe South Carolina is Detter nuea 10 d of distin)puished service to the Uh versity than Mr. Watson. He is ir tensely interested in taatters of edi cation, a man of education h'mael: a bysimesS man, and one interefcte in living up to the best traditions o the Palmetto State. No man woul study assiduously the rteeds c the UnKtersity &nd none woutd serv it tato* conscientiously. * " BL' " K* r %' . c'. . MANY SHIPS HUNT FOR SAILOR I Man Washed Overboard 700 Miles at Sea Lost for Seven Days. j New York, Feb. 14.?A score of' ships of aM kinds, from battered tramp steamers of the seven seats to: graceful, pleasure freighted passenger j " i liners, were leaving for ocean routes * today on a mission of mercy. They were continuing to search for John. ~ Birkner, 24, the sailor who was cast j adrift from the steamship Gaffney,. 0 last Wednesday, 70 miles in an ,un 3 frequented part of the Atlantic. 0 If Birkner's frail craft is still a : - float, today's dawn marks the begin-! e ning of his seventh day adrift on the J waters. The master of the Gaffney, -. Captain Walter Beckwith, advised ;every craft carrying wireless to seek! Hriftinf Railor. Birkner was one of' four sailors; ordered to lash a life boat in a ter-j rific storm, when a g'ant wave heeled j the GaflFney over. The life boat wasj .swept into the sea, and Birkner with Jit. He*clambered into the boat, but -,the GaflFney was already too far away j ; 'to throw him a line. For sixteen J J hours, Captain Beckwith cruised^ about, trying to get close enough to put .a line aboard. But the high seas! t frustrated each attempt. ! I; 5 (TEACHERS' MEET POSTPONED , ! > Next Session To Be Held Saturday March 4. I, Officials of the county teachers'( t' asociation have sent out the follow i ing notice to teache-rs, which is self explanatory: ' i "Due to the bad -weather of this . i week we have take-n the responsi- J . 'bility of postponing the County i I . Teachers' meeting until the first,' Saturday in March which Is the 4th1 of th? month. We will meet at the J : court house and certainly hope that;, > every teacher in the county cai\' 3 and will come to this meeting. A j special speaker will address the tea chers at his time. ^ ! "Mrs. Chas. Gilliam, l ; "Secretary. -j "J. D. Fulp, 1: President."! BANK IN OPERATION i Anderson, Feb. 14. ?The Citi 1 ' zens' bank of Honea Path opened j ' its doors today after being closed | - J for almost a montfj. The directors' 2 are optimistic about the future of e the bank, and tendered a vote of thanks to James -Craig, state bank | examiner, and his assistants in re ojJening the institution. During the lrst hour after the bank reopened deposits amounted to $5,000. Th? old depositors guaranteed to leave their deposits in the bank for a year. SAILOR AT SEA i IN SMALL BOAT I. ' . yl New York, Feb. 14.?Somewhere j on the Atlantic about 500 miles _ | from New York?if his luck ' has ' held?John Brickner, a British sea j man, is bolbbing about in a life ( boat waiting out his sixth night in the hope of rescue. The story of his loss in a high c gale and of a heartbreaking game: bf hide, and seek his little ibark play ? ed with his would-be rescuers was a (brought to port today by Capt. Walter Beckwith of the steamship Gaffney. r The sorm broke on the morning s of February 8, Captain Beckwith [_ said, with a 100 mile wind, which v quickly dashed the sea into fury. 0 Brickner was sent with another sea ,t man. to make fast the lifeboats, p J Swinging on the out turned davits, \t | Brickner dropped into one 01 me ,fci boats to make fast a line when a j huge wave swept th? boat away. Captain Beckwith quickly turned the Gaffney about and began a struggle to get a line to the 'life boat, missing time after time 'by a few feet. The boat was lost once in a rain V squall, only to be discovered and lost again. Nightfall put an end to the sfearch and the Gaffney steamed ori to port, first broadcasting a radio messages asking aQ ships to look out the lost seaman. The lifelboat was stocked with food and water and Brickner Was warmly clad,v so that Captain Beck v. ~ A#' ^ wun ng-ures ne ? 1?" biwuvt. j reside' if his little 'boat weathered' 'i . > ^ the gale. ,f ' e There is one car to every two adult. white persons in the United States. HONOR ROLL FOR JANUARY Of the Abbeville Graded and High | School. First grade?Distinguished: Bry son Evans, Stuart Thomson, Georgie ] Levi. Second grade?Highly distinguish ed: Clifford Zimmerman, William H. < Hill, Mildred McComb, Martha Tol- 1 bert, Ida Gaston, Eva Poliakoff, Su- ] sie Blount, Rebecca Smith, Elizabeth 1 Stephens, Albert Gilliam, Leon Sta- < pies. Distinguished: Frances Welsh, t Louise Levi, Ralph Wilson, Sarah Neuffer. i Third grade?Highly distinguished: > Eugenia Swetenburg. Distinguished: j 1 Benie Evans, Sarah Hall, Mamie i i Lewis, Marnie Reese, Walter Hagenji -iuwin McCuen, Edward Roche, Wil-jt liam Cheatham, Archie Brown, Frank!] Dawson, Will:'am LaBoon, Mary Max-1 well, Bradley Moore, Elizabeth Pet-'] t'pvcv.*, Dale Welsh. Fourth grade?Highly distinguish- 1 ed: Lida Mae Johnson, Martha Lewis, i Ruth Fundy, Annie Rogers, Francesj* Wosmansky, Mabry Miller. Distin- ' guished: Elizabeth McCord, Norma 1 Flynn, Lucia McCord, William Mar- * tin, Ovelle Gilliam, Frances Johnson, Cassel Ferguson, -Clyde Norrell, Lad- ' son Perr!n, James Reynolds, Marga- - ret Culbreth, Frances McComb, Mar- k garet Telford. r < Fifth grade?Highly distinguished: J Emily Morse, Henry Power. Distin- j* guished: Anne Smith, Jack Suther-^ land, Douglas Guy, James Blessing, j Mary Chalmers, Sara Evans, Lillie, Pruitt, Charlotte Reese, Sara Smith, c Edna White. Sixth grade?Distinguished: Ma-^ bel Bradley, Susan Minshall, Jamse; Fulp, Ada'r Aiken, Josephine Barn-i well, Estelle Lyen, William McComb,1 Jean-Milford, Minnie E. Swetenburg. I Seventh grade?Distinguished: j James Graves, James Grubb, Alma j Gaston, Frances Jones, Bernice Pow- i ell, Grace Roche, Grace Smith. HIGH SCHOOL. Eighth grade?Highly distinguish-, ed: Margaret Harrison. Distinguish-j ed: William P. Greene, Jr., Mark j Oovirftinrno -Tnmfl5 Mpfflmh. Ellen . Nabers, Ada Perrin. Ninth grade?Distinguished: Ellis j Poliakoff, Allen Wilson, Virginia | Cochran, Madge Ferguson, Frances Gilliam, Lucy Highsmith, Judith Hill, I Fannie M. Mundy, Jennie White, , Virgin'a Wilson. 1 i Tenth grade?Highly distinguish- ; ed: Grace Milford. Distinguished Ray Swetenburg, Alice Chftatham, Helen : Cromer, Carplina Chalmers, Mary S. Qilliam, Elizabeth Lyon, Deby Owen, Marion Wilson. Eleventh grade?Distinguished:; William Cox, George Smith. J. D. Fulp, Supt. i Milk Samples Tested j Wilmington, ' N. C. "Feb. 14.? j Samples of milk supplied 'by a local | dairyman ' were being analyzed by i fcity health ofScers tonight follow- fj ing the death this afternoon of a 13 months old baby and the serious* J illness df five other children rang ing from two to seven years. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING ' n Notice is hereby given that a , meeting of the stockholders of} Adair's Department Store, Inc., a , corporation organized and charter- 1 ed under the laws pf tfye Stat? of , South Carolina, will be held at 12 r o'clock, noon, on the 18th day of 4 March 1922, in the office of said, corporation, in the City of Abbe ville, South Carolina; said meeting , being called under a resolU- | tion of the "said board of directors of said corporation under date of ] 14 day of February, 1922, for the:j purpose of considering and acting ;j upon the matter of liquidating and winding up the affairs of said cor poration and dissolving the sanie, j I in accordance with the provisions of the laws of South Carolina. E. J. Adair, J E. J. Adair, C. C. Wallace,'! President, Secretary, j ; February 14th. 1922. , 1 time c. Ui(|hut Grade Hemstitching and Picot Edge work. We make machine and know how to turn out the high est grade wojk. ' 'Crde'rs taken for pleating of all < kinds. We opeirate modern Jjlant and <> do only the best work. Latest style' ; electrically driven machines sold j on easy terms. ' ! i All makes of machines repaired. Singer Sewing Machine Company. | 505 Main St. Greenwood. Phone 151 j V. B. Barnet, Mgr. | LEGAL SALE. In The District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina. to the Matter of R. T. BROADWELL Bankrupt, In Bankruptcy. Under an^ by virtue ^of ah order >f D. H. Hill, Esq., Referee in Bank ruptcy, I will sell at Abbeville Court Souse, South Carolina, on salesday n March, 1922, to the highest bid ler, the following described real es ;ate, to wit: One acre, more or less, situate ly ng and being in Lowndesville, Abbe ;ille County South Carolina, and jounded by lands of Ira Bell on South and East; Mrs. R. T. Broad veil on the West; Main Street on T. - J 1 ;ne rsurwj anu Known as u?e luuinsuu Ot. Also, all that tract or parcel of and, situate, lying and being in the Township of LowndesvVlle, Counjty ind State aforesaid, fronting forty feet on Main street, and running jack by parallel lines thirty feet, and jounded by Thomson lot on South ind East and Mr. R. T. Broadwell on he West and Main Street on North. Also, all that tract or parcel of and, situate, lying and being in the Town of Lowndesville, County and State aforesaid, containing two acres, nore or less, and bounded on the south and We^ by Richard Bonds tfrs. R. T. Broadwell on the East, ind the Presbyterian Church lot bn he North. TERMS OF SALE: CASH, pur chaser to pay for papers and stamps. P. E. BELL, Trustee in Bankruptcy of R. T.\ Broadwell. ^eb. 15. 3wks. WILL BRING MILLION DOLLARS FROM HIDING Augusta, Ga., Felb. 14-.?Estimat ing that there is not less than a mil lion dollars in cash stored away ir various hiding places in Augusta the clearing house association oi this city today began a publicity campaign to bring this money intc the banks and 'to put it in genera circulation in the community. Boys Ck This week we into the prices 1 \ We are offei n a. wvercociLs cti BOYS Boys .$18.00 Suits n Boys $16.50 Suits n Boys $15.00 Suits rt , Boys $12.50 Suits n Boys $10.00 Suits n Boys $7.50 Suits no \ ,C IBoys $10.00 Overcc feoys $7.50 Overco* BOYS KNI Boys $4.Q0 KnicW Boys $3.50 Knicker Boys $3.00 Knickei ]Boys $2.50 Knicker Boys $2,00 Knickei Boys $1.50 Knickei Boys $1.00 Knicker Boys 75c Knickertx You can t afford mmmmm i LEGAL SALE. > In the District Court of the United States, Western District of South 'Carolina. In re J. H. HILL, Bankrupt, and H. M. HILL, Bankrupt. Under Order of D. H. Hill, Referee herein, I will sell at the home place of J. H. Hill, in Abbeville County, S. C. on February 23rd, 1922, begin ning at 10 A. M. personal property consisting of mules, cows, farm sup plies, farm implements, engines, trac tors, etc., amouriting to around three thousand dollars. Terms of Sale, CASH. J. S. STARK, Trustee of H. M. Hill and J. H. Hill. Feb. 15. ei. "If there were,more good roads and more auto buses in , our rural i counties, the consolidation of schools could go on apace."?P. P. Claxton, Former U. S. Commissioner of Edu cation. \ Quality f Reliable < growers i Sixty yea Formulars f Hand R. E. COX, : A. D. KENNEI at F are putting the k of Boys Clothing. jOOK AT THl ring now all of 01 id Extra Trousers FOR CASH i suits o,W j. ?9.00 o.w $8.25 ow $7.50 w ivrornATR ?,ats no\y ?5*9P its now 13.7$ CKERBOCKERS <? I 'fS Y*^ ' K*t f ^ bockers now.. .. 1. $2.00 bockers now $1.75 bockers now $1.50 bockers now $1^25 ^oc^rs pow fiockers now -7ac. bockers now 50c. DCKexs now .... .... 38c. to pass up bargains top good to miss I i attempteo Te kill wife ?y holding her on t1 Windsor, Conn., Feb. 1-4.? Charged with having attempted to take his wife's life by holding her upon the trolley tracks before an approaching car, Joseph Stroff, was held at the Windsor jail here to day. The woman's right leg was crushed by the trolley car and Sub sequently amputated at the hospi tal, where she is now in a serious condition. " , Stroff was seen bending, over the trolley tracks by. Motorman Moran last night,' who attempted to stop his car. The man held his position until the car was nearly upon him. When the car was stopped it was found that Stroff's wife was under the wheels. "The motor can has become an in dispensable instrument in our politic al, social and industrial life."?Pres ident Harding. r " " iff!' . M 'S 1 :rop :or rs \Jfl- * * :or all crops led By Abbeille, S. C. DY, Due West ! latf Price '/ nife still deeper S N .f jr Boys Su its, at Half Prices S I