University of South Carolina Libraries
PASSENGERS ARB SAPB ON SOUTHERN'S TRAINS, ft. " Washington. D. C., September 10. ?Fairffcjf Harrisorv, president of the I Southern Railway System. sold today: Since the manager/ient of the Southern resumed the operation of its prop-1 erty on Marc- 1. 1920. at the end of j federal control, it has* had the comfort J of being able to record, month by! month, that no passenger has lest his' ?? - - - !, life by accident while on one of its j _ trains. What this means by way of forethought throughout the organization responsible for the passengers' safe conduct will appear in the fact that during those thirty months, ended August 31, 1922, the Southern's 1 trains carried pasengers equivalent,,in A number to nearly half the population of the United States, and carried them under va^-ing conditions, providential and hutyan, including stress of weath. er and stress of strike. j On the other hand, during the same period, there has been a steadily grow- . 1 ing toll of fatal accidents at road crossings^ resulting in loss of life to > passengers in automobiles. It is, i therefore, apparent that the drivers of i. automobiles have not been as sue-j cessful in rotecting their assengers as 1 the railroad has been: It cannot be questioned that the social duty of pre- | caution rests as much upon one as upon the other. \ ? r i lb was bad enough when rains were t I* destroying the crops, but now that the j golf courses are being ruined the sit.. Jf y j : # nation may not be regarded as other J than calamitous.?Labor (Washing- j ton). | CLERK'S SALET ffevV j >* i N . ( State of South Carolina, County of Lexington.?Court of Common f. Pleas.. . . H. M. Price. Plaintiff, against K. A. > v r y . . Price, Defendant. *- f ^ " By virtue of authority vested in me by Order of the Court in the above & entitled Cause, I will sell before the court house door in Lexington, S. C., |% . at, public auction to the highest bidder during the legal hours of sale onr the first Monday in October, next, the j wpne beiiig the 2nd day of said month, I the following described real estate, . torwit: - . V All tViaf niana r\irnal a?> Ikin# jZ 7? '~^r- AAA |/(M VV4 V* VKVVV VJb land in the County and State aforesaid in Hollow Creek Township* con- ! > t^ning Aiaety (90^ a^res, more or less, ^^^^^fprice, W. S. Long, W. C. Price, Cklvin Price* O. M, Price* and per- , haps others, being the lands originally I belonging to the estate of Henry L. i ' Price." jj ' Terms of Salei One-third cash, bal- j " ance on a credit of Que and two years, \ ' secured by bond of the purchaser and . 1 > .li mortgage of the oremises, with lnv . j < terest from day -of sale at seven per! cent, per annum, the mortgage to j 1 contain the usual clause as to ati ? -i < |g(| torney*s fees, with option to the pur-: chaser to'nay ail cash. Purchaser, to ! ' r'-v . pay for papers revenue stamps and 7 : recording jfees. H. L. HARMON (L. S.) 11 Clerk of Court. ' BFIRD & CARROLL, 1 Attorneys for Plaintiff. 5 ^ Sept. 7th, 1922. 1 ? Spend Next Sund ISLE OF - T* skP-' ' $3.50 ROUND TRIP FR< m U Good Onlj .'C p. Leaving Lexington 9: via Col 5s" ' ' ' ? ' Arriving Charleston ' -iRpItiming tiel:et will he good lea' >;.t. . day. Also on 3:00 a. m. Monda gage checked. Not good in pari ?ENTIKE DAY OF IXN AND ] . . j f: . - Excellent Sailing. Bathing, Fish in, , # 0 Charleston, Fort Moultr . \ Week Em . ;>oid for all trains Saturdays and ' starting point pror to midnight T . 1_ Summer Tourist tickets bo-?rin;r or: sale to Mounta n and Seasho: ! icuiars communicate with : ' TICKK ?... i V-' Southern Ri ?.? ;-r/W ' .. . . DEATH OP MRS. MART SMITH. Mrs. Mary Smith, nee Kaminer, departed this life September 3, 1922, at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Jeff Gibson near Saluda court house, and was buried September 4, 1922, in the family burying" ground near her home. ' She was bo^rn January 27, 1847, making her stay on earth 75 years, 7 months and 6 days. ' Sbe was married to Sampson Smith to which union was born 6 children, A daughters and 2 sons. She loaves to mourn her departure G children, 30 grandchildren, 1 brother, Mr. W. P. Kaminer, 2 sisters, Mrs. Job Harmon and Mrs. jaeoo uunier. iier nusuacio. proceeded her to the spirit land 7 years. - Written by her heart-broken sisters ahd brother. aS * O <-* WOULD SKIP vmu IX COTTON CROP. Washington, Sept. 10.?Senator E. D. Smith of South Carolina, announces that he will introduce a joint house and senate resolution providing for cooperation between the federal government and .cotton producing states in m&tnng it possible for the South to forego the planting and growing of cotton for one year. The object of the proposed resolution will be the extermination of the boll weevil by eliminating the only plant on which he feeds. The proposed'resolution will precipitate extensive discussion provided it is ever seriously considered in congress. Senator Smith denies that the government has the right or power to dictate to a sovereign state what it shall not plant. He holds, however, that a sovereign state may so'dictate to its citizens, or that its citizens will voluntarily and unanimously agree to grow no cotton with the understanding that the federal and state governments will pay a certain premium on every acre planted in crops'for which there will be no money market. The. South Carolina senator holds that if the states east of the Mississippi river would plant' no cotton one year, and the states west of that river would plant no cotton the succeeding year, the boll weevil would suffer extermination . Government reports recently published proved that nothing has been devised capable of coping with the weevil. He destroys a third of the orop at a cost of $3,000,000,000 per an' num. Senator Smith declares that unless he is exterminated, it vylll be Impossible, in the'fhture, for the south to produce cotton and clothe the. srorld. \ ^ IJe made the point that the problem is not sectional but national and international. He declared that if the' south is deprived of its only money orop, the south would be eliminated as a, market for the manufactured products of other sections. He beholds the South which has weathered the storms of centuries, destroyed by an insect. Southern senators all admit that "something* is wrong. For thej South with a'monopoly demanded by the civilized world, is miserablv Door is far as its real producers of that! monopoly are concerned. But Southern senators have never been able, in recent years, to define the trouble in >uch wise that the world would accept vithout question the definition. The ay on Delightful 1 PALMS OM LEXINGTON, S. C. | ' on Train * Sj 32 P. M. Saturdays & umbia ^ 7:35 A. M. Sundays ring Charleston 5:15 p.. m, Sun- $] y following date of sale. No bag- s! or or sleeping cars. n FROLIC AT THE SEASHORE? i\ g g and Water Sports. See Historic ?5 :e and Sullivan's Island $ in I i Tickets | Sundays limited to reach original M uesday following date of sale. & fir.al limit'October 31. 1022. now a ;e liesorts. Stopovers. For par- H r agents | ilway System | "'same is true respecting remedies suggested. Senator Caraway of Arkansas, thinks the trohble is found in the fact | that the Southern producer is at the mersv of stock exchanges. He would i abolish the exchanges, but would not I regulate them as Senator Dial of i'Soutn Carolina would regulate them? 'that is, require them to deliver that j'which they agree to deliver. Senator !' Heflin of Alabama has cried, "Cut off ! the heads of the exchanges." tit in the ' senate committee on agriculture, he I agred that SerTator Ransdell of Louis ' iana, moving' in the interest of the New Orleans stock exchanges, write the adverse report on the Dial bill, j Senator Smith of South Carolina, | deploring the condition of the southi ern planter?and he is one, himself? ' opposes the Dial proposition on the i ground of his fear that a differentiaj tion as between grades would imply a I difference in the value of cloth pro| duced from different grades. In advocating the abandonment of cotton planting in the South for one year, Senator Smith referred to the outrageous fact that the price o? cotton is set by manipulators in Liverpool. Dial says the manipulators are in New 'York. \ ;' The idea exists that there are ma! nipulators in both centers, outherners can not get together in a determined '' < ' effort to prevent manipulation. There is no attempt on the part of anyone to deny that-for the failure of Southern senators effectively to legislate in the interest of cotton, Southern senators are solely responsible. Senators from the "West are willing to act respectnig cotton just as senators from the South tell them to Act. But they will do nothing as long as each Southern senator has his own remedy, and raises a storm of protest whenever any other senator from the South attempts to secure relief. In the meanwhile, from the boll weevil and exchanges cotton continues to suffer. The west agrees that the S<fUth shall have that legislation ;it.requires provided the South asks fo it; * v&mt unanimously. ... >^i " IPHUX . Domestic Science Teacher: Name' . three articles containing starch T Pupil: Two cuffs and one collar". \ ? Two Scotchmen were on a raft I ' adrift on a stormy sea. Angus knelt 'and began to pray: "Oh! Lord," the said, "I know I've broken mos of 'de commandments, but oh! .Lord, if I am si>ared this time I promise'^^lfe' paused and looked up, saying, "wait a minute, Lord, I tink I see land." Teacher in History?What kind, of a man was Henry VIII? j" Pupil?He was a good sport.^ He. married six times. ?. IK DESIGNS f, WEDDING BOUQUETS FLOWERS, # Chas.L.Sligh FLORIST 1446 Main St. Phone 2761 COLUMBIA. S. C. .ilit.Ai.UlUL'yUUt.tiAilUA. Our Accuracy Quality I Service give you "Well Fitted Glasses" ? ?m ? r* r HI KLMIiKtfl Optometrist and Optician 1207 Hampton Street COLUMBIA, S. C. DIMMMMnHMMEHnMHIMMMWHDHHBmHnP I HI A MnMHQ PF API <s L/iniv*\/li JL/kJ) jl WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER, CUT GLASS RELIABILITY SQUARE DEALING BOTTOM PRICES. ?jHgr A:/ERY Jeweler COLUMBIA. 5.C 1619 MAIN ST. / I ODD IDEAS OOXCERXING TIDES. j Aristotle and Heraclitue said the tides were caused by the sun, which whirling the winds about causes them to fall with violence on the Atlantic, 'which swells and thus cases the tides. , Plato's explanation was that they were caused tiy an animal living in a cavern, | which through the movement of its | mouth caused the tides. Anotner uei' lief was that the tides were a natural 1 movement of tho respiration or j breathing of the sea. j There arc records of medieval bci liefs anions: the Arabs. Some thought j-that the tides were caused by the moon heating the waters so that they I swelled up and thus rose higher, while | others believed they were caused by ,4 i the vapors generated in the bowels of | tho earth. . Again, others believed I they were caused by the alternate de1 composition of the sea by the air, and i j then the air by the sea, thus account. ing for the ebb and flow. Still another ' belief was that a great serpent swal| lowed and vomited water alternately, j' Early Cape Cod folk and those in j'other districts along the New England coast believed that people died at the ebb or flowing of the tide. Watchers by the bedside of dying people firmly believed that one could not die until fthe ebb tide began to run. In Scot land it was formerly thought that in setting eggs to hatch one should set the eggs at flood tide if one wanted roosters, and at the ebb tide it" one Wanted hens. FRUIT HAS DIVERS FLAVORS. !, In Burma is found a curious and delicious fruit called the durion. This fruit grows on a tree of about sixty feet in height. It is oval-shaped, from ten to twelve inches in length and from six to eight feet in diameter. It is of a light green^color and the outside is covered with thorns half an -inch long. The thorns are very tough and strong. The interior is divided into five sections, in winch lie rows of seeds about an inch long, surrounded with the delicious pulp, which is considered a treat delicacy by those who like it. Others dislike the taste. The flavor is described as follows: "Take the sweetest bananas, the richest pineapples, the most juicy orapgeg, some peaches and cream, flavor the mixture with some rare spice, and yojLJrnight have something that would reSemble ad urion." It has a punTs.holley I v, rr-. 7 ?.? * TTVni^RT A ITT VC (IVli rASTTFTS v , MOTOR HEARSE P Pelion, S. C. . SHOES! THE KIND THAT WEARS EASY AND LONGEST. We are always prepared to serve our Lexington friends from a large stock of dependable Shoes for every kind of wear, in all leathers and sizes. The "Family Shoe Store of Columbia." E. P. & F. A. DAVIS Farmers' Medium and Heavy Work | Shoes a Specialty. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DRS. BOOZER DENTISTS 1615 MAIN STREET Over Lever's Shoe Store COLUMBIA, S. C. RHONE NO. 7211 3 CO A MIr k? 1 IXMliru iVi IJULiV^JU Real Estate and insurance BATESBURG, S. C. I B. J. WINGARD ATTORNEY AT LAW No. 12 Clark Law Building ! litw Ran^e Telephone 1S? j COLUMB-A. S .C. i ^k. j'gent, spicy fragrance which ia great-1 I ly admired by many and not liked by others. The King of Burma used to send every year special steamers to 'Moulmain, Burma, to procure royal specimens of this most royal fruit. s i c i ? Power of the Press. ! 'Don't all those papers make you' J tired?" asked a kindly citizen of aj newsboy who was struggling along I under a tremendous bundle of dailies ! just off the press. 4 4 Vo V? ! ' ear?l t ? > a xrrnitVi *4T h in't : Aiaxi i i u ,) t-'uni . * uiti c ! got to read 'em i | | CI.eiik S SAI.I:. j I State of South Carolina. County of | Lexington.?Court of Common i Pleas. I IF. Hampton Ilendrlx, Plaintiff, i | against John H. Keisler, et al., j Defendants. 7>y virtue of authority vested in me by Order of the Court in the above entitled Cause, I will sell before the court house door in Lexington. S. C.. \ 'at public auction to the highest bidder during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in October next, the ! same being the 2nd day of said month, the following', described real estate, towit: "All that piece, parcel or tract of 'land situate,'lying and being in LexI'ington County, Boiling Springs Tovvn| ships, South Carolina, containing forty ( two (42) acres, more or less, adjoin[ ing lands .of Joseph Frye, E. M. 1 i ? Are You Workin Work of any sort is pure dru< your existence. But with a pur] tor a reward and it lightens yo pleasure. Have a purpose in life! Mat building up a savings account ii you with the means to attain yc independence, wealth?they all persistently save. Same rate of interest (4 per ce accounts. THE OLD The Carolina Nation W. A. Clark, President. T. S. Bryan, V. President. \ TheAver - \ Does not realize all that a Bi It is a friend^-cnd then som A Real Is a financial institution thai of the community it serves, for the solving of all the fina tele. . Saving the Fi No matter how splendid yoi may be, if you have not SA will not bring you the rewa. ried out, the man who has i behind your idea, is the one Let Us Helf The Home N I Lexingtoi Capital, $50,000.00 Member of Federal 1 "Everything < I AT ' Sanita? 1 134-5 Main Street, 7 jrome Looking and Reasc "Little ] Quick, Polite and attenth Open Day and Night. ? Ketsler, Goo. "W. Gunter and perhaps other#. Said lands waa deeded to John H. Keisler bf H. M. Keisief on December 2th, 1813, deed recorded in Book 3-L page 187. All that piece, parcel or tract of land situate, lying and being in Lexington County. South Carolina, containing fifty four (54) acres, more or less, adjoining lands of P. C. Price, / A. L. Kirkland, the said John H. Keisler, and perhaps others, same being tract of land purchased from H. L. Harman, Clerk of Court, Lexington County, South Carolina."' Terms of Sale: One half cash, and the balance on a-, credit of iwelvfc months secured by bond of purchaser and mortgage 01" the premises sold I with interest front day of sale, with I privilege to purchaser to pay all cash. I One hundred dollars*to be paid down ' i cash on each tract of land in one 1 hour after the sale, and in the event j-'such payment is not made in time 'mentioned, said tract or tracts of land to be immediately resold at the risk of the former purchaser. 1 K. L. HARMON (L. S.) ' Clerk of Court. E. L. ASBILL, Attorney for Plaintiff. Sept. 7th, 1922. i ? \ ?*% Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever,, Bil\J\J\J ious Fever, Colds and LaGrippe. nr With n PiimrkQG I ^ TV ? *.?? M A Ml ^/WV dgery if it means merely earning ?ose back of it you are working ur tasks and makes work a real :e your life a success! Start by Vthis institution. It will furnish >ur object. A comfortable home, come within your reach if you nt.) paid on both large and small RELIABLE tal Bank of Columbia Jno. D. Bell, Asst. Cashier. Jos. M. Bell, Cashier. > ???TT age Man '? * / i mk means to a community. ie. { Bank t functions for the welfare It has machinery at hand tncial problems of its clienirst Essential ur idea or how practical it VED something your idea rd it deserves. If it be carsaved and whose money is \ who will profit most. i You Save ational Bank i, S. C. Deposits, $600,000.00 Reserve Association 1 Good To Eat" THE Y7 > Columbia, S. C. 0 ?nable Prices, Different" from the others /e service. - >?i .."'J ' ^ ..