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DOTS FROM ST. JOHN S. j ^ r;}Wc- bjive been having delightful! *r shfc>wers and old corn is looking fine. > '" Cotton in this section is making a fe fine weed but it seems- that Old Bud|\die Boll Weevil is waiting for every jj? yboll that is forming. Some farmers in this section say there is a grub in | I levery square. It is ^vith sadness we note the fact; ? that Mr. Ralph Hendrix is very sick with typhoid pneumonia; bur we hope i he will soon be improving. ?./' Mrs. Mary Franklow has been cong fined to her room for several weeks, |: hut is improving slowly. Mr. E. E. Hook and family alsoj |F Mr. Kerskin Keisier spent a very; I pleasant Saturday afternoon, at the V home of Mr. Washington Leaphart,; where they were served with a gen- \ erous ice cream supper. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hook spent Sunday at Mr. Jeff Rawls. Mrs. Ella Keisier and her children' k- 1 visited Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Keis- j ler's Sunday morning and report that j r Mrs.' Keisier is critically ill. . % Mr? and Mrs. L. Sease and charmdaughter, Cora, dined with Mr. E<1 Hook and his folks Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. H Shull also spent ? Sunday afternoon at Mr. Hook's. ? . .Mrs Bernice Etheridge and daughi< ter of Saluda are visiting her mother i ' and other relatives in this commun- i f-. Ity. Mr. Clyde Livingston and fam- j vi ily, accompanied by his little nieces, . Lurleen and Miriam Shull, motC,. _pred to Saluda Saturday. Mr. Greer-Taylor and family visited |-Mrs. FanniP Taylor, his mother, SunXfi?e TTarmfln snent several ! IF Weeks in this community visiting rela^aftves and friends also helping to care : l^ior Iter aged mother, who has' not j ip&een very* well. S^y^iljr. W. L. Smith is happy as these! |?i-hot/ dayg are long singing bye babyj glSfcr another sweet little *girl at his j house, ^ Rev. G. H. C. Parks and family i ^ visited jn this section. pc ' ' The Same Everywhere. v5Phe""editor of Paisa Akhbar, a nanewspaper of Lahore, India, says, l^yiiaye used Chamberlain's xColic and :.? \^i^ihoea Remedy many times among Children and-servants, for colic j ^diarrhoea and always found it j it r n | i L D. 1 ?" mmi We have r< lip' new machir ?|-; Capacity Fi I?!' our our fori j|j|i as millers, Mm service this K| \ Special att fvfit \trade. | SHIJ BATESBI RG PERSONALS. I I Batesbprg, July ?Mr. Lee C. Gmi- j xer of Knoxville. Tenn., spent Sunday' with his mother, Mrs. X. X. Ounter. ] Rev. C. A. Jones, secretary of the j Baptist state board of education,! preached an interesting sermon to the! congregation of the Baptist church I Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ira C. Carson spent Sunday with relatives at Johnston, i Mrs. W. L. Daniel of Saluda was the j guest of friends in town Friday. Miss Mary Ellison Brantley of Or| rangeburg, is the guest of her cousin. Miss Louise Parler. I T. E. Lagrone, esq., a member of i the Greenville bar, spent Sunday' here with his mother, Mrs. W. A. j Crouch. j Mr.- and Mrs. M. B. Edwards of j Augusta were the guests of relatives] in town Monday. The fourth of July was observed by i * the banks and postofTice and most of; the business houses in town. The recent rains have greatly bene - - * ??? :~ i liteel me growm? m nno vicinity. ] q.q.? i PISGAH NEWS. ^ Farmers are busy picking up boll weevils. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Taylor visited Mr. and Mrs J. J. Gunter Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lindler visited Mr.^and Mrs. L. M. Kyzer Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Rawl and son, S. J., visited Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Roof Sunday. Miss Louise Lindler spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and. Mrs. O. S. Lindler. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Lindler and little son, Tommie, visited Mrs. Sallie Monts of Ballentine Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lindler and also Mr. W. L. Rawl wre 'over in j Columbia shopping Saturday. j "It Looked Like a Battlefield in Europe." Said Mr. C. Dunster. ""Was staying at a hotel in a small Pennsylvania town. Early one morning I w'ent to the stable to hire a rig and was shown a pile of dead rats killed with RAT-SNAP the night before. Looked like a battlefield in Europe." Three sizes. 35c, 65c, $1.25.1 ! Sold and guaranteed by Lexington Pharmacy and Harmon Dru* Co. % iarr's Flo eesville, S. < Bcentiy overhauled lery to our Seventyill Clxrrd-Awt TP1 Aim M:1 All UJOtCIll r iUUl 1YJ.1J ty years of practical we are offering } season than ever b ention given to c P US YC WHEAT your wheat and c eesville, S. ( i MOLDAVIA Xow that Roumania has liouRtd its i area and population, thus becoming j j the largest of the% Balkan states, it is! attracting more interest and atten-j : tion among nations of the world. J I Moldavia, the north wing of the ; butterfly-shaped Roumania of prewar days, was conspicuous during the! j struggle between the Austro-Oerman ! armies on the North and other central 1 l 1 lowers' forces attar-Icing on the- south, j .Moldavia had approximately one-! fourth of the population and onefourth of "the area of the Roumania | in 1014. The population is a little j les.\ than two and ;i quarter million j and the area a little less than 15,000! souare miles. To the west ot it lie | Transylvania and the Austrian crown ! lands of Bukowina. To the east lies! Bessarabia, with the river l'urth making tlie boundary the entire distance. On the south is Wallaehia, | the other wing of the Roumanian kingdom. The Sereth river divides Moldavia into eastern "and western sections, flowing the entire length of the principality along the foothills of the Carpathian mountains. Eastern Moldavia, composed of the high plateau [ lying between the .Purth and the I Sereth, is approximately 2 75 miles j long and has an average width of about 5 0 miles. Western Moldavia is entirely mountainous, the crest of the Carpathians forming the boundary between it and Austria-Hungary. The history of the principality of i Moldavia is of striking interest. Tt was founded in the middle of the fourteenth century by the Wallaeh Voivode Bogden. It soon grew to be a large state, embracing the present Moldavia, Bukowina and Bessarabia. Poland and Hungary were both rivals for favor with the Moldavian court, I with neither able permanently.to asi I sert its overlordshiy# Stephen the Great ruled Moldavia from 14 57 to I 1504, and defied the Turks, winning a ! signal victory over them at Itakoya in ! 1475. Gradually growing stronger. ! however, the Moslems succeeded again, under Stephen the Great's successor, in establishing their mastery. Although the Turks never settled the counrty, they proceeded to build fortresses, and thus they managed to hold their ground. Up to 1821 the country was governed by hsopodars appointed by the i sultan from the families of Greek | ur Mill ni and added five Barrel 11 and with : experience fou better efore. >ut-of-town >UR I nrn ! I VJ. XX* B ^ o? I 1 HllllilllPWUII IIIWIIIMIMiMMBaggM^ aristocrats. In that year native princes were once more made to head the government, hut in isiiit. Itussia ' having gained a victory over Turkey, was aco<cded a protectorate over Moldavia under the trcaty%of Adrianeph-. This treaty was terminated i>y ihCrimean war and the treaty of I'ar-is." Thereafter, the powers agreed to s? t up the two principalities of .Moldavia and Vdallachia. which iit their turn decided, in Is'fi-Hi. that they would -unite under one head ami heeome om.* < ? tl.lt I V. ? -<i" wftij::: 01 si MONKY COKS What distrihuti(?n <ost as com- j pared with production appears from j the history of fa ton of spinach that a j writer in the Railway Age followed j from the farm in Texas to the dinner taiues 111 i nnago. i nc :c.\;is :,u -j mer sold the spinach at a ton. The I railway charged $30.t>(> a ton to mowit to Chicago, hut the consumer who bought it at a Chicago market had to pay about 15 cents a pound, or .>'300 a ton. Can anyone explain satisfactorily why it costs eight times as much to get the spinach from the freight station in Chicago to a dinner table in the same city as it costs to! plant, raise and harvest it and ship it two thousand miles? Not for Him >' ''Here' boy," said the man to the \ 'boy who was helping him drive a 'hunch of cattle, "hold this bull a 'minute, will you?" "Xo," answered the boy. "I don't /mind bein' a director in this company, but I'm darned if 'I want to be a stockholder." pentersand Make your frames to fit our noyance, time and mone For your convenience we pri sash and doors we carry in at STOCK PRICES, which a CUT LIST OUT AND KE mm Inn R f i M i Ij jl |Lli I Bungalow "B" Bunga WINDOWS I Our stock of check rail sash in each of the three popular styles illustrated above, consists of the follow-; ing standard and special! sizes: 4 ft. 0 in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high j 14 ft. 0 in. wide x 5 ft. G in. high i 4 ft. 0 in. wide x 5 ft. 10 in. high | 3 ft. 6 in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high | 3 ft. 6 in. wide x 5 ft. 6 in. high 3 ft. 6 in. wide x 5 ft. 10 in. high 3 ft. 2 in. wide x 3 ft. 10 in. high 2 ft. 10 in. wide x 4 ft. 6 in. high 2 ft 10 in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high 2 ft. 10 in."wide x 5 ft. 6 in. high 2 ft. 10 in. wide x ft. 10 in. high 2 ft. 8 in. wide x r> ft. 2 in. high j 2 ft. 8 in. wide x 5 ft. 6 in. high j 2 ft. G in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high j 2 ft. G in. wide x 5 ft. G in. high 2 ft. 6 in. wide x !> ft. 10 in. high j 2 ft. 4 in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high ; 2 ft. 4 in. wide x 5 ft. 6 in. high j 2 ft. 4 in. wide x 5 ft. 1 0 in. high 2 ft. 0 in. wide x 5 ft. 2 in. high 2 ft. 0 in. wide x 5 ft. G in. high 1 ft. 2 in. wide x "> ft. 2 in. high 1 1 ft. 2 in. wide x 5 ft. G in. high ; LOWEST PRICES ON FRA I LUMBER AND HIMRFR 1 Columbia, S. C. i Yards on Wayne Street, two rue en S. A. L. i __ BIDS FROM SHARDS LH.L. "We have hacl some nifce showers iri this section recently. Misses Bc-ssie Sightler anu Barry Leo. attended preaching service ar Harmony Sunday afternoon. Misses. Ethel. Blanch and Vera Ooodwin went down the country u> a fish fry Thursday. Tito revival nieetimr will start a' llarraouy c hurch the first Sunday in August. Y\V will also have a young )>cojde's day. Tii" ]>ul.?lic is cordial iy iaviti d t<> attanti. ^ !?:Sst is West Husband?The orientals have a! curious :-;:sin/;i < f taking niT their; shoes l>iu!'c clltcling tile hulls*'. Wif*.?The iiic;! in this country do the same thing when they come homo! at ? a. 111. If one l'eels that a hook of class- ; ie literature is a bore, should one courageously say so? i One Dollar Saved Ilepresents Ten j Dollars Earned. i The average man does not save to exceed ten per cent of his earnings. [ ! He must spend nine dollars in living! expenses for every dollar saved. That! being the case he can not be too care- j ful about unnecessary expenses. Very! often a few cents properly invested, like buving seeds for his garden, will, save several dollars outlay later on. j It is the same in buying Chamber-! Iain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy, j It costs but a few cents, and a -bottle j of it in the house often saves a doc- j tor's bill of several dollars. ? -i ?stion to >rs, Car-, Builders sash and doors and save anV. nt below a list of sizes of < stock at all times and sell e always lower. I IP FOR REFERENCE ti innnni ? ?I | ! ! j ~~ i- ; i i i ! "1 ! ] 1 ' low "D" Bungalow i 1 DOORS Below is a list of sizes of our beautiful fir doors, in two panel. and the popular five cross panel: i 3 ft 0 in. wide x 7 ft. 0 in. high 2 ft. 10 in. wide x 7 ft. 0 in. high 2 ft. (J in. wide x 7 ft. 0 in. high ! 2 ft. 4 in. wide x 7 ft. 0 in. high 2 ft. 0 in. wide x 7 ft. 0 in. high 2 ft 10 in. wide x 0 ft. 1 0 in. high 2 ft. 6 in. wide x 6 ft. 10 in. high 2 ft. 4 in. wide x 6 ft. 10 in. high 2 ft. 0 in. wide x 6 ft. 10 in. high 2 ft. S in. wide x G ft. 8 in. high 2 ft. G in. wide x G ft. 8 in. high 2 ft. 4 in. wide x G ft. 8 in. high j 2 ft. 0 in. wide x G ft. 8 in. high 2 ft. G in. wide x G ft. t; in. high ! 2 ft. 0 in. wide x (> ft. 0 in. high i We also cany a line of fine Front Doors, French Doors, Fancy Side Lights and Transoms, besides the j cheaper lines of sash and I doors. tfES AND ALL KINDS OF j MOULDINGS |! AUAUTY ffUANTITlt I f. Phone 1944 j H t blocks nor A Eimv/ocd Ave- \ C $ Railroad ; SIMMONS. State.. of South Carolina. County o? Doxinsjton.?Court <?i* Common Pleas. Dank of \\ ostein Carolina. jdointilY, versus M. S. Sua.In.an. J. '. Stcadman and Mary \V. St. adman. It. f endants.?Sum: i. ons. To the Defendants Above Named: You are hereby Summoned ami required to answer the c<.mpiaiiit in this action, of" which a copy is herewith served unoit you. and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscribers at their office at Dexms'ton, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you tail to answer the ... 7-%; v-? tlin T ofnrhcoi/1 v_/ UI11 pitll II C \\ 1L1I111 il XV liiuv, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. EJCIItD & CARROLL, Attorneys for Plaintiff. May 10, If21. To the defendant -Mary \V. Steadman: You will please take notice that the original Summons and Complaint in this action is now 011 file in the office of the Clerk of Court for Lexington County. EFIRD & CARROLL, Attorneys for Plaintiff. July 5, 1921. 3t-39-c CITATION NOTICE. State of South Carolina, County of Lexington.?By George S. Drafts, esquire, probate judge. Whereas, NIary Fallaw made suit to me, to grant her Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of James Monroe Fallaw. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said James Monroe Fallaw. deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lexington, C. H., S. C., on 20th day of July, 1021, next, after publication hereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my Hand, this 5th day of July, Anno Domini 1921. GEO .S. DRAFTS, (L. S.) Probate Judge, Lexington Co., S. C. Published on the Gth day of July, 1921, in the Lexington paper, two weeks. DEBTORS AND CREDITORS NOTICE. All persons indebted to the estate of Mr. Barrett Jones will please make payment to the undersigned and all persons having claims against the estate will please present the same duly proven to the undersigned. MRS. MIX XI E V. J ONES, Administratrix. Batesburg, S. C. 2w NOTICE OF FINAL MEETING OF CREDITORS. In the District Court of the United States, lor the Eastern District of South Carolina. In the matter of \V. P. Poof, bankrupt. Notice of final meeting of Creditor?. Take notice that the final meeting of the creditors of the above named Bankrupt will be held in my office in the City of Columbia, South Carolina, in the District aforesaid, on the 14th sday of July, 1 !>21, at which time the final accounts of the Trustees will be passed upon and the fees for the attorneys for the petitioning creditors, for the Bankrupt, and for the Trustees will be passed upon. The report of the Trustees can be inspected in my office. It shows $6,853.97 on hand for distribution. Messrs. Timmerman, Graham, Thurmond and Callison. as attorneys for the petitioning creditors and for the Trustees, have petitioned for the allowance of a fee to them in the sum of SI,500.00. All creditors can present their views in person, by attorney or through letter directed to the undersigned Referee. All such other business as may properly come before such meeting will be transacted. H. X. EDMUXDS, X<>. 713 Palmetto Building, Iteferee in Bankruptcy, * . Columbia, S. C. T -- 1 . 1 1 (I O 1 Columbia. * .. .jiu\ i.h, SALE OF STOCK OF CAYCE DEYKLOP.MKNT CO.. IHILOXGIXG TO ESTATE OF ,JAMFS A3. HAGINS. F>y virtue of authority vested in me by order of the Probate- ?'ourt, I will sell to the highest b'< !< * for cash, five (o) shares of the capital stock of the Cayce Development Company, bolonging to the Estate of James M. Hagins, in front of the Cayce Cooperative Store, Cayce, S. ('., on Saturday, the sixteenth (loth) day o! August n< \\ at "* o o'clock, a. m. i.-'rn'o" , ; M.s'ato < f Jnnvs M. * 2\\