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important ruling in federal court Judge Smith Denies Right of Officers to Search Office or Dwelling Of interest to the bar of the state ~ * t-- m *t a. -%r i are decisions 01 juage n. /v. m. Smith of the federal court in the case against J. M. Chicco, white, et al., tried last week for possession of liquor. A great part of the evidence swung around the right to search a man's dwelling, office or store without a search warrant, and the fact that some evidence was secured by forcibly taking a bunch of keys from the! negro, Willie Hills, indicted in thej / case. Judge Smith ruled that no dwelling, office or store could be searched without a search warrant, and the negro : V claimed that the building in which * the liquor was found was his office and shop. However, the place was '/ vacant, except for the whiskey, and J Judge smith ruieu mac in mac caaej the officers of the law had a right to I search without a warrant* whether of- \ flee or dwelling:. ? : V;v. : The judge also ruled that all. evi- j t dence collected from the forcible seizure of the kejrs should be thrown out - and could .not be used against, the defendant. , Formerly officers of the law had the right to search between sunrise S. and sunset without a warrant, but that j was changed by the supreme court in I the case of Lawrence Amos, negro f, . from Sumter county, a few years ago, i this being the latest change on this! subject of search warrants, accord-j ing to District Attorney Weston. Chicco and Hills were both found / guilty but notice of appeal was filed. i v Both men are under suspended sentence of the Charleston county circuit _> i. M COUri IUI llliyt 114uui Halt. Listen, you farmers who think that you can't keep on farming because of the high cost; of labor, and you can't < do it yourself. What are you farming for, to get rich, or to have a home? If you sell out, and move to town, in a few years your cash and your job : will be gone; and then where's yourj living? In town you must pay forj llpC every drink of water, < every stick ofj ' wood, every apple, etc. If you aref! gsfr \ . old" and no help, rent part bf the piV' farm on shares ,or clap it all in gra^s, h and raise hens, or geese and ha\>j a ; . t cow, and a garden. There's your/livlag' right there, besides a homte. of "f> your own. Don't live so high/. I've men farmers' .tables bankrupt the OMmjluir' wtefl'Ar? co/ nrv oil wu:xu?.; tmawao- VWV MM *rh*t do!i>+ .>^>>vr '01^ * ' overhead charges make it no i>Iace tor the^man or woman oyer thirty years old Train thev children to love the old farm, and come there every holi day; and DON'T swindle them. Judging by His Habist. Visitor?"Does Mr. Crawford, a student .live here?" Landlady?"Well, Mr. Crawford - lives here, but I thought he was a night watchman."?The Goblin. JRAINS TO SLOW ] FOR AGED CITIZEN \ -* Special to The State, Greenwood, Jan; , 21-.?Riding, through a biting, bitter wind, Col. | Robert 3. Watson, an 86 year old Confederate veteran, reached Green-' wood Tuesday about noon on a 100-' mile horseback trip from Ridge! Spring in Saluda county to Green- i ville, where he^will visit his son, Maj. K. F. Watson. Colonel Watson refuses to travel by rail preferring to ride his favorite saddle horse in spite of weather conditions. Two years ago Colonel Watson rode from Ridge Springs to Greenville in the dead of winter, reaching Greenwood in a blinding snow storm. Stop ping until the snow ceased with an old comrade, Capt. J. G. Jenkins, Colonel Watson resumed his journey; in the slush, reaching Greenville on j ' r >edule. The galal^t old cavalier left Ridge Springs Monday morning in spite of! y I < threatening rain, he spent Monday j night with a friend near Cambridge! and rode into Grenwood Tuesdayj morning, although the clouds threatened snow and the wind was bitterly cold. He expects to spend a few i days with Maj. S. P. Brooks, a kins- j man .and then continue his journey to; Vfl VV4? V AllV The 100-mile horseback trip to j Greenville in midwinter is an annual j feat, though not regarded as such by) i Colonel Watson. He does not want to j be bothered with waiting for street! cars and automobiles when he reaches ] his destination, he says, so he rides | horseback. As agile as a ; outh in the saddle, Colonel Watsor. is troubled slightly in waking by two old wounds rereived in the battle of Gettysburg, but ? - - - ? ?i ?^11. <Joionei w axson aoesu t wtrnv u m? > favorite horse, "Dolly," can get there, j v i - . GERMAN CABI.ES RESTORED SOON New Tork, Jan. 21,?Clarence H. Mackay, president of Commercial Cabled Postal Telegraph system has announced that his company has just completed a contract with the German Atlantic Cable company, a German ? corporation, under the terms of which direct cable communication . nntVi Cflrm^rvir TT-i 11 hn pewjtnPPfl affp.r fl 1/ u avm V4V& rr?*? wv ??.? *. ? lapse of eight years. j This contract, which has just beep signed, calls for laying a new cab/le between New York and Emden. Germany, with the cable touching at /the Azores, to be completed and in/ operation by October 1923. The arrangement provides for the Comrrjiercial Cable company to lay a cabl/ from New York to Azores, (2,302 /miles) and for the German company/o make *V> o /fnnnaMiitn hotvppn the AZOteS and Emden (1,888 miles)./The two sections tdl lbe joined at vhe Azores station and all messages wiftl be transferred automatically fron* one to the other .giving what virtually wil be instalntaneous service /between the two countries. / .The contract furtheyr pro\Tides that the Commercia Cable/s Postal Telegraph system shall hsindle to the German company all messages collected by the United States? destined for Germany and that thp German company vhall reciprocate / by sending all its American traffic/via the Commercial Cables Postal T/elegraph' system. The laying o% this new cable is the first attempt /it resumption of direct oommunicatioii oetween tne i imt-u j States and Germany. Inuring the war there was no cable communication between Gernuany and the United States. Since the signing of the armistice all cable messages sent between the two CGuntrie.vhave had to pass either througtfvEngland or France. This plan has noW proven satisfactory to Ameri* ? ? ?? na\r - 1 can Diysiness HHClCBls twna mv, . ble is/ being put down in response to a widespread demand on the part of commercial houses, banking" institu tionsfc and others interested m me trade relations of the United States an/ dGermany for better communication facilities. Prior to the outbreak <6t the World war there were two ^cables between the United States and Germany and both were operated by the Commercial company although j owned by the German-Atlantic Cab^e j company. The first of these was-laj|f > in 1900 and the second in 1904. Theyj extended from New York to thej Azores,. and thence to Emden, Gev- j ; i many. j.in ran ' hJur after Great Britian' *-| j ciared war upon German:*, At stj t), X J JL'I, XX.xU .. v*>* uxXx.x .fxtil oh, 1917, lay dormant. In March, 1917, they again were cut by the British government at a point more than GOO miles from New York, and one of the cables, under agreement between Great Britian and Fx*ance, was diverted into Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Penzance, England, and since July 1, 1916, has been used by the British government as part of its Imperial i Tc-legraph and Cable system. The I pfivf-rnment did not remove I the other erstwhile German cable I from American shores, hut in Novem| ber, 1917, the French cable ship, Jermanac, arrived at New York and cut i hot hcables some five miles from their ! landing place at the Commercial ; Cable company's station at far Rockaway, and diverted one of them into 1 " " v i%Amt%or?v'o cf o tinn of UlC i1 rencu ^uu>c wuuif<uij j ?? ; Coney Island. The end diverted to the French Cable company station was put into operation by tha^ company, .under control of French government, , between New York and Brest, France, via the Azores. "The disposition of these two exGerman cables," said Mr. Mackay in his statement yesterday ,is now in the hands of the five allied powers to , whom the cables were ceded by many under the treaty of peace and the Commercial Cable company has filed a very substantial claim against them on account of its former contract for > operation of these cables, which contract was impossible of resumption at the close of the war because of the seiziire of the cables by the British and French governments. In m akingthe contract for the laying of the new German cable the Commercial Cable company in no way ceded any of its rights or claims against the allied powers in connwuua wnu the former German cables. "The laying of the new German cable is part of the Commercial Cable company's program of expansion. It recently was announced by that company that it had made application to the state department for a license to i lay a second trans-Pacific cable." MOVED from .1615 Main St., to 1423 Main .St. DR. CLARK, Chiropcdzet. On \h& Fftnn You /can't Co vrj&ch loir the crops this rriionth, elecn/t to sprfead manure, hen droppings on them; and this is the.^ime to do it, especially if covered wit# .now. In ;the orchard you can scrafp^ off the-' loose bark fraim the apj^lo trees with a blunt hoe; aiAd expose t'he myriad predatory bugs, vrorms an$ fi< to the hungry wrens yknd chickadee-, or to the icy north 'wind; artd sav.e you?" iruit. wnen you / . ? manure/' the oreahrd I/ON'T put, i? close around the -tree for a mouse narbor, but reread, it -oat under the limbs, wheer ;r.<? roots below can get its strength. Open tne, ditches you forgot or neglected before the spring rains catche ion napping. Plan your crops now, give vhe horses a daily apple and a currying, pply the Golden Rule to &i lacts and keep your mouth shut. ; LOOK The future's, ail before j*ou, Look Let the past's niislaVes not bore you, Look ahead; rn,.?? ere rPP^tfinE" X U1 11 liVV LTWV o..- . S. VJ v. j . vo. (7, Over what is-done, vain fretting, But your glsme straightforward setting, ' . T. I Book ahead. . Life's of obstacles a p.tmble, Look abeau; On which ev> :y step mdy stumble, Look ahead: . 'Tis a path you can't g:^ blindly, With good luck to _treat you kindly; Slips must alv.-.-v-s ir? >bur mind be. Look ahead.' . * There's no time for resirospection, ! : ) Look an&aa;If you do, faty detection. Look ahead?* When you've gained- at what you're . . ; aiming, ; i i Further progress keep on framing:, Make the future your own naming? Look ahead!?Baltimore Am . -??#>* ; erican. { ; ?vm I Cm CAMP BRA N < II SOUOOL ,HOUSE. I . ! There will be ait. interesting enter- ! tainment at Camp ^branch school house, first! Sarurjfciy /flight in FebI . ruary. Fishery and <<ther amuse. ments. Professor Jy^itis' Sharpe and others will t* /' Entertain the O > .?" II WiilcoJtm Saturday o sales Colui ever witnes | bottom of c I you come c I == 8 Men's Fleece Lined J |v and! Drawers Men's Ribbed Union ? $1.50 value Men's Solid Leather sole, hand _ sewed Men's $2.00 Madras Shirts I. Man's ? 3.50 Pants - Men's 75c Ribbed Sh and Drawers $25.00 La-lies Coat S tine a ncl Ser<ee for Ban | Corner Main c ) jmS. | SMASHES VASES ' TO ILLUSTRATE Spartanburg, Jan. 23.?"Billy" Sun i day preached tonight on the woman j | who touched the hem of Christ's gar-. | ment before another audience that! packed the tabernacle, and when he called for those who sought to touch Christ through grasping his hand in public acknowledgment of their repentance hundreds came forward, by far the largest number moved by his preaching. His serm.on was the story of the timid woman saved by her faith and his graphical illustration brought mingled tears and applause from the I great audience > "The only thing the timid woman could do," he said, "was to touch Jesus Christ That is the only thing you can do, 2,000 years afterwards, to be ^avea. you may be baptized, sprinkled or dipped, be confirmed, go to prayer-meeting and all that, but unless you touch Jesus Christ there is nothing to it. You are lost. "You may not believe there is a hell, but your misbelief will neither put out the fire nor shut the gates." Continuing, he said: "One of the real objects in life is to do something that will live.after you are gone and go on doing good forever. We are going to meet a lot of people in heaven we helpc-d to get there and did not know that we have helped them." This afternoon Mr. Sunday spoke to the children of the city ,and the meeting was one of the most original and unusual ever witnessed. On the desk before him were ten vases representing the Ten Commandments. He told I a story of a little boy who played hookey from Sunday school and then told his mother he did not. in which transgression he broke sfx commandments, and Mr. Sunday smashed the vases on the platform to carry the story to the minds of the youngsters. ? , ? I 1 m* 1 m FWneriencod. } Mrs. Jones was entertaining some of her son's friends. "Willie." she said, addressing a six-year-old, who was enjoying a plate of cold beef, "are you sure you can cut your own . meat?" The child who was making desperate efforts with his knife and fork replied: "Yes, thanks. I've often had it as tough as this at home."?The Christian-Evangelist. me their sale th m \y had on the c ir /?cf *HOob Ti ? frVIUI. A I tnbia and her -sed, we can tri mr hearts, you ind look our sto Ladies' Ribbed !: Shirts OA drawers ^ Ladies Outing G Suits OA $1'50 value ^ Ladies' Outing Shoes triple Petticoats $1.98 Ladies' 50c Bust AA Hose in Lisle vO C Ladies'85c Silk .... $1.98 n?" Ladies' $1.75 Bust irts ?||| Silk Hcse uits .in trico- Ladies $8.50 Pie OC W001 *n <pl ??&}| plaids 15*=^ ind Green Sts. ? PROMINENT MASON ENTERS OBJECTION | To the Editor of The State: I notice there is a bill before the legislature to exempt Masonic temples from taxation. As a Mason in good standing and a great believer in its character and mission I protest against its passage. I have not heard a single argument in its favor and, besides, it ts a vicious and dangerous precedent. I know that one of. its strong points is the dispensation of charity. I never knew, before, .that the order is an object of charity. Composed ,as it is, generally, of the best and most substantial people in the country, and requiring an entrance fee of $40, this effort to dodge taxes is cheap and unworthy of the great institution. I hope, as a past grand master of the order, if put up to Governor Cooper, he will veto it. It is so thoroughly out of harmony with the history, practices and inner workings of our fraternity that I am greatly disappointed over this movement. It is the first time since I have been connected with it that I have heard of its playing- the beggar. With no claim to superior qualities of what is right and proper and with no reflection upon the promoters of this tax-dodging scheme, I know and feel that it is not in keeping with the spirit and capacity of Masonry to shirk any just and righteous obligations to the public. the state or to charity. It is pre- j eminently not a charity organization, j except to others. I have been amazed j that it received any favorable con- j sideration at the hands of the legisla-1 ture. T. H. Drehcr. ! I St. Matthews. RATS DIE | so do mice, once they eat RATSnap. And they leave no odor behind. Don't take our word for it ?try a package. Cats and dogs won't touch it. Rats pass up all food to get RAT-SNAP. Three sizes. 35c size (i cake) enough for ? ? ?- ii_ Fantry, Kitcncn or *^enar. . i 65c size (2 cakes) for Chicken House, coops, or small buildings. $1.25 size (5 cakes) enough for all farm and outbuildings, storage buildings, or factory buildings. Sold act! ftuaraitteed by Harmon Drug Co. end Lexington Fharmacy. % ? is week on acqt )pening days r ? ? s /* ? fiis is one ot ti neighboring tc ithfully say thi will say the s ck over. Shirts and OA 25c DRESS C ^ Friday and [owns; 7ft and 28, for oi 13 q 9:30 and 10: 25c Dress Gir OA plaids and far *** C purchase $1.0 yard, 5 yards er Brown 25c Dress Gin] C Yard AA ? " <U 20c UU 1 lINi. C Friday and ? ~ and 28, from er Brown QQ ' _ hour onlv?W tf\j c ?* ?" in all colors t .. $1.00 or mor< ated Skirts all yards to a cu; Q9 20c Yard Coi MiiuMiuiMmmiiuuin, | lililll I HTfTT I Easily Explained. The fancy shop proprietor had ra:.- |flH sacked his shop in an endeavor to please the rather exacting woman who wanted to purchase a present. "Now, are you sure this is a genuine crocodile skin", she inquired, crUicaily examining a neat little satch "Quite, madam/' was the rep-v. You see, I shot the crocodile mysel v "It looks rather dirty," remark i the customer, hoping to get a redtction terms. "Yes, madam," replied the shc.vkeeper, "that is where the anin-'/ struck the ground alter it fell off t tree."?London Telegraph. | MOB IN GEORGIA STRINGS TP XEGIiO Sandersville, Ga., Jan. 22.?A zco^ i cwmposta or citizens or v\ asningi o;: and Johnson counties tonight continued to search lor Ed Greer, * . negro, charged with attacking the wife of a white farmer near Harrii > late yesterday. Jesse Greer, brother of the flier.five, was caught late today af : bloodhounds had trailed him s^vfe-.T miles. He was strung up to a t. < and with drawn rifles leaders of the searching, party made him tell all he knew of his brother's whereabouts.. Later he was placed in the Sand . j ; . Come Up to These Claims. RAT-SNAP is absolutely guar .nteed to kill rats and mice. Cremr.tes ' them. Rodents killed with RAT-SNAP leave no smell. Rats pass up all fvcci to get at RAT-SNAP. Their meal is their last. RAT-SNAP CO.; ^ in cakes. No mixing. Cats or won't touch it. Three sizes, 35c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by !Le>:ington Pharmacy and Harmon Drue How Big New York Grocery Firm H Keeps Down Rats. Yroome & Co., Butter & Cheese Merchants, New York City, says: "We . keep, HAT-SNAP in our cellar all the time. It keeps down rats. We hay' it by the gross, would not be without it." Farmers use RAT-SNAP cause rats pass up all food for I: ATSNAP. Three sizes, 35c, 65c, ?1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Harmon .Drug Co., and Lexington Pharmacy. I - - . ' ^ I mm or me he biggest j| \wns have \ L^| s from the j? ame when ilNGHAM 5C YARD |j-. Saturday, January 27 T le hour only, between SO a. m. we will sell y tgj -' lgham in checks, j a icy colors to those that I 0 or more at 5c per * to a customer. I 5 \ ? ; AT SC PER YARD-?._. Saturday, January 27 9:30 to ,10:30?one \ HH e will sell 20c outing 0 those that purchase \ <g 1 at 5c per yard, 5 > j T^ ^" 'i W 'fflULflP.