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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 at post office in Abbeville, S. C. Term* of Subscription: One Year $2.001 Six Months $1.00 j Three Months .50 j Foreign Advertising Representative AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION WEDNESDAY, FEB. 22, 1922 THE RADIO . The Radio Theatre is on the wayj -and it is an institution that is des-| tined to come to the same sort of popularity as the moving picture theatre^ says The Charlotte Observ er in an editorial. It is the enter prise of the amateur wireless opera tors that is bringing this new fea ture in social entertainment to the front, and we are not surprised to learn, as we do from The Gazette,' that our neighboring town of Gas tonia, which enjoyed the privileges of a wireless station in the early days of the war, is foremost among the movers for a wireless theatre. 1 The spread of the radio service has u Vimriprpfi hv g"ov- ! UCCI1 ovuiv n um v v w_ ernmental restricitons, ibut the 70, 000 amateur operators in this coun try are now moving on President Harding and Secretary Hoover with the determination to have some of| these tresljaTictions removed. They | are standing on firm ground, be-} cause the radio is developing not ; only as a social agency, but as an institution of . great possible good to the agricultural sections. It will not/ b? long until every fanner who has a telephone in his home can also^ have his radio outfit, and keep as ' well posted on the news of th? day, 1 including the state of the markets, / as "the city, man." Secretary Hoover has indicated]' that tie restrictions now complain-j ed of are not intended as a perma-j: nent arrangement, but that the 1 Department of Commerce is work- 1 ing on plans by wtacn tne radio ser vice -will be promoted practically 1 unlimited. The Experimenter Pub- ' lishing Co., of New York, is coming 1 nobly to the assistance of the ama- ( teufs, and it states that the plans * under advisement by Secretary Jjr Hoover look to authorizing ama- s uP * teure desiring the broadcast, if < - , such broadcasting is of public bene- < fit, to use the wave length of 200 i meters at certain specified times, s so as not to interfere with the exist ing amateur radio telegraph ser- J vibe; second, to all amateurs to ' . (broadcast, only on 175 or 225 oheteris leaving the 200 meter wave t Jength open to regular communica tion service. If it is decided to au thorize broadcasting o<n 175 meters this authority can be included in tneir present regular ammeui j tion licenses will be necessary. 1 But $ke situation now seems to ' rest ob tie point of whether the 1 Department of Commerce can legal ly restrict the us? of amateur sta- ' tions for broadcasting while legis- : lation to that effect is only being 1 considered and how long will their stations ;be thus restricted pending the enactment of the proposed legis lation /which if it follows the usual course from pigeon hole to pigeon hole nay keep their stations silent for months or even years. MAKE BUSINESS GOOD. The head of an important business called on an acquaintance. "How's Kncinflca^M tV?o co^nrir) man finollv asked as their conversation was end ing. "Rotten," replied the first. "I don't expect it to get any better for a year at least." "If that's the way you feel, you can be pretty sure it won't be any better," said No. 2. "Your salsemen hear you talk that way. 'What's the use of working?' they say. 'The boss says business is rotten.' One of them . goes home tonight. 'What did you do today?' his wife asks. 'Oh, nothing, he answers. 'Can't expect to. The boss doesa't see any business ahead for this year.'" Now this isn't intended to preach the possibility of any miracle. When industry is out of balance, some thihgs ontfuly low and others undul^ ! high, when federal taxation is so J imposed as to eat up investment l^unds, nobody can make a magic by 'repeating some formula. Just to say (business is good won't make it good. But this is true: A man's attitude can make a situation a whole lot worse than it really is, it can make a situation a whole lot better than it otherwise would be. The man who says, "Oh, what's the use? Business is rotten," will cer tainly find it rotten. The man who says, "Well conditions aren't so worse. There is really a lot of busi ness to be had by working for it and 1 I'm going to get my share." I'm going to make good. A lot of people have been spoiled by the easy money of the last few years. A motor car salesman didn't have to go out and sell his cars. Cus tomers came in and begged to be put on the waiting list. Now that he has to comb the town for customers he is apt naturally to feel aggrieved. We have to recognize that the days of quick and big profits are gone. We have got to get out and hustle for what we get. But things aren't so bad but what if we do this we can make a showing. Somebody proposed th# motto last year, 'Nineteen twen ty-one will reward fighters." It did. The same thing js true of this year. The country has been through worse periods than this. It went through a long one in the '70?, and another in the '90s. People weren't fortified then as they are now by years of big prosperity just behind. This big, rich country, with all its natural resources and its energetic and intelligent population, isn't broke or anywhere near it. There is an enormoils amount of work to be done. There is a vast amount of capital on hand. The West has suffered its depression with the drop in from prices. But it has gone to rock bot tom and is on the up-grade. B'esides, the farmer has this big advantage over the industrial worker of the East. When the farm demand slows down the farm plant still keeps run ning and maintains the family of the farmer. When thfe factory closes, the industrial worker has nothing to fall back on. We aren't out in a desert. We are in the midst of a great producing region. There are plenty of opportu nities for the diligent. The man who issumes there is business to be had ind goes after it, who doubles . his energy<i? the face of disappointment, arho is resourceful, and on the job ;very minute?don't worry about iim. He will get his share. The business is right hiere in Kan sas City. Not for the man who lies ipwn. Not for the man who is easily liscouraged. But it's here for the nan who will work to get it!?Kan ;as City Star. STATE SUNDAY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION MEETS JUNE 20 \n?ul Session to be Held At Uni versity of South Carolina This Year iSjpartanbu/flg, JFeft). 13.?Preljmi lary announcement of program for the anual State Sunday School As sociation convention was made by the program committee yesterday. A.mong those who have already ac :epted places on the program are Dr. H. E. Tralle, of Philadelphia, head of the training work of .the American Baptist Publication So ciety. Dr. Tralle will speak each day of the convention. Dr. Robt. S. Truesdale, pastor of Main St. Methodist church, Colum bia, will speak on "Sunday School Evangelism." Dr. Truesdale is sec retary of the evangelism committee of the State Sunday School Asso ciation, and is widely known for his interest in this phase of church work. T"It? W of CAM P "H nn/ioti nnolnr rtf i/ii f? abovit jLruiivaii| ^aokvi vx Cheraw Methodist church and one of the most popular lecturers in the State, will speak on "The Discovery of a Little Child." Dr. D. B. Johnson, preside-nt of Winthrop College, trill preside over the Convention sessions as presi dent. The convention sessions will be held at he University of South Carolina, and the date has been set for June 20-21-22, in accordance with the wish of the University au tVinrvtnps. this H?incr +}ip wppV -fn? lowing Commencement. Purthfer announcements regard ing the convention will be made liter by General Superintended Leon C. Palmer*. of the South Caro lina Sunday School Association. BURN TO DEATH IN AIKEN FIRE Wife and Three Children of C. E. Monts Perish in Flame* Tuesday Morning - I Aiken, Feb. 21.?Mrs. C. E. Monts and three of her children were burned to death in their home here shortly after midnight tonight. Flames had largely envolped the house when Mr. Monts was awaken ed, and in his efforts to save\ his wife and children he was seriously burned and is a patient in a hospital t here^ , The dead are: Mrs. C. E. Monts, I about 35 years old; Eugene Monts, t oldest son, 15; Clarence Monts, 14, t and Eugene Dubose Monts, be- f tween two and three years old. t Mrs. Monts was the second wife t and before her marriage was Miss r Nannette Dubose of Washington, c Ga. ' t Mr. Monts is ticket agent for the t Southern railway here and is a t highly respected inan in the com- c munity. r It is not known at an early hour!a this morning how the fire started. * b Upholds Domestic Service London, Feb. 21.?Domestic ser-j *1 vice is a skilled job and the oppo- jc site of a degrading occupation, de- (8 clared Lady Astor, M. P., presiding ^ at a conference on unemployment^ among women. r "When I listen to the anti-women members in the House of Com-1 mons," she added, "I rather long to J go to them as a domestic. It would 11 be such a wonderful chance of what o the soldiers called 'learning 'em.' "jt . 'j STATE OF SOUTH CAROLI IN A h COUNTY OP ABBEVILLE. js Court of Common Pleas. 11 W. F. NICKLES, Plaintiff !b against | h Minnie L. Farrow, Lucy Hamilton, 'd Theo, "Alias", Frost Davis, L. A. $ Richie, Chtfrlotte a Garlingbon,1 e James Davis and Arthur Wright, s Defendant J 0 COPY summons. for RELIEF, t] (Complaint Served) jl< TO THE DHBNDANTS as above r named: .. jti YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMON- ,tl ED and required to answer theje Complafht in this action, of which, c a copy is herewith served upon;c you and to' sei^e a copy of your an- 'v* swer tb the said Complaint-on the r subscriber at his office at Abbeville is Court House, South fcarolind, With-, in twenty days after the service herreof, exclusive o 1 the day of ; slich service; and if you fail to an-; . swer the Complaint within the time^ aforesaid, the plaintiff in this ac-j ^ tion Will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. ^ Dated 22 day of February 1922. D. H. HILL, ... . ^U iriamaff s Attorney. . ^ To the absent defendants above named i You and each of you will please take notice that the complaint in the above entitled action, together with the summons therein, of which the a<bove is a copy',, -was duly filed in the office of J. L. Perrin, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Ab beville County, S. on the 22 day of February 1922. D. H. Hill, Plaintiff's Attorney. 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., amounting to around three thousand dollars. Terms of Sale, CASH. / J. S. STARK, Trustee of H. M. Hill and J. H. Hill. Feb. 15. ei. Highest Grade Hemstitching and Pieot Edge work. We make machine and know how to turn out the high j est grade work. oil ISIUClo L-ark.cu xux picaiu^ va an kinds. We operate modem plant and do only Uie best work. Latest style electrically driven machines sold oh etisy terms. All makes of machines repaired. Singer Sewing Machine Company. 305 Main St. Greenwood. Phone 151 V. B: Barn^t, Mgr,, r Stuff Around Town j Signs of Sjiring. Despite the fancied or real man 2Uvers of the ground hog a few iveeks ago, the weather of the last few days has been such as to banish jvercoats, spoil the coal market, and :ause the appearance of spots of fellow in the lapels of numerous loats. Also the warm sunshine has iwakened in the minds of many 6us Dects the inherent or acquired ;houghts of a garden with its beans ind onions and collards and spinach, ^nd with such thoughts the next ;hing is the acquiring of certain nec issary tools with which to wage the ight for the infant plants against he marauding tendencies of neigh >oring chickens. The birds have al ready searched out the crooks and irannies that will shelter a prospec ive brood and have already started he herculean labor of transporting naterial for building. The dropping >f awningg" not moved for some uonths lets fall a shower of straws nd sticks ar.d hairs collected by hese same industriously early nest lU'lders. The bulbous jonquil has put orth its fragrant blossoms in a tundred front yards giving spots of olor to the erstwhile brown and ;reen lawns. February is not gone ,nd March is yet to come but the eeling that spring is here has/ al eady taken possession. ' Bootleggers Scarce. Those who are on the inside of hings anti-VoIstedian and on the utside of things prohibitory say th6t he essence of liberty and the siiti ect of ten million vaudeville jokes as grown steadily scarcer since the heriff and his assistants have started heir intensive drive against the ootlegger. And ih accordance with aws of economics as the supply has s ecreased the price has soared from 6 to $8 and $10 a gallon with the nd not ,yet In sight The retailors eem to be lying low, for a more fav rabie season. It has been suggested hat the makers may have learned the ;sson of experience and .are quietly eplenishing their stores in prepara ion for the better days. Then when he price has gone to adegfrable lev 1 they will begin unloading the lear white fluid, perhaps using a ooperative selling agreement that rill not flood the market. At any ate the supply is now very low, (It s said.) N A Personification. Always there are persons or things bat are the personification of the escriptive phrases that are familiar, f some one speaks of a tin rattle le hearer thinks of a Ford joke. But le descriptive phrasing of "a gen eman of the old school" is one of-/ sn heard, yet seldom is a man aund who meets our idea of the ;rm. To meet one that does fulfill le expectation gives pleasure aa ell as satisfaction. Those who fre uent the court house and know lose who have offices there are fa riliar with several gentlemen of le finest typfe?lovable men whom ou like to hear talk. But the dean f them all, the stateliest, most cour ;ous, moBt dignifitd, most affable? le personification of the term above i T. P. Thomson, Master of Abbe ille county. Original name of Boston, Mass., ras Trement. PLANT......;. YOUR.;. GARDENS.... You furnish the Garden and we will furnish the ....5 E t U.... Beans, Peas, Corn, Tomatoes, Spinach, Beets, Cabbage, Onion Sets, Pepper, Buists' Oats, 8eed Irish Potatoes. Special prices in big lots. rkTTD CDVPIAI TV TQ t3T? SEED ?I Amos B. Morse C<o. i DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNIT ED STATES, , WESTERN DIS TRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA. In the Matter of J. H. HILL, Bank rupt, In Bankruptcy. By virtue of the authority given me under an ord^r of D. H. Hill, Esq. Referee in Bankruptcy, in the above stated case, I will offer for sale at Abbeville Court House, South Caro lina,, on salesday in March, 1922, be ing March 6th, at eleven o'clock A.M. the following described real estate, bo wit: "All that tract or parcel of land 3ituate, lying and being in Lowndes rille Township, Abbeville Courity, in said State, containing Twenty-three / rt \ ^ ' J. li4__ 1 -J tl-1 \zo) acres, more or less, Dounuea t>y ? lands of H. M. Hill, estate of L C. o Clinkscales, and by Max Below, and C being the same tract conveyed to J. H. Hill by Max Below Nov. 20, 19i5. o Also, all that tract or parcel of I land situate, lying and being in c Lowndesville Township, in said state c ind county, containing nineteen and n line-tenth (19.9) acres, more or less 1 ind bounded by lands of W. W. Wil- a son, by lands of Max Below, J. H. Sill and others, and being the same ii ract conveyed to J. H. Hill by Max li Below, May 11, 1917. to Also an undivided one-fourth in- It ;erest in that lot or parcel of land e :onta:ning two and three-tenth (2.3) la icres, more or less, now known as a jin House lot, and bounded by lands L >f Henry Hill, estate lands of Peter lunter and others, and formerly b cnown as "Cross Roads Lot;" v Said property is sold free of all r; ncumbrances as the property of the c ibove named bankrupt pursuant to b aw. v b TERMS OF SALE: One-half cash, w >alance on credit of twelve riiontity vith interest from da? of sdle at the m ate of eight per cent, per annum, he credit portion to be evidenced >y the bond of the purchaser arid se :ured by a mortgage of the premi- p es, each with attorneys fees clause. - The sale will be subject to corifir- ^ _ i! 1 nation Dy me court. ' J. S. STARK, Trustee in Bankruptcy, of J. H. Hill, Bankrupt ^eb. 6, 1922. *2, 10 4 ti. * r JISTRICT COURT OF THE UNIT ED STATES, WESTERN DIS- I TRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA. n the Matter of J. H. Hill, Bankrupt, In Bankruptcy. Pursuant to an Order made by D. I. Hill, Esq., Referee in Bankruptcy, n the above entitled motion, and by irtue of the authority given us un !er the laws of the State of, South Carolina, as pledges thereof, the lin lersigned will sell at public auction t Abbeville Court Housfe, Sbirth larolina at eleven o'clock A. M. on laturday, February the 25th, the fol jwing described property, to wit: One Hundred and Thirty (130) hares of the capital stock pi tlie 'isheries Products Company. The said property will be sold as he property of the above, named ankrupt to satisfy the indebtedness f the undersigned, or so much there f as the proceeds will pay, to which idebtedness the said stock is pledg d as collateral. Planters Bank, By Otto Bristow, Cashier, 'eb. 6, 1922. , 2, 10.2t King Alfonso of Spain has a rau eum of the articles used in attempt gainst his life. M tifi Wed Invita What Is/ more sentimental tb Certainly it is not 4 mere i peddlod around to the cheap la generally disappointing. < rofecb?and we have correct don and every purse. LODI8VI PRESS & BANN AbbevilU )ISTRICT COURT OF THE UNIT ED STATES, WESTERN DJ5 RICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA.'' n the Matter of H. M. Hill, rapt. In Bankruptcy.! By virtue of the authority giTeal ne under an order of D. H. Hill, laq.| leferee in Bankruptcy, in the above tated case, I will offer for sale at Abbeville Court House, South ina, on salesday in March, 102 teing March 6th, at eleven o'dlti i. M., the following described r^ state, to wit: "All that tract or parcel of talc ituate, lying and being in Lownd illtf Township, Abbeville County ir aia oxaie, containing Sixty (M)| cres, toore or lefts,bounded by f C. M. linkscales, Ted Clinl Jeorge Hodge, J. H. Hill and oi Also, all that other tract 6* f land situ&te, lying and bettfe iowndesville township, J A\ ounty and State of South Cst$l ontaining forty-four m nore or less, bounded by lands I. Ferguson, J. 0. Cann, J. H. nd others. Also an undivided three>lj iterest in all that lot or and containing Tiro and i enths (2.3) acres, more oi Je?,lfrt sown as Gin House Lot, and d by lands of H^hry Hill; inds of Peter Hunter and oifi&s, nd formerly known as GroSs-l .cit. TERMS OF SALE: On^half tari dlance on credit of twelve ?bi rith Interest from day of SAle it ate of ei&ht per cefat. per anntifa, rfedit portion to bfe evidenced bjr tte ond of the purchaser find y a mortgage of thfe pretnisei, eJiet rith attorneys fees clduse. ; 1 Tkn coIa vfrill Ka o<iKiA>i /; J lation by the court. / i. S. STARK, i Trustee in Banloiifltfcy, Of J. H. Hill, Bankrupt] eb. 6, 1922. ' 2, id N UNITED STATES D qOURT, WESTER!* D OF SOUTH CARpUNA s re W. B. Hill* Bulrap! In (Bankruptcy By virtue of the authority T d in me as Trustee in this atatteg nd under an order of D. H. ;sq., Refetee in Bankruptcy I ell to the highest bidder, on sales 4y in March 1922, at AbbWftle ourt House, S. ., the folk-wing escribed lands, to wit: All that tract or plantation of ind, situate, lying and (being on Al eville Cotfnty near BrfrftBtae'a ross Roads, containing one knn rted and eighty-five (1'85) lore or less, and toouilded by am. f H. J. Power, Sallie . Hill, Estate of E. E. nd public road leading rownlee's Cross Roads to irey. Terms of > pay for pj t risk of former purchaser. C. H. PENNEJUL, Trustee, e.b. 17, 1922. 3 wks. EMBERS OF ALLIED DEBT FUNDING COMMISS^W Washington, (Feb. 21.?-iNaflpfefc on of Secretary Mellon, Seezq|ftry ughes, Secretary Hoover, S^nafor moot and Representative fetttUn 1 be members of the allied ?e>t mding commission will be senl le senate today, it was anntfriised t the white house. ding tions fail a Wedding Invitation? Mechanical product to b? ie.?t bidder. Cheap finery 1. 1. ...Iln within