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fAVrE r WTJ Established 1844. THE PRESS AND BANNER ABBEVILLE, S. C. The Press and Banner Company I Published Tri-Weekly Monday, Wednesday and Friday. J I Entered as second-class matter at' pest office in Abbeville, S. C. Term* of Subscription: One Year ... Six Months Three Months $2.00 $1.00 .50! Foreign Advertising Representative I AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1922. THE BONUS sFred H. Dominick, congressman from th? third district, is the only ( congressman from South Carolina' who voted against the bonus to sol diers of the world war, and in the opinion of the Press and Banner is 1 the only congressman from South ' Carolina who voted right. ' Why should the soldiers in the ' World War receive a bonus any more than the soldiers of the Span> ish-Amecriean war? Many of them, 1 a large majority in fact, did not see the service, nor endure the hard- 1 ships, which members of Company A, of the First South Carolina regi-,' ment, and which members of Cap- i tain Perrin's company saw and en- 1 dured. And if a bonus is to be paid, why ' is it not limited to those who actual ly saw service on the field of battle? 1 Why skauld officers who never saw the smoke of battle and who re- ! ceived far more money foir their ' time and training than they had : ever earned before receive a bonus, when this country is tax-ridden to the breaking point? Did the soldiers who fought in the | last great war fight as patriots as did the soldiers in all the other great J ware in which the country has been 1 engaged, or were they after serving 1 in order to hereafter receive the^ (bonus money? It seems to us that this insistent demand for money from the public treasury does at J1 least a large percentage of the men ' who fought a gToat injustice. - The politicians say they are for a'1 bonus because they promised their j constituents they would vote for a j bonus. We rather think that many jJ of thesn are for a bonus because:! they lire seeking the soldier vote. J1 They think to get the whole soldier * vote, taking chances that the people who pay the bonus will not be of- J fended. But unless we are misin- ' formed the taxpayers will be heard j1 from as well as the soldiers. 1 Perhaps after all the taxpayers' may decide that the war was fought by this country to make the worl4 safe fo* democracy and not to make pdMic money easy in a vote getting scheme iby congressmen. 1 DCTITONC PRHM Tim A Joe Dupra, who has ibeen a f radio operator in the navy and j has been stationed in Cuba ( for several months, has receiv- <: ed his discharge and is expected in j Abbeville tomorrow for a visit to i his aunt, Mrs. J. C. Cox. { LIBRARY PLAY Mrs. W. O. Cromer president of th? Abbeville Library, is making ar rangements to put on a play written by Mrs. Rosenberg of Greenwood, at Abbeville. Announcement will be made of the date later. The Library' fills a great need in Abbeville, and a | play in its interest should receive J ] the support it deserves. OLD FRIENDS Mr. J. T. Rogers, one of the ( prominent merchants of Gaffney, is in Abbeville visiting his old friend, ij Mr. J. M. Gambrell. Mr. Gambrell j ] and Mr. Rogers were boys together at Williamston and are recalling j many incidents of boyhood with i pleasure. CONTINUES TO IMPROVE Mrs. Hollingsworth has received the good news from her daughter, Mrs. Roy Gilleland, that she is now ; able to ibe up and taken or. the ] roof garden in a rolling chair. She expects to be home in a week or ten daya , ] . X i \ , :;A WARE SHOALS IMPROVEMENTS Mr. S. T. Patterson, electrician at Harrison's garage, spent Sunday ia War? Shoals. He says the Ware ' Shoals Manufacturing Company ex-J pects to make extensive improve-' ments at an early date, building seventy-five new homes and running the plant night and day. There is to 1 be built a $75,000 new Y. M. C. A.1 building, upon the completion of which the old building will be turn-' ed into a Y. W. C. A. for the young women. LOWER COUNTIES SIGNING COTTON Report* From Marlboro State Thai Over 30,000 Bales Hare Been Signed Up fViln-mfhin Ayvr 1 'Marlboro county today shot past the 30,000 bales mark in the cotton co-operative marketing campaign, according to a telegram received tonight at the headquarters of the South Carolina Cotton Growers Cooperative Associ ation. The field marshal in thAt county, R. Wallace Evans, county chairman; H. ?. Evans, county agent, and & M. Pratt, county <ti* rector, tonight reiterated their statement that at least 40,000 bales would be signed in the county before May 1. Officials of the association said to day that the most encouraging re ports came in today from practicaly every county in the state. A. H. Ward, county agent for Darlington, who is spending this week in Green ville county, reported tnat tne cam-i paign was gaining great momentum in that county and that he felt con fident that Creenville would sign its quota. Encouraging reports came from Newberry, Abbeville, Green-1 wood, Aiken, Chester, Fairfield, Dil lon, Sumter and York counties also during the day. J. D. Coghlan, a dirt farmer of Texas, who is selling 100 bales of 1921 cotton through the Texas as sociation, wiil arrive In Columbia Sunday and will speak in fifteen' South Carolina counties during the1 next two weeks, telling of the oper-j ation of the association in Texas.1 Mr. Coghlan is very enthusiastic' over the success of the Texas asso-j ciation and is anxious to see every slate in the belt organized. He says| there are hundreds of Texas farmers who are anxious to take the stamp J and tell the farmers of the other states just how much the Texas as-' aociation has already meant for them. . Richland county is making good progress this week. Approximately 4,000 bales hav^ been signed in ;hat county and the campaign is yet in the preliminary stages. rO THE FARMERS OF AABEVJLLE COUNTY I have recently been employed as bounty Demonstration Agent by the bounty, State and United States De partment of Agriculture, beginning \.pril 1st. I am located temporarily n the City Hall building in the of ice of the Chamber of Commerce, ielephone 356. According to my pres ent plans I will (be in the office each Saturday where I can meet with you, ;alk over matters and render any as iistance possible to your problems ilong agricultural lines. If I can not five you the necessary assistance I vill tell you so and get a specialist , :'rom the Agricultural College, or the [Jnited States Department of Agri culture who can and will be glad to issist in getting results. The. remainder of each week will je spent mostly in the county at vhich time I will visit as many far ners as possible who have prob ems and desire my assistance. I sincere-ly hope that you will as sist me in this work by helping me :o meet you and in learning the problems that tne agricultural inter est of the county are facing-. I can also be reached by the tele phone at night when necessary at number 367v . i Hoping that I may have the pleasure of meeting and working with you in the near future. Wayne G. McGowan, County Agent. APPENDICITIS OPERATION Charlie Wilson was operated on at the hospital this afternoon for ap pendicitis. Edwin Parker of WiHingfcon was e tmsiness visitor in town today. [ LETTER FROM CONSTANTINOPLE Mr. Walter T. Tuaten Writei Hii Sister, Mr*. Eugene B Gary, from Conttantinople. Pora Palace Hotel, (Constantinople March 10th, 1922. My Dear Sister:? Well, here we are in another citj of Mosques and Minarets, a greafl city of albout two and a half millior population. We have Ibeen here einc< last Monday and will sail toraor row night for Athens, Greece, anj will proceed" from there to Italy. 1_ 4.1, vur two weaw muii^ tut Syrian coast and the three stops we made on the island of Cyprus and our visit to the ancient city oi Smyrna were very interesting ant instructive and the weather heing good, with tbe exception of two days our passage was very pleasant. Since our arrival here we have been pretty much on the go an<j have now seen everything that wc are interest )d in. Of course, one could spend muci longer than a week here and foe in terested if they had not visited Mo hammedon countries before, but at we have had so much of it in Indis and Egypt we are no longer inter ested in seeing more. This city though, is lnarvelooe fox its location, which is wonderful there is not another city in the world to compare with it in this respect. Anne was just in my room looking out of my window which coimnandf a fine view of the Golden Horn, and ran back to her room to get hei mother to ccme and see the beauti ful sunset. A day or so ago we wen1 by boat up the Bosphorus to the en trance of the Black Sea and found the scenery very beautiful.. The food here is excellent, by fai the test we have had since w? lefl the U. S. A. There is a fine restaurant here where we have taken most of oui dinners, run a .Russian refugt nobleman, and the waitresses art young women of royal families ol Russia, refinement being written or all of them and some are beautifu types. I feel so sorry for them as ii must be terrible to fall from such s height and the poor things certainly are in no way responsible for whad happened in their country. A mar connected with the American consu late here told us yesterday that h( was in this restaurant a week or s< ago for dinner and saw some Bus sian Bolshevist Jews sitting at on< of the tables eating and drinking champagne and being served bj these ladies and he said it made hi? blood boil to see it. We will all be giad to get among English speaking people again. Marie of course with French and German at her disposal is all right, but she says the most of the natives speak French about as badly , as they do English and the German population here is very much reduced. I hope you are all quite well and 1 trust business conditions in the South are better than they were a short while ago. We have all been quite well with the eocception of Anne, who was a little unwell after leaving Palestine, bat we bad a very fine Vienna doctor on board and he fixed her up in a day or so. Give my love to all and drop us a lin? in care of Farmers Loan and Trust Co., No 41 Boulevard Hous man, Paris. We expect to be there about the 10th of April or perhaps earlier. Affectionately, WALTER. COULD NOT SEPARATE Spine of Siamese Twins Interlocked X-ray Shows. Chicago, April 2.?The Siamese twins, Josefa and Rosa Blazdek who died last week, after two weeks ill ness at a hospital here, were joined at the spine and severing them would have been fatal, X-ray photographs taken after their death are said to show. The pictures, it was declared, showed a continuous u-shaped spine and also many vital organs in com mon. The deaths were due to in testinal obstruction, according to George W. Brady, radiographer, who made the pictures. STOPS IN ABBEVILLE Mrs. H. G. Henderson of New York is spending* a few days with Mrs. John Harris on South Main street. Mrs. Henderson is returning to New York after spending the winter in Florida. /substantial gifts made to ORPHANAGE Citizen of Clinton Gives Laundry Building?Abbeville Church Pro vides Equipment. Clinton, April 1.?Through the in terest and generosity of friends, sub stantial improvements are soon to be made at the Thornwell orphanage here. Through the liberality of m. S. Bailey of this city, who has been a member of the orphanage board since its foundation in 1876, a modern, well equipped laundry building is to |>e constructed of reinforced concrete with a concrete floor, steel window irames witn ribbed glasses. Tentative j plans are waiting the arrival of a I practical laundryman. It is proposed , to make this one of the attractive buildings of the campus and it will be known as the M. S. Bailey laundry. ( In the recent $1,000,000 campaign j the Presbyterian church at Abbeville s made a subscription sufficiently large for the p&ting in of a irodern laun dry equipment John McSween of Timmonsville, a bpard member since 1-885, and his j son, the Rev. John McSween, have t made it possible to install a linotype machine in the orphanage printing office. This will be a valuable addi tion in that it will enable the print ing office boys who select this line of ' work /to get the necessary training. ' The orphanage authorities are deeply grateful to these friends for their ' substantial gifts with which to pro 1 vide these greatly needed improve ! ments. ' CRUSHERS ASKING FOR LOWER TARIFF ' Weit TelU Committee That Higb Rates Would Injure Ameri can Export*. Washington, April 1.?The South 'Carolina Cotton Seed Crushers' asso [ ciation, which, some time ago favored the high tariff on cottonseed oils con tained in the Fordney bill as it pass ed the house, is now insisting that the tariff be materially lowered. The secretary of thie association, W. B. West, testified today before the finance committee of the senate. He argued that if the high tariff prevails, Europe, which now buys American cottonseed oil as an edible oil, and for it pays handsomely, will buy Oriental oil and thus deprive the American product of a lucrative mar ket. He contended mat 11 tne tar in ? . . . . > I m is very low America will consume the ' Oriental oil in baeer purposes and ' thus leave Europe open for the Amer r icon product. ( ' It is regarded as probable that the committee will follow the advice of ' Mr. West. Apparently it wishes to 1 give Southern protectionists just what 1 they desire for their products. Liabilities $25,546; Atieti $15 Charleston, Apr. 1.?Voluntary petitions in (bankruptcy have been filed by the Colonia Hotel of Colum bia, liabilities being listed as $25,- j 586.64 and assets as $15; and J. A. i Grifftfch, of Columbia, a hotel mana- i ger, liabilities J>eing listed as $4,500 J and assets as f660. TO RECEIVE HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMAS AFTER 50 YEARS Atlanta, April 1.?Superintend ent of Schools Rutton will have a problem on his hands .tonight when he delivers diplomas to a class gradu ated from the boys high school. Al most without exception, its mem bers have the advantage over him in years and therefore, in experience and the homily which usually at tends such occasions would be sadly malapropos. The class was graduated in 1872 and included a number of boys who have achieved prominent places in the vocations they afterward select ed.'Among them were Clark Howell, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, Frank P. Rice, leading realtor, Mari on Erwin, prominent in southern le gal circles, and many others. For some reason, long forgotten, the Uipiujima wtic ncvci w the young hopefuls in the years in tervening since their graduation. V OPERA HOUSE V V THURSDAY and FRIDAY V V APRIL 6th and 7th V V Cecil B. DeMille's Production V. V "FOOL'S PARADISE" V V Matinee Each Day at 3:15 V V 15c. ADMISSION 35c. V V NIGHT 8:20 V V Admission: 25c and 50c V SWIFT FACES CHARGE Packer'* Son Deii?t TkU He Wat I atoxic* ted \ Chicago, March 28.?Louis P. 1 Swift, Jr., son of the packer, today 1 (was free on bond hut scheduled to appear Friday before the police ] magistrate of Evanston on a charge ' of driving as automobile while in- 1 toxicated. Mr. Swift was arrested 1 yesterday after his automobile had 3 collided with another car and was * held four hours at the Evanston po- ' lice station until his brother, Wil- ' Ham, appeared and furnished bond. ' ?fr. Swift denied the change of < intoxication. He explained that the ' accident was unavoidable, due to a ' aiippery pavement V OPERA HOUSE V V THURSDAY and FRIDAY V V APRIL 6th and 7th V : V Cecil B. DeMille's Production V 1 V "FOOL'S PARADISE" V V Matinee e$ch Da^y at _ 3:15 V V 15c. admission 38c. V V . , NIGHT 8:20 i I V Admission: 25c and 50c V < * t Notice. Notiee is hereby given that certi ficate No. 2 for 50 shares of the pre ferred stock of Cafttotin Falls Com pany issued to A. P. Calhoun and transferred by hlra to F. B. Crier ftod ! T. P. Cothran who are now the legal owners of same has been lost or des troyed and that the undersigned as owners of said lost or destroyed eer- 4 tificate of stodk wiH apply to the cor- ' poratien for a new certificate on the 17th. day of A.pril, 1922. F. B. GRIER " ? T. P. COTHRAN. < Mar. 8, 1922. ltw. 6wk 1 BOYD'S SURE POI Will sure relieve, .your horse or given with a teaspoon or small sj to swallow the medicine to get touches the inside of the mouth, Send me a Post Office order for ' age to yoyx. ^Reasonable dlaeom 8. A. MURPHY, P. O. AGOOt MAKES THE DAY. is to step into one of I athletic UNION SUF ing right? They're cut loose! and imitation. The fabric is she* sured coolness! And they will we ting garment can. A half dozen Uni( you for the summer, ment. JAMES M. COX SAYS COTTON POOL #. % Colombia, March 28.?Co qptip tnve marketing of cotton was dtavfer ly endorsed by Former Gowmr James tf. Cox of Ohio, Deaocmic presidential candidate in the feet election, in his speech at Aikca terday. Governor Cox, who HdteI speaking to more than 2,000 Detffe, j referred to the campaign now he conducted in South Carolina fiav formation of (the South Cotton Growers' Cooperative ciation and expressed the eofltt] hope that rt would succeed. He de clared that the prosperity ?f ttte| agricultural people of Demnaril __ an illoatration of what coopoNfcFe] marketing nreans for the trrral interasta. . Contracts representing 000 bales itae received tbfcj Lng at the marketing headquarters here and from every county in the state dutA1 news! of Heavy Bigri-upe. t)ir. D W. DataieJ of CkitiiE .<1 lege electrified a large t of Orangeburg county & what many who Heard hfen to be the moat poweA _ beard in South Carolina for at ion Wong farm era, Mr. G. H. Wardlaw is veiy jjkkl at the home of his daughter, jfersj Manning Carlisle, near town. , (Mrs. Walter ?llis of Creek spent today in Abbeville 0&Q] ping. , V Airs. A. W. Smith of Greenville expected down tonight to spea# 0a* eral days -with her taster, Mrs. f. C.| White. ?' totrc REMEDY mule or cow of the coBc. It to rringe. The horse does not have results.. When the medicine , the blood takes up the effect. 75 Cents ar d F will pay the poet* its 01? larger orders. ' ftox 113?, Columbia, S. . II I I. II . i, If your first move these Wilson Bros. rS, you're commenc y to save discomfort / >r and crisp for as ar as only a well-fit }n Suits will outfit Its a good invest