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\ N ^ DONALDS % \ ^ VVV V \ VVVV\ Dwaaids. Oct. oO.?The ''Jolly ilatroas" are giving a Hallowe'en in the school auditorium to tqgrht. and it gives promise of being a ^sp?xky affair." The decorations *f yatUow and black paper festoons, ^oa jacfc-o-lanterns, witches and 2?iack cats in abundance. The different Meatus where ice cream, candy fzfi.c -jther good things are to be sold xsm 'C&ique and very attractive There "?i2i 3ms a cake walk and games for jrltfaunf young. A big time is expect?sd. The .proceeds of the night are to ke irsed for civic improvements. Jtre. Pierce Tribble visited relatives In Charlotte last week, and she .sad JEr. Tribble spent Sunday in Jbidtraon with her parents, Mr. and JKx%. Pettigrew. 3?r. Baskin Winn was a business wsks?r in Abbeville on Friday. !&xz C. E. Sharp and Mr and Mrs( ?SL ?L Thomas visited relatives in <45r?s?fflle on Monday. .&?"? . J. JVI Dallas was an Abbeville lfcifeir on Friday afternoon. AL1 ? _-c xi saw mommy meeting ox me ^lvn. riie&pee was held at the home of Mrs Jfitora Donald on Wednesday afterhbkto. with Mrs Frank McKenney <dri35rs. Pierce Tribble as joint hostesses, Considerable business was \ Icansacted, and plans were made for Bxtsing of funds. A bazaar is to Siue iseSd in the near future. A very *HKTBBting pro-gram was given. JL?ur(lite social hour a delicious salad .atfsTsc was served by Misses Juanita mt? Horis Tribble and little Master Wfifiam Mckinner. The living room <acas> gsettily decorated with cut Sj?Fnrs and pot plants. It addition to the regular memseveral invited guests were pres AH enjoyed the hospitality of Jjt irttiesses. Ifai Calvia Martin visited in Abbe on Friday. 15ev.. J M. Dallas filled his regular appointment at Ware Shoals on ftni&y morning and night. He and 3?xs. jfl*al!as were dinner guests of ifr aud Mrs W. C. Cobb and family j it ferir hospitable home. John Anderson Drake spent i Frufzy afternoon in Abbeville on A uamber of our people who have ritec* sack are all improving. Mr. James Pruitt of Belton is sick ? .lonne of his parents. We wish! Iran a speedy recovery. A 'xsrn near Donalds was burned "Thursday night, -with the contents. "& at#jw?ed to Mr L. J. Davis and iriH Tx? a considerable loss. Virginia Thompson is spendtfn' week-end at her home in JkyriTujea. 'Strand Mrs New-ton May and child *rn ?r Honea Path are the guests of Wr a;irf Mrs Andrew May. $Sss Lillie Martin addressed the '^Fwutnsn's Missionary society of the Abtyevillo Methodist church on Wedaight. .?r ind Mrs J. M. Sadler attended 26fr thsvie-1 re-union at the home of ?Ir im( Mrs Kelly Daniel near Ware ? > innonnpopncunci c 12HJUUIJUMIJIJIJIJIJIJI BOYS! FREE GO MIS TO OUR STORK, fcet a Fuel Saving Week rI k la will admit any child nn j. years of age to the Oj: I SJotrse for any performa i jhis week. FREE ! . /fciJL THAT IS NECESSARY !!{ "TOR YOUR PARENTS TO GO J THE OPERA HOUSE WITH Y< turtle's Hot Blast Heaters, Ra ?<?. Furnaces burn approximt Ts(r<rot'j pounds of air to every p< of -coal. Air costs nothing?coal CAipeasive. Burn more air in a C Hvwt Blast and save one-third to on your fuel bill. Cole's if &U?t Heaters burn hard coal, ! jwalL coke, lignite, briquettes, w |cobs. Corn stalks?ANYTH J> I i W. A. Calv ji 27 WASHINGTON ST. rini nnfTfin 1-1 r i rifirLFLFU ^OuuMunli u uUUIJ 17 i I 1 k. jV SANTUC LOCALS \ \ V vvvvvv vv vvvvvvv Mr. A. J. Morrison and little son, '.Richard of Columbia, came up for a j week-end visit to the former's home [people and Richard remained over for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Kay had as their guests Sunday, Mr. Wm. H. Sharp, Messrs Bascom and Clarence Kay, Misses Annie and Louise Kay, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carwile and son Leander, and Mr. John Walker of I^evel Land. TVTrc Maf?k WYirrVit. anH Misc An. nie Kay spent Monday afternoon With Mrs. Charlie Botts. Fx*ances Kay spent last Friday night with his little cousin, Thomas Milford. We are sorry to note that Mrs. Bramblette is not improving much at this writing. Hope she will soon be in her usual health again. Mrs. Ermie Haddon is spending this week with Mrs. Tom Hunter who has broken bone fever. Mrs. Ada Milford and little nephew, Thomas Milford spent last Sat' urday with Mrs. W. F. Kay and Frances. Mrs. Thomas Stevenson and little [daughter spent Monday in Juue west with her mother, Mrs. E. V. Bell. Mr. E. J. Botts spent Sunday with Mr. William Brown. Mrs. W. F. Kay and children spent Monday in Due West with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sharp. Mr. Furman Martin of Donalds spent Monday night with Mr.. J. R. Haddon. Miss Lizzie Sharp is spending awhile in Abbeville. Most''of our farmers are through picking cotton and have begun sowing oats. Mr. and Mrs. Mack Wright spent Friday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. n t r> 1 o. Li. oeasiey. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. McMahan of Cold Spring spent Tuesday here with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Culbreth. V ?WHAT LIES? V V BEYOND THE ROCKS V V in the Lives of Men & Women? V V FOR ANSWER SEE V V GLORIA SWANSON V V AND V V RODOLPH VALENTINO V V IN V V "BEYOND THE ROCKS' V V By Elinor Glyn V V OPERA HOUSE V V FRIDAY and SATURDAY V v 15c.?Admission?35c. v vvvuvuvvvvwvv Shoals last Sunday. Mrs J. C. Sadler spent several days this week with her parents Mr and Mrs Anderson, near Hodges. Mrs. Floyd Pearman and baby Louise were calling on relatives and friends here today. Mrs P. M. Davis and daughter, Miss Louise, and Master Lewis visited relatives in Greenwood last Saturday. in rinnnnpinfipiriwni GIRLS! FREE I 'ag. der era nCC TO Hjl zz Si^lS, Hot ^ soft nOrl. ING ert & Sons - - ABBEVILLE, S. C. NEWSPAPER SPACE IS BEST BUSINESS GETTER Chicago Ad. Superintendent Sayi Newspaper Space Should Be Used Continuously. Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 26.? "No form of merchandise advertising is equal to, or a substitute foi newspaper advertising, it not onlj helps sell the goods but incid' entally helps build good-will." was the advice given today to 1,001 members of the American Gas Association by John F. Weedon, sup erintendent of advertising of the Peoples Gas Light and Coke Com pany of Chicago. "Newspaper sP&ce should be usee continuously throughout the year,' Mr.We?edon said. "Spasmodic advei tising activities produce only spasmodic results. Keeping everlastingly at it emphasizes a faith in youi institution, your service< and youi goods that is eventually transferred to the public through the insistence and persistence of your announcements. According to Mr Weedon the sum total of successful copy writing is keep all advertisements simple." "An advertising man need not be brilliant," he said. "All he needs is good hard sense, which has been de fined as being chuck full of stable information. Seemingly clever head lines and witty phases do not sell goods. (Advertisements arte news items. The public wants to know what?where?how much." In speaking of good-will and policy advertising, he said the expense for these two forms should not be imposed on merchandise advertising. "Tho account should be divided to show exactly the expenditure for each," he advised. "This will alsc help to fix a proper conception oi the advertising expenditure as not an expense but an investment thai helps earn a net." JOE MUNDY, THE HEALER Cures Many Maladies?Remarkabl< Feats Performed Abbeville has a man who clainu to be possessed of a strange healinf power. He is Joe Munday, and h< lives near Buzzard Roost church 01 the Abbeville-Hodges road. He is i middle-aired ssuarMo* fpllrvf nf or dinary education and attainmen but believes absolutely in himsel: and in his power to heal. Ho says this power nas been ii his family for generations and i handed down from mother to soi and from father to daughter. Tha a man can teach a woman to hea but not another man, and a womai can teach a man but not a woman The power is passed down throug] the sexes in this cross-wise way. i ne jyiunaas live at tne oia nom< stead. One brother, Rink Mundy ha lived there for 55 years and ha never been away longer than tw< weeks during this time. Joe Mundy believes firmly that h has the power to heal and that thi power is God given. He says he cai cure any kind cf skin affection o disease like eczema or pellagra, o: any hemorrhage or bleeding. H< cites various cases and marvelou cures he has made. Hq makes n< charge for the treatment and claim; that his gift would be taken fron him if he accepted pay. His powei is a secret and he will not repeal it All that is necessary for you to dc to be healed, he says, is to tell hiir your name and he will look int< your eyes and preeto you are wel. There are magic words he uses ir his mind, but that belongs to the secret. Joe Mundays family believe him possessed of this strange power. Recently one of the children while playing near the house cut a to nearly off and a playmate ran foi the mother, who kept on with hei work saying that Joo was there anc that he would heal it. They claim he did. He also claims to bo able to hea animals. A mule while plowing in z field stepped on a broken bottle anc cut a gash in his foot causing greal loss of blood. Ho approached the 1. \ 1 i_ _ 1 1 iL, muie loosing into nig eyes, ana uu bleeding stopped instantly. The Leaning Buddha, a twelftl century pagoda, near Nanking China, is 100 feet h'gh, of 13 stor ies and inclines 12 feet from th< perpendicular. SHERIFF'S SALE The State of South Carolina, ? COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. Court of Common Pleas. The Planters Bank of Abbeville, Plaintiff, against - J. P. Clinkscales and L. 0. Clink: scales, _ _ Defendants. r By Virtue of an Execution to Me . Directed in the above stated case I 3 have levied on and will sell at pub) lie outcry for cash at' Abbeville - Court House on salesday in Novem ber, A. D. 1922, within the legal . hours of sale the following des. cribed real estate situate, lying and being in Abbeville County and said i State, to wit: * All the Undivided Interest of L. O. Clinkscales In (1) That trafct or parcel of land . situate, lying and being near the . corporate limits ot tne city ot AODe. ville, known as the Mazyck place. I containing sixty-five (65) acres, , more or less, and bounded by lands of J. L. Hill on the north and northwest; by lands of E. A. Williams on southeast (being separated from same by a road); by Anderson road on northwest and by lands of Louise Ellison on west. (2) All that other tract or parcel of land in Diamond Hill Town'* ship, known as the Power place, con| taining One Hundred and sixty (160) 1 acres, more or less, and bounded by ' lands of J. Allen Smith, Ben Hal', and A. M. Simpson and perhaps others. (3) All that other tract or par" eel of land in Lowndesville town! ship, containing One Hundred (100) acres, more or less, bounded by lands of Bas. Mann, T. B. Martin and others, and by the public road, 1 and known as the Huckabee place. Levied on and to be sold as the > property of L. 0. Clinkscales to f satisfy said execution. ; TERMS OF SALE: CASH. Pur; chaser to pay for papers and stamps. P. B. McLANE, 3wk Wed Sheriff for A. C., S. C. MASTER'S SALE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 3 COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE I Court of Common Pleas - Miss Mary T. Hill, Executrix, 1 Plaintiff, 1 against * Janie Rice, Jessie Rice and others, t Defendants, f By authority cf a Decree of Sale by the Court of Common Pleas f-or l Abbeville County, in said, State, s made in the above stated case, I .will i offer for sale, at Public Outcry, at t Abbeville C. H., S. C. on Salesday .1 in November, A. D., 1922, within the a < legal hours of sale the following [. described land, to wit: All that tract i h! or parcel of land situate, lying and j being in Abbeville County, in the e 1 State aforesaid, containing Sixtys Six (06) Acres, more or less, and s bounded by lands of Jim Prince, Joe 0 Prince, J. H. Bell, Ed Smith, the I * | estate of J. E Brownlee and others. J TERMS OF SALE?Cash. Purs chaser to pay for stamps and papers. J THOS. P. THOMSON, r Oct. 19, 1922 Master A. C., S C r! M A ?? T F. R'c; SALE e STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, s COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE Court of Common Pleas (Mrs. Jennie M. Botts, individually 1 and as Executrix of the estate of i T. H. Botts, deceased and others, | Plaintiff against 1 W. D. Botts, Maude Botts and others, - Defendants. By authority of a Decree of Sale 1' by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, in said State, made in the above stated case, I will 1 offer for sale at Public Outcry, at Abbeville C. H., S. C., on Salesday s j in November, A. D. 1922, within the legal hours of sale the following described land, to wit: All that tract or "| plantation of land situate, lying and '| being in Abbeville County, in the j State aforesaid, about three miles least of the city of Abbeville on the IJ Abbeville-Hodges public road, containing Two Hundred (200) Acres, 'I -- i - _ J 1 J_.J 1 | more Ol' less, ana uuunueu uj lauuo ^jtiow or formerly belonging to P. ;j Rosenberg and Company, Jno. W. Botts, Mrs. Emma Haddon, Dixie Land Company and J. A. Shands, J. D. Miller and others, and being 5 known as the T. H. Botts home place. ? TERMS OF SALE?Cash. Par chaser to pay for stamps and papet'3. - THOS. P. THOMSON, Oct. 19, 1922 Master A. C., S C DRY Gf You can be certain the right goods at 1 DRY GO< 36 inch Heavy Sheeting 40 inch Sheeting Heavy Outing, prices 20c Dress Ginghams at Amoskeags 32 inch Dress Gin< Heavy Cotton Flannel price fi WOOLEN DRESS GOO 36 inch Serge 36 inch Wool Serge $1.00 Wool Serges in all color $1.50, 54 inch all Wool Serge BLANK $3.00 Blankets at $3.50 and $4.00 Blankets at $5.00 Blankets at $6.50 Blankets at ; $8.00 Blankets at $10.00 Blankets at $3.00 "White Bed Spreads at .. $2.00 White Bed Spreads at . SWEATEE COMPLETE ASSORTMENT I Men's Sweaters prices from . Boys' Sweaters, prices from . Misses Sweaters, prices from Ladies' all Wool Sweaters in ; MEN'S AND YOUNG M $15.00 Men's Suits at $25.00 Men's Suits at $35.00 Men's Suits at $25 Men's Suits in coat and p made up well and going as lc $18.00 Men's Overcoats at $15.00 Men's Overcoats at .... Men's Rain Coats from BOYS' SU in all bizes irom Boys' Knee Pants in all sizes MEN'S ODD $3.50 Men's Odd Pants at . . . $5.00 Men's Pants at $7.50 Men's Pants at $9.00 Men's Pants at $2.50 Men's Pants at Men's and Boys Dress Shirts I Men's and Boys' Work' Shirts SHOES FOR THE V\ Men's solid leather work slio< Boys' solid leather work & dr "Beacon Shoes" for Men Men's Dress Shoes frice from Ladies and Misses Shoes, pric< Infants' Shoes price from Trunks from Suit Cases from UNDERWE Men's Heavy Fleece lined Un< ers Men's Ribbed Undershirts and at. Men's "Hanes" Unionsuits at Ladies Underwear price from D. POLL ABBEVILLE, ... SO SHERIFF'S SALE Execution. County Savings Bank, - - Plaintiff ?... against FOI R. R. Tolbert, Jr., - - Defendant w By virtue of an execution to me directed, in the above stated case, I will sell to the highest bidder, at ? Public Auction within the legal hours of sale, at Ferguson's Stable on Salesday the 6th day of November A. D. 1922, all the right, title and ^ interest of R. R. Tolbert, Jr. in the * following described property, to wit: Five mules, one two-horse wagon, ten hogs, 160 cedar posts, varying in SI length from ten to thirty feet. Levied on and to be sold as the property of R. R. Tolbert, Jr., the _?! proceeds to be applied to satisfy the i aforesaid Execution and costs. TERMS?CASH. . h F. B. McLANE, Sheriff jur' ,wl Of Abbeville County. Oct. 21, 1922. 3wks. yoa noo Siam is holding a lottery to raise; deft money for the development of her I Jaci air service. wai priaf^ffaT^/^f^gaif^i^?^?^[^rpJrrgngrFarrar?ap^cya )ODS of finding here he right prices. , ODS. 10c yd. 1 Tf/1 . - AUU J U. 12 l-2c, 15c an d20c yd. 15c yd. >;hams at 25c yd. * rom 20c to 25c yd. ids and silk 25c yd. 50c yd. s 75c yd. $1.25 yd. :ets $1.98 per pair $2.98 per pair $3.50 per pair $4.50 per pair $5.50 per pair $6.50 per pair $1.98 $1.25 is lowest prices 98c to $2.00 98c to $3.50 i $1.25 to $3.50 all colors prices from $1.48 to $150 EN'S CLOTHING $12.50/ $19.00 $25.00 ants in all wool goods, mg as they last at $17.50 ; $15.00 $10.00 I $3.50 to $6.00 [i > -s ITS. . .. $2.50 to $10.00 from 75c to $2.50 PANTS $2.50 a pair . $3.50 a pair l/ B . ..... $5.00 a pair I I $6.50 a pair I 3 $1.98 a pair :'rom .... 75c to $1.50 B from . . . 48c to $1.00 VH /HOLE FAMILY S is trora.... ^.ckj to $cj.ou ess Shoes price from $2.00 to $3.50 | $5.00 i . . . . $2.50 to $6.00 3 from . $1.50 to $5.00 98c to $1.50 . $5.00 to $10.08 98c to $5.50 AR. iershirts and Draw 63c each. I Drawers, best grade 75c each. $1.50 a suit . 48c to $1.00 garment kVLOFF II UTH CAROLINA I agjgpppppfp;^j^(pjf^[^rpir3rpivu<f?iftoCiWwwi B| WANTS | * RENT?Four up-staire room3M| rith all conveniences. Apply toH| Irs. Rob Turner, 12 ViennaH| treet. 11, 1-tjbcol. HQ NTED?To buy Hides. Wfll pawE ighest market price. Next to Dr^H . E. Calvert's wholesale house. 0, 25.4tpd. Robt. S. Ellis. ?| >T or STRAYED?About twc^EB eeks ago one red sow with blaclflH lots. Sow weighs between 14(^H 50 pounds. Notify Tom Adams. DH B ry of Six Women and Six Men^^H [ackensack, N. J., Oct. 26?Th^BJ / of six women and six mon hea^K] by Miss Susan A. Squire, 2^H| r old stenographer, this aftoiHH n received the case of the thre^^H endants, charged with mudorin^M[ k Bergen movie actor, in Edg^^H I