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IS Established lb44. |. , THE PRESS AND BANNER I ABBEVILLE, S. C. |U The Press and Banner Company if. Published Tri-Weekly I Monday, Wednesday and Friday. I ,4 - ? | Entered as second-class matter at j post office in Abbeville, S. C. Terms of Subscription: One Year $2.00 j | Six Months $1.00 j i Three Months .50 i ' AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION J Foreign Advertising Representative ^ WEDNESDAY, OCTObUK Zo, ivzz - ?_____ i WHO WILL NOT BE JUDGE. I . ; Justice Day has resigned as a, member of the United States Su-I preme Court. He is 73 years of age. j The last two appointments to thatbench have been'republicans and itj is likely that the new appointee will! be a democrat. There is much spec-| ulation as to who will get the ap-j pointment. A good many names havei been mentioned. i ' Among the names suggested is1 that of Governor Hardwick of Georgia. We do not know, of course, and have little idea, who will get the ap-, pointmeht, but we are willing to1 mipss that President! | Harding will not appoint so nimble a! I "politician as Governor Hardwick to | so important an office. The Governor -j iias recently been defeated for re-!. P election and then for United Statesjj j Senator. He should have enough of } f seeking office now, and so should his p"' friends. He is not fitted to be a judge , and neither has he the learning nec-'j . essary for the position. 'j However, we believe he has made!< 1 a good governor for the Cracker jj State. It may be found that Georgia (] j,, did not improve the situation by ] substituting the new nominee of the < \ Democratic party for him. 1 THEY. DONT LIE DOWN AND i QUIT. <t The squirrels are barking on the limbs of the hicksrv nut trees, there j is frost on the cotton tails of the rabbits, and the 'big carp in Long 1 Cane has winked his eye at ex-sheriff < McMillan* but all of this does not i keep the Greenwood Index-Journal i |... . from thinking about the sad state of \ the country, and especially of those i people who will not help themselves. 1 Of t&ose who are willing to be (upji and doing, the Index-Journal is full 1 of hope, because in the end they 1 wiJKwiii, but the others?well reSid 1 what the good paper of our neigh- 1 boring city has to say: < "Over in Georgia, they have dis- ] covered a new money crop. They are '' raising peppers, sweet peppers, pi- 1 mento peppers. One can hear the old " line cotton farmer, who never raised anything else but cotton, snort al- | ready at the mention of such a sis- : sified money crop as peppers. Pep- ^ pers. Something his wife grew in ' l the garden. "But in Georgia they didn't lie down and quit when the boll weevil took the profit out of cotton. They kept digging away, and now every . few days, the Atlanta papers are tell- . ing of the profits made in central Georgia from growing pimento peppers. The despised garden plant has become a money crop. "One doesn't advise everybody to plant peppers. The world can't subsist on pimento sandwiches, but the example of the Georgia farmers in continuing to try is worthy to be followed. "Yesterday, the News and Courier commented editorially on the success in growing asparagus, with which planters in the Ridge Springs section were meeting. With intelligence and hard work, the boll weevil handicap * *- -*?? ?- ? Ti IS 'ueing uvercvuic. il iaan uaiuvi work and more intelligent planning and cooperation to make farming a success now. That's where the shoe pinches." CONDITIONS THAT ARE MORE FAVORABLE. (By N. L. Willet in The Augusta Chronicle.) I spent last week largely on the, Port Royal Railroad looking overt A O- I some experiment in suj vcau 6i , ing, southern types, and I will write] several soy articles in a few days, which will give very valuable data to our agriculture and which should be scrap-booked, for soy beans are ^ -- " - ! going to take the place of cow peas with us, but here are some interesting data which I take from my note j book. i ! What I Saw j Cotton is all out of the fields, so is corn, so is hay and tobacco, and peanuts are in the stack and soon the cutting down of ribbon cane will j begin. Rice has either been cut or j is ready to cut. Sweet potatoes are J being gathered and put into the po- j tato houses, and there is a new pota-! in hnncn. hv thn wav. at Ilankinson.i " . I These farmers dig sweet potatoes j before frost and wisely. It is the, gravest of errors to dig potatoes af-1 ter frost, for the potatoes are apti to be frosted and they always rot! sooner if the vines are frost killed.; Peanuts are being bought at seventy-! five dollars a ton which is a better j price than last year by the peanut) factory at Allendale. The Southern j Cotton Oil Company did a great work I for that section of the country in^ erecting this fine plant. This plant, buys peanuts all over South Georgia I j and they have recently installed ma-i chinery, too, for crushing the infe-!^ rior peanuts, thus making oil and;^ meal. This allows them to give more! ] for peanuts because there is less! waste. There are as many peanuts as I * last year in this section and the peanut men are not complaining. The Cattle Industry. The soft pedal is being put upon ;he cattle industry. The county igents are simply not stressing this ndustry. A great many people will' five it up at least temporarily. Cattle seem to be a drag on the' narket, and, of course, selling cat-! le at two and two and one-half cents I s a bad losing business. In place of | :attle the hog business and other j igricultural lines are being stressed. Hr. Gus York, county agent for lampton county, tells me that he t | ^ ihipped off from that county recent- k y four carloads of hogs, and that Mr Robertson, Allendale county agent, w | ^ md himself are figuring on getting.^ >ff a carload of chickens in the ear- ^ y part of the year.v. y V Better Feeling. y The biggest farmer on the Port ^ loyal Railroad told me last week ^ hat he lost quite heavily on his .'arms last year but that he was j naking money this year and I find ;hat the feeling in agriculture up ihd down the road is optimistic ;his year as opposed to pessimistic j i year ago. There is plenty of la>or, different from the red hill land 1 abor, will never go away. There i las always been plenty to eat down j .here. Agriculture here is far more t liversified than in the hilly coun- f .rv and the cultivation of land is 1 " "* ~ '-7 7- .. . . / ; i much easier proposition. The neg- i o does not have to work so hard c n these lands and he is apt to be ? aetter fed. The live stock' industry, r et me repeat, has gone practically j nto hogs and chickens, though there nay come a change if beef prices go c jigher. All the crops this season ^ vere saved well. In the richer lands l vhere King Cotton grows to some ( leight I found that this type of oot- ? ton had been grown by some. Cleve- i and, though, is the leading cotton. ^ Express cotton has done finely. The Delta type of long staple cotton has I ione exceedingly well and this cot-| ton, without doubt has a hard boll! weevil covering and is quite resistant |r :o the weevil. I am convinced, how-i ever, for a one inch big boll cotton, that College No. 1 is probably our c best type. f i Women And Crises. C >In all crises the women rise mag- t nificently to the exigency. I talked i with one farmer's housewife who ? made this year two hundred and|? seventy dollars on pecans. Another js one was sending out forty dollars worth of butter every month andjf her butter that I ate, I honestly be- jd lieve that the best butter that I had | ] eaten in my life. One good woman j< on this road the year before this! made a thousand dollars on chickens, jl while her husband lost two thousand j dollars on the farm. I find that the j minds of these farmers' wives arej; turned strongly to the following in-/ dustries: Pecans, chickens, Which j means eggs, day old chicks and fry- ,< ers and also butter. From Men!*! Work. Some d'f them see, too, in the San Pear a possible money making indus-, try for them. All of this above only brings in liftdney as pocket money fdr themselves and as a help in the i 'I inm A FUEL-SAVING FILM EJ AT THE OPERA HOUSE A very interesting film showing It how to make a one-third to one-half * saving in your fuel will be shown at the Opera House next week. st This film is being run by W. A. I fr Calvert & Sons in the interest of j to Fuel Saving Week which they will' th conduct next week. th Some strong side lights are thrown m on the fuel proposition and definite1 gi reasons presented * why you are ! pi wasting a very large part of your "s fuel as unburned fuel gases and smoke. ch This film promises to be of great > a ^?o -f-n nncpfflpr] fnpl POndi-! "1 Ill LU1 cat UUV, WV tions and the present high prices of. ec same. di, FUNERAL HELD FOR EBENEZER P. ELLIS ' S Funeral services for Ebenezer P. Ellis, 89, who died Sunday at his lome in Jonesboro, were held Monlay afternoon at the Masters Ceme;ery, near Ellenwood. < Mr. Ellis was a pioneer settler of his section. Practically all his life . le had lived in DeKalb Coynty, near ?edan, moving about 10 years ago o Jonesboro. 1,18 He is survived by two brothers, A. I. and Mimms Ellis, of Due West, S. ^ j., two daughters, Mrs. S. E. Stew- *n irt of East Point, and Mrs. John M. ^ ?undy, of Jonesboro, and a num- ^e! >er of grandchildren and great-grand ^ ihildren.?Atlanta Georgian. an< _j Ab V V VV VVVS.VVV sa* y On OPERA HOUSE V *n< ?FRIDAY-? v erl GLORIA 8WAN8ON In V ^ "HER HUSBAND'S V J. TRADEMARK." V veJ Her love was only his busi- V. ' ness. Her style and* beauty V Ca: were put on parade to make V mo him look successful. He nev- V cer er stopped to think that she V del k might attract other men too V sec k, much. A gorgeous picture V. ise k of fashion and married life. V. cht k Set in New York and the ban- V i l dit haunts of Mexico. V pa] ? 15c.?Admission?35c. ^ AUVUVUVVVVV Oc EMPLOYEES OF SOUTHERN AkE dlVEN PRESENTS jj Washington, Oct. 24.?All em- j|? >loyees of the "Southern railway, fgj *yht> VoluhteereJ to quit their' reguar duties and serve in tflie Shops <3W H ng the strik? last sumtaer afe being f|| Presented this week With either m hecks for $350 *>f 'certificates tor H| ive shares of its stock. At railr'o&d |g leatiquarters the action was saM to epresent tne appreciation 01 me |g :ompany for loyahy to its interests ;hown by the men concerned and jl lot to represent a bonus or wage S payment in any way. A large number of other railroad gj| :ompanies affected by th^ strike it m vas said have taken somewhat simi- jl ar action. The donation went to sev g sral hundred of employees on the j? Southern lines but no estimate of g|? ;he number or the total amount in- B solved was made public. ESTATE OF MRS. N. G AGNEW, jj DECEASED. Sis Notice of Settlement and Applica- 9 tion For Final Discharge. Take Notice, that on the 18th day jj (f November 1922. I will render a inal account of my actings and do- |g ngs as administrator of the estate jl >f Mrs. N. G Agnew, deceased, in ?j| he office of the judge of probate for |p Abbeville County, 10 o'clock, A. M. Iff ind on the same day will apply for jp i final discharge from my trust as ?jf ;uch administrator. All persons having demands a- S rainst said estate will present them gf ior payment on or before that day, jp iroven and authenticated or be for- g| ;ver barred. Jg 15KU W IN OUWiii,, 3ct. 19. 3tpd. Administrator. jg family expenses but it takes them H Sua away from the menial work of the g kitchen and general scrubbing, which B work they can well afford to hire |j out. It is quite interesting for any- g one to go into this territory for he ?| finds greater hopes in the hearts of g the people and he finds everybody, ? too, in this country than a year ago a and one can see as in old times num- p erous cotton bales standing around g the farmer's houses and as yet un- gj shipped. || 1GHT-HOUR DAY FOR di THE STEEL INDUSTRY in I is Said Change Can Be Made , cri Without Increased Prices. 1 Z Washington, Oct. 24.?American " eel industries are in a position om the present 12 hours labor day w< one of 8 hours without increasing nc e cost of the labor component in {ln 4 I gf eir output in the opinion of a com] ittee of Federated American En-! neering Society which has com-jva eted a nation wide inquiry in the ? hift system" of labor. sif "Profits need not suffer, if. the ^ ange is made with wisdom," said(ji report made by the committee. ;|] ""he majority of managers and ex-is , |CJ utives with whom the matter was @ scussed, believe the good of the in [a MASTER'S SALE 1 TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, I COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE Court of Common Pleas s. Fannie J. Long, - Plaintiff Ij against |j E.'Cromer, W. L. Gable and oth- ? ers, --- Defendants, a By authority of a Decree of Sale |] the Court of Common Pleas for s ibeville County, in said State, % ,de in the above stated case, I will er for sale, at Public Outcry, at beville C. H., S. C., on Salesday f November, A. D. 1922, within the ;al hours of sale the following scribed land, to wit: All that tract plantation of land situate, lying i being in Diamond Hill Township | beville, County, in the State afored, containing Fifty-Seven and e-half (57%) Acres, more or less 1 bounded by lands now or formy belonging to Ed Smith, Estate Dr. J. H. Bell, lands of Elizabeth irk, Henry Sally, and others, and ng the same land this day conned to us by said W. F. Nicldes. rERMS OF SALE?One- half 9h, balance on a credit of twelve nths with interest at seven per it, the credit portion to be eviiced by the bond of the purchaser ured by a mortgage of the prems, with the privilege to the puriser to pay all cash. Purchaser to pay for stamps and ?ers. I THOS. P. THOMSON, V t. 19, 1922 Master A. C.,SC i +/W I You'll find all three of here now. We see to i come in to our store ai We believe that, ,qiu of the country wliicli { profit. We know ho deal of pride in seeiu | make a sale. I You'll find this a safe | Styleplus Suits.. | Other Good Suits E i PARK ? ? . istry can better served by climinat g the 12 hour day." g The committee estimated that the n iange would add only "from 3 to f, > per cent" to the labor cost and tl glared that in most cases this 3uld be less than the variations I >w experienced between compet-j g plants because of difference ini. ficiency of equipement techuical j ^ ill, location and other casual ad-| mtages. i _? SJ5J5ISJ5JSI2J2JSJ5I5JSJSJ5M5JSJ5I5J5JSJSJS19J5I5J5 Woman's ! Will Handle your Comm $1.00 a year to becorr Exchange, and an ad( for handling your wc be made once a month See Mrs. Courtn governing the Exchail ? THE I J A MESSAGE? TO THOSE WHO J Statistics compiled by throughout the countrj ber of persons who are the State Lu their old a pie, no doubt faced th< with belief and couragi but lost There is but They lacked the sta to learn life's greatest We invite Investigation & Loan Plan. October STANDARD BUI) ASSOCI; ,OTTO BR1ST Office at PLAN these essentials in the ( t that only CLOTHES < id are offered to our tra ility considered, (here isn't n i offers its merchandise on a 1 \v Clothes should fit and \v ig that they do fit our patrons f place to make your CI $2? $18, $2 ER&R i ? I ! Fifty dollars reward for a really ood reason why farm homes should \ ot have some good looks, beautiul pictures,-and attractive premises le^same as city homes. A big need in each country commnity is more people who are willlg to work in unselfish helpful up- uilding of the community. W"Watch the label on your paper. U5JSJ5IS15/SJS15H2I2JScjJSJSHSJ5IBIElSIS15EB' F.YrKariflfA Needlework on ission. 1 x ie a member of the I iitional 10 per cent. 1 >rk. Payments will |; ey Wilson for Rules jj ige at | 7 iCHO 1 'V ' ' ==r . ' I?-?\ THINK. >' ; - . t . Life Insurance Companies show ail, appalling num- '< dependent on relatives or ge. These self-same peoj future, in their youth 3. They, too, aspired high, one answer. mina to save?the ability . habit?SAVING. I t of the Standard Building Series just opened. LDING & LOAN if ION ; :il! OW, Secretary ' I TEES BANK. 1 I Quality I I 'I Price 1 I * pB H Fit 11 5? a XOTHES you buy | I of superior, quality |f m ?tore in this part HE owcr margin of BH c take a great 91 >roperly when we B] lothing purchases, jg Hj i and $30,00 I I D, and $22 I I EESEjl n