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, |EL» * ft • PAG! TWO v SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, PSCHMBER IS. 1»27. YES! According to 11,105# written Opinions from Allendale Will Vote oH Death of Leonard Hien. on tdeK: - > _ mi i siiwnf" ItfracUVe Offer Made by Edi»to Pub- lie Service Company.— To Vote Early Next Month. iv - TXT’HAT is the quality that Lawrence Tibbett, David Warfield, Nazimova, William Collier, Florence Easton, Mary Boland, Sophie Tucker and other famous singers, actors, broadcasters and public speakers havefound thatmakes LUCKY STRIKES delightiul and of no possible injury to their voices ? For the answer we turned to medical men and asked them this question: Do you think from your experi ence wijg LUCKY STRIKE cigarettes that they are less irritat ing to sensitive or tender throats than other cigarettes, whatever the reason ? 11,105# doctors answered this question‘^YES/^ These figures represent the opinion and experience of doctors, those whose business it is to know. v < O Bloom, rhlcttfo Mary Boland, Delightful Actreu, writes t “For a number of years, I no ticed that Lucky Strikes were the • overwhelming popular cigarette with most actors. It was only natural, when I started to smoke, that l try Ducky Strikes. Now I know it is rightfully called ‘the actors’ favorite.’ It is the most enjoyable cigarette and results in no throat irritation or harsh ness and this means everything to us of the stage.” ** It’s toasted * No Throat Irritation-No Cough. hrrby ruriify that «r* haw aw am mad 11,105 atgnad card a oonSrm*. ini tfM abora atatamant • LYBRAND ROSS BROS, ft MONTGOMERY Accountant* and Auditor* New York, Julr 22. 1927. Closing Out Stock Bargains in CEILING, FLOORING, SIDING, FENC ING, MOULDINGS, ETC. JUST THE MATERIAL YOU NEED TO REPAIR OR BUILD YOUR HOME. LOTS OF LOW GRADE STOCK PRICED UNDER COST. Large or Small Quantities. Y ? ? Y ? Y Y T Y ? f •> Co. Denmark, South Carolina. NOTICE! Against Hunting, Fishing & Trapping Any person or persons entering up'dn the lands hereinaftetr referred to, situate in Barnwell, Richland and lv*d Oak Townships, or the purpose of f hunting, fishing o'r trapping, will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law: , Allendale’s light and power plant will be sold to the Edisto Public Ser vice Company if the citizens of this city so desire. This decision was rmched* by Mayor C. C. Chavous and five of the six couhcilmen in Humect ing at the town hall here Tuesday mght when the city fathers unani mously voted to order an election on the matter. It is understood that Robert A. Easterling, of the Edisto Public Ser vice Company, offend to purchase the plant from the town for the sum of sixty-one thousand five hundred dol lars. This, is $6,500.00 in excess of rKe price paid by the same company for the Beaufort plant a few months iago and is considered a very attractive of fer by many of the busin&ss men lit Allendale. The Edisto Public Service Company will reduce the. present ‘rate for power ,and lights 20 per cent, as soon as the plant is taken over by them. Several other advantages that will benefit the citizens of the town ai-e proposed by the corporation, in cluding the doubling of .the present water supply net laUjr than June, 1928. A number of necessary im provements to the power plant w’ill be made by the corporation if they secure the franchise. In the event the voters cf Allendale do not favor selling .the plant the improvements will have to be made by the town. The indebtedness of the town of Al lendale is approximately fifteen thous and dollars, according to unofficial in formation. The finances of the town ere in such shape, it is stated, that additional improvements to the plant are impossible. Reports a re circulated here that the JUghUand pown pltnrt'frasTievTrr been profitable and that the taxpayers have had to piy increased levies to meet payments on the initial cost of the plant and for .additions from time to time. It i* estimated that the town has parid more than thirty-five thous and dollars in interest alone on the power plant invoUment. Those flavoring the sale of the plant point out that the taxpayers will re ceive taxes from the corporation should they purchase the plant and in stead of being a burden 4o the town and it« citizenry the plant will be a new source of revenue. It is also pointed out that ev»*ry consumer of light and power in Allendale will pay less for electricity than is now being paid. The election will be helcl some time curly next year and unless public sen timent is materially changed there is every indication that the election will cairy by a substantial majority.—Al- Kndale County Citizen. VALUE OF zrevitt. THE C. 0. P. CONVENTION. COLDEST SPOT ON EARTH. MARRIAGE STILL BEST. - , . ' » President Coofulge, a man of lev words, regrets that his message to Congress could not be shorter. Madame de Sevigne wrote to her daughter, “If I had had more time I should have written you a shorter letter.” Considering the field cov ered the President’s message will be found shorter than most men could have made it. His “I do v not choose” proves ability to 'say much in few words. ‘ ' Friends and relatives of Leonard Hiers were' grieved to learn of his death in Rockyford,. Ga., on Novem ber 26th. Mr. Hiers was the sou of Reuben Hiers, a well known and high ly respected citizen of this county, and had been living in Georgia since the deaith of his father. He was in the twenty-fourth year of his age and T* x was only ill for a wry fhott time. He is suxvive<f by -hi* widow, an in fant child, His mother and one sister, all of Rockyford, who have the sym pathy of here. : ' . , -■ <s «r~ '■■■— ~ An orang-outang can sing, says a German biologist, and that statement dears dp the mystery of where the weird noises heard over the radio • originate. In AustraHS workers, unemployed, tried to force their way into the Treasury Building. The rioting was suppressed. Australia iLsevere in its imnfigra- tion limitations, and rioting there by the unemployed reminds American workers that what a country NEEDS is population. L. W. Tilly . 200 J. M. Weathersbee . 572 Mrs. Flossie Smith 1,000 Jessie Middleton - 309 Harrett Hqtson . 175 Estate of H. A. Patterson 2,009 W. H. Duncan . 405 - Joseph E. Dicks - SQ0 Mrs. Kata M." Patterson __ 3,000 R. C. Holman _• - 400 Duncannon Place 1,650 A. A. Richardson 2,000 Simmons Place _ . 500 Lemon Bros. - 150 Mrs. Jane R. Patterson 6 1,000 S. B. Moseley __ Barnwell, S. C., Nov. 22, 1927. G. ARTHUR EVANS, ANGUS PATTERSON, , . Manager*. w.. Great Vacation « Jones was discussing vacation with his wife. M Doc Parsons tells me,” lie said, ‘‘that a separate vacation Is the best for married folk. We’ve been married now<for nearly twenty years. Think of what a change It would be for bdth of,us to get away alone—to •ee nothing but new faces. A^hange. a thorough change. Is what we re quire, Doc Parsons says.” Tn * T t l> Tery well, William, I consent, but on one condition—that yon make this change really thorough by jetting me go off on my vacation by myself and you take with you on yours the six children I haven’t had out of sight for ten years.” "Humph!” said Jones, and he pro ceeded to change the subject—Boston Transcript. A monument to Theodore Roose velt " will be erected above the Culebra Cut overlooking the Pan ama Canal. Roosevelt deserves the honor; the monument should be a fine one. All his interesting talk, advising women to have nineteen children, etc., will be forgotten. But the fact that he put through the Panama Ca-. nal will NOT be forgotten. In that he rendered his country great ser vice. ^ Old age is the night of life. “Work, for the night is coming when man’s work is done,” says the old hymn. For those that have not saved, age is a* dreary night. • *. San Francisco is expected to pet _ iheoivepuhliuan eiimeiilinir'nm Yearr with twenty-three national commit 1 ‘teemen now pledged. That is the place for the convention. Many im portant Republicans need to visit San Franriscft, learn something about the 1’htted States on the way, and some thing about national development af ter-they get there. a - — Chicago has found in Detroit a blonde beauty with long hair, and positively arranged yesterday to show a Lady ( jodi\ 1 ai last night’s Arts Ball Kosalm I Hightower, who will be Lady Godi\a. without horse, rode to Qncago from Detroit in an air- plane.ffand will pose it, a picture frame, hair and ail She sees noth ing immodest in a beautiful lady dressed only in her hair, and says; "To me a short fat woman in an ab breviated skirt is vulgar, the human body is a thing of beauty.” Berlin scientists have created the coldest spot on earth, producing in laboratory experiments a temperature 459 degrees below xero. Outside our atmosphere, in mys terious spaces separating solar sys tems from each other, there exists "absolute zero.” On our Fahren heit thermometer that would be 46l degrees below zero, space without heat. At such a temperature the prop erties of matter change. Metals lose resistance to electricity and become supra-conductors. A thin thread of mercury will carry enough electricity to light several hundred lamps. He lium, the gas used in our dirigibles, becoi^es liquid a few degrees above absolute zero. In that terrible cold molecules in matter lose their mo tion. which may account for their greater clcctri^ pendp 1 '* First abstract science, then useful appreciation. Practical men may find a way to create in metals, apart from any absolute 7*ero temperature, con ditions similar to those that abso lute zero creates. Tjiat would make possible -transportation of electric current without cost or loss, and solve the problem of cheap power. Development of “Spec*” Aristophanes speaks of the burnings glass, Pliny mentions solid balls of rock* crystal, and Seneca describes tlieir use by engravers. In A. D. 150 Claudius Ptolemaeus wrote a treatise on optics, but after these early times It is ditlicult to trace the history of the eyeglass' fofover a thousand years until, In the Eleventh century, Al- hazan, the Arabian, wrote with consid erable knowledge on the subject. The monks ground up rock crystal Into lenses and so Introduced the fore runner of the monbcle, which was fol lowed by a kind of lorgnette with V- shaped supports, but glasses devel oped into something like their present form about COO years ago. I Summer Cloud* As a rule the clouds of midday, seen on a clear day, known as cumu lus clo&ds, have a well-marked straight base. As the ground and the air near est It begin to warm, the warmed air rises Into the higher, cooler regions. SEND US YOUR ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING. panslon against the colder air about it, some of its moisture is condensed, forming a cloud. As by continuing ascent more of the stream of air comes in the region of condensation the cloud build* up higher. The base ot the cloud remains at the height where cchdensatlon begins, which height continues about the same. Mr. Haldeman-Julius, of Kansas, whose daughter is just Jrying a “companionate marriage”' experi ment, tells the world that his daugh ter was born six years before he, — Haldcman-lulius, her father, was married. II? didn’t have m* ncy to ret up hous •keeping, but . the dear little girl was bom anyhow. ' 'That is interesting,——TTTt’jsual. Lcona-!o da Vinci, second in great ness among all artists, was born out side of marriagc. 'Jtis father and mother never married. He supported his’ “legitimate,” respectable high born liaji bro^ier.1 and sisters. William the Conqueror was born before h s fa h r married the inter esting gi d w’ tn he fi-st saw* wash ing cl th.es in a brook as he rode past with his warriors. But all that doem’t change the fact that rfarriage is better than lack of marriage. .MarriSgc will not go out of fa-hion. It wi!+“persist until men become worthy of an institution at present too good for many of them. RHEUMATISM While in France with the American Army I obtained a noted French pre- where, cooled mainly by Its own ^x-1 scription for the treatment of Rheu matism and Neuritis. I have given this to thousands with wonderful re sults. The prescription cost me noth ing. I ask nothing for it. I will mail it if you will send me your address. A postal will bring it. Write today. PAUL CASE, Dept. M-206, \ Brockton, Mom. -r t—r . >-r Body by Fnher K ghakc this Shristmas last for thousands of milts . Buick for 1928 combines exquisite beauty i with unmatched get-away, power and "X handling ease. Step into our showroom today and select the model which is best suited to your family’s needs. Pay on the liberal G. M. A. C. time payment plan. We’ll make delivery on Christmas day—or whenever you prefer. ^arpuickjor (Christmas Denmark Buick Co. Denmark, S. C. . 0 Money to Lend SEVERAL THOUSAND DOLLARS IN AMOUNTS $400.00 AND UP. APPLY TO Ninestein & Baxley BLACKVIJ.LE, SOUTH CAROLINA. OF LONG TERM MONEY to LEND ft figXJrnt inUrest on large wount Private funds for small Items. BROWN & BUSH LAWYERS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. MOTHER:-net- cher’s Castoria is es pecially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipa tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishnesai arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving bbalthy and natural sleep. To .,o«i *»**»,, llwiri look for tl* of Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians cm/whCTj fOBOffWItad # Try a Want Ad for Results i '■j m ■