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2 COLLEGE PRESIDENT ^ SPANKS HIS FATHER! N< hero E. A. Hanley of Franklin Criticlses His Parent. muc grea I ro? THEY ARE FRIENDS AGAIN cour I rupt I man rour Educator Said to Have .Acted After _\ny Alleged HI Treatment of His i ProP ilias Mother and Sister-in-I.aw. | takii lawv Terre Haute, Ind., Sept. 13.?Four tun', members of the Hanley family late Verv today were subpoenaed to appear be- gort fore the grand Jury here Monday the . morning to tell of the alleged assault to d made upon Calvin Hanley of Middle- j8SU( ton by his son. President E. A. Han- Gf tl ley, of Franklin College. Those sum- sort! moned were: President Hanley's Qf n mother, his sister, a brother, Oakley the Hanley, and the latter's wife. swoi President Hanley tonight arrived the i here from Indianapolis, where he have Issued a statement admitting that he ,\nd had switched and spanked his father, to b< He is a guest of the Rev. C. R. Par- a lo ker. a member of the executive over board of Franklin College. The Rev. are Mr. Parker In a brief statement said testi the executive board had full confl- wou dence In Dr. Hanley and that no half hasty action would he taken In the tire case. to a' Calvin Hanley was resting easy to- matt *ilcrV?t nnrl b 1 c dVivqIpIiti cnlr! bo (\ innnr not consider his condition serious. and Witnesses arc being summoned by to ti the Vigo county grand Jury, which pie j is investigating an attack made by whll President E. A. Hanley of Franklin get College. Ind.. upon his father, Calvin tech Hanley, at the latter's home at Mid- theii dletown. in the southern part of this ness county, last Thursday. I but ALLEGED ILL TREATMENT. It is understood the son switched and spanked his father because of pOSj alleged bad treatment of his mother drag ard sister-in-law. In resisting his enOT son the father fell against a window sill and was injured. that Oakley Hanley of Indianapolis, a are teacher, said at the father's home to- bust day that Dr. Hanley came here to loss have an understanding with his fath- hen( er concerning the treatment of the the wife and daughter-in-law. Dr. Han- poss ley demanded that his father apolo- dutj gize to his mother and to Oakley lmpi Hanley's wife for remarks and ac- to s< Hons accredited to him and he re- p fused. Wh; The son then proposed to whip him him as he had been whipped as a trip boy and proposed placing the father'beer on a lounge for that purpose. The the older man attempted to reach a gun coed in the corner, it is said, and in the new struggle fell, sustaining the injuries tailf reported. trai Dr. Hanley is one of the leading case educators of Indiana and a former tria! "Raptist minister. At one time he ting was pastor of the John D. Rocke- com teller church in Cleveland. Ohio. | It BURY THE HATCHET. ? Dr Hanley and his father were j f,'^r reconciled tonight when the son rjm, motored to his father's home. In the ..wo presence of the members of the fam ily the two embraced and asked ,|t j( mutual forpiveness. Accordinp to a j)ro, friend who witnessed tho mootlnp. J)00 th<> fnthor doolarod that ho had hoon sp},, spoiled by boine allowod to dlotnto anfj to othor members of his familv jnc Dr. TTanlov lator returned to Torro u ju, TTaute and dopartod on a Into train ,.rjn from Franklin. js r Whnt offoot tlio reconciliation will far( liavo upon tlio prnnd jury investipa- fror lion officials would not prodlot to- jM.n nlpht, although frionds of tho TTan- j loy familv doolarod tho aotion proh- f.m, ably markod tho rloso of tho Inol- j.-r;t dont whi E. A. TTanlov. prosidont of Frank- whi lin Collepe, who is horo today, in a hly slpned statomont. admittod that, ho j],',. had swltohod and spankod his fnthor ost: at. tho lattor's homo on account of wo? ill troatmont. of his mother. acci "For 2." yoars," said Professor Yor TTanlov, "T liavo kept my hands off of rou my father, hut when T learned that lie and had called my mother by an un- moi speakahle name and wished she were he Mn hell* I could not stand it any fina ion per. "I don't think I hurt him serious- . ly. T tried not to do so. I did not strike him with my fist nor did I use a club. I wanted to bo severe enouph to warn him for all future time, hut not violent, enouph to injure him." "**' The statement tells of an over- (> poworinp love of his mother, bitterly reprets the "sorrowful deed," professes love for his father in spite of 1 all, and wonders If his action in whippinp his father will destroy his l"a further usefulness. foo hen Sincere. in Chleapo Eedper. yoi To run n newspaper all a follow ute lias to do Is to ho able to write norms. discuss the tariff and monnv (.ip questions. nmnlrr a hasrhall prame. rrporf a wrddlnc, saw wood, describe a fire sr. that tlir rradrrs will shod j(,.j thrlr wrans. makf. *1 do thr worV ,tn, of ?10. Phlne at a danrr. mrasnrr or(] rallro, ahusr thr liquor habit, test mj, whisker. suhsrrlhr to rharltv. pro ^;il without mral" attack frrr silver, 0}lf wrar diamonds. Invrnt advertise- asfl mrnts, snrrr at snohhrrv, ovrrlook fo0 scandal. apnt'lse bahlrs. drllp'ht KO pumpkin ralsrrs. minister to thr afTllrtrd hral thr dlsrruntlrd flprht i to a finish, set type. mold opinions, 1 af.j swrrn thr office. spr>ak at thr pravrr frr. mrrtlnprs and stand In with rvrrv- to body and overythlnpr. Inn* Human Chronometer. Hi: Thr dotlnp' mother was tplllnc the bachelor nnclr about the won- ,'H d erf til baby. i *"7 "Oeorpre Is so repoilar In his |n li: hits," she said "TTe wakes up ! ')U: crvlnpr at eractlv twelve o'clock s,n everv nltrht." ' "A time bawl," snfd the bachelor ' uncle. d" & THE THE RICH AND CRIME. New No Penalty If They are Willing X! to Pay lawyer*. earn O., In Newberry Observer. of 1 o age nor station Is without its amo >es, and none without Its crlmi. One reason crime is more to der{ leplored among the rich than but ng the poor is that it costs so cupt h more. If there should be a runi t deal of crime among the rich, forn ?an of the sort that Is taken into er ( t, the states would be bank- , '?jr ed In trying them. To try a rich ] costs thousands of dollars to the iege itv in which the trial takes Dlace. sort of a trial is an expensive spe(, iosition, but when a defendant ^eac lots of money it is a big underng. His money buys high-priced $23i ers. who know every trick and m"a'^ of legal procedure, making It T^e, hard to convict in the plainest n of cases. They know how to "pull on wool over tho eyes" of jurors and equ. ivert the attention from the main ?, which is the guilt or innocence turi] he defendant, and bring in all ? of side issues which are really gjri< 0 consequence except to befuddle acqi jury. Hundreds of witnesses are rn and testify to things that, to tf>ar average lay mind, do not seem to catj, 1 the slightest bearing on the case. jiaV( yet the Judge on tho bench seems j e helpless and sits like a knot on , g while the lawyers wander all ' creation. Hundreds of witnesses i sworn and volumes of alleged ! mony are taken in caso where it Som Id look to the common m'.nd that a day would suffice to sift the en- : i matter from top to bottom and rrlve at the absolute truth of the wit' :er: and it would in the case of a . o fellow on trial. Day and weeks in sometimes months, are required *y a case, the expense to the peopiling up tremendously all the e: and the minds of the Jurors And so befogged with side issues and | nlealities that they hardly know Som r own names. Lawyers abuse wttes and sometimes one another? I "In a plckwlcklan sense gcner" and the lawyers for the den lnmhnct thp nrnopniUnn Pnn. nru > ? of v It take* place between op- ! ng counsel; and so the case Q-eJ ;s Its slow length along till the | mlty of the crime is forgotten In j afc great mass of extraneous rubbish i Is brought Into the case. Cases And spun out so Ion* that a man of of j ness often suffers very serious t0 when he has to sit on the Jury; The *e business men, who would make | best jurors, resort to every means Q'ei llble to get excused from Jury t r, and thus often leave the most | ortant cases to men who are glad a f r>rve for the sake of the per diem, j ut why does the Judge allow It? i 1 7, Indeed. Chiefly because back of sits a supreme court ready to son: him up and send back the case | iuro of some small deviation from porr strict legal technicality of the pro lings, and give the defendant a jn , trial, with all the horrible dei to be rehearsed again In a "new | I." And there have been so many jn s reserved or sent back for new I by supreme courts that it is getharder and harder every year to flct a defendant so It will stand. q.oj costs a lot of money to convict r-h criminal, even when the case is 11; so much that it may some day ire long become a question for se- ' s consideration whether It Is Kn rth the money." Hence it is a for- px(. ite thing, from one point of view ^ east, that the majority of persons ^ j iglit. before the courts for trial are j" ^ r men. and therefore unable to r< i out their trials to such length .s j at so much expense to the suffer- ' j public. It may lie a question . 1 ?ther the poorer class Is more .' linal than the richer; but there j'.'^ io question that this is a lucky ^ . considering the matter solely ^ n the standpoint of public or.- ^< r se. ust think of the cost to Fulton nty, Georgia, of the trial of Heo \<h nk. It looks like a plain case; by ch I mean, it looks 1 ik? a case In j < ii ;mi testimony mat couin possi- j f), boar on it could lio presented in oourso of a single day at furthebut it baa boon going on for 'j>m ks. Tho case of Harry K. Thaw, Sf.v :>rding to tho ostimat.o of tho Now k district attorney, cost tho j uty of Kings a million dollars; ^r< I the end is not yot. It costs lots of ney to try any rich man; and when (jaf is triod tho chances are that no ja0 illy goes free. (,^>r MEALS HIT HACK Ple AND STOMACH SOURS ^ _ ?|M-'s Dia|?cpsin" Knds Indigestion, w i??s, Dyspepsia and Stomach Misery in Five Minutes. f what you Just ate Is souring on :r stomach or lies like a lump of A 1 d, refusing to digest, or you belch i and eructate sour, undigested d, or have a fooling of dizziness, I ^ irtburn, fullness, nausaa, bad taste mouth and stomach, headache, ar' 1 can got blessed relief in five mln- wh s. ' bu \sk your pharmacist to show you acl formula, plainly printed on th< ;H" na y-eent cases of I'apo s Dlapepsln, n you will understand why dys- 1,0 >tic troubles of all kinds must go. eh< 1 why they relievo sour, out-of- 1 pil lor stomachs or Indigestion in five | mites. 'Tape's Dlapepsin Is,ti pmless: tastes like eandy, though h dose will digest and prepare for , mr imllatlon Into the Mood all the | >d you eat; besides, it makes you cai to the table with a healthy appe- ^ri ; but, what will please you most, Mj (hat you will feel that your stom- fr< i and Intestines are elean and do sh, and you will not need to resort an laxatives or liver pills for bilious- til is or constipation. c This city will have many 'Tape's Ht< ipepsln" cranks, as some people els 1 call them, but you will be en- Kr' islastlc about this splendid stom- tin 1 preparation, too. If you over ne :e It for Indigestion, gases, heart rn, sourness, dyspepsia, or any ce: mach misery. Nr fjet some now, this minute, and rid Ur urself of stomach trouble and Ingestion In Ave minutes. 2 an LANCASTER NEWS, SKPTEMB1 College Students' Earnings. | What is Yoi York World. Augusta Chro bat 500 Columbia students 1 ? VtJhl ied $120,000 toward their col- 1* expenses last year giveo an Idea P,ttBrnwui w, :he development of self-support wron__ _ ng college youths. The figures * t?i?cate average earnings of $240. del^,a Teleg ved In the main from tutoring, . yo?K gained also from such varied oc- J* up , ' itions as hotel clerk, elevator y p ler. renting agent, subway plat- eDj ^ ^ th) i man, leiepnone operator, wan- spend a he participation of girl students ^ar^heltrou 3arnard and the Teachers' Col- - * In self-supporting work and . P , r comparative Incomes havo a . .. lal Interest. One earned $125 ? von r vprv hlng modern languages during .. summer, while another cleared ' ,. f .. B as a stenographer, and a third . ronn u* e $247 as a restaurant cashier, evoke gloom. f?e earnings approximate to those 8U?P?cion. lale students and have a bearing ^.jjy no* the question of "equal pay for , ?,?noi il work." of *ratltude hey Illustrate also the larger re- K'^en you? is of commercial pursuits. Will \?u ay practical experience of college K00d8> , ' 1 . ?i.,? ? ,ho|r received thf S III llltl IV IllfC* ft II * ill Fy ouu VI1CII . 1 t .. latnlanre with the actual condi- , . * s of work tend to turn them from ha? smlk hlng and other professional vo- waIlr the J1 ons to business? They already Look hack 5 the example of male students ;'ou not nfluence them. thp a't( merit or efTc have done? WHEN THE TIDE IS l/OW. | Take, the thought a si e time at even when the tide Is good things v low and be thank shall slip my moorings and sail to show forth away, fulness In kli h no response to the friendly hall Do not fo f kindred craft on the busy bay, have come 1 the silent hush of the twilight good, and In pale, beneficence y r'hen the night stoops down to little from th embrace the day, your thought! the voices call In the water's ed, and In th flow, freedom and ie time at eve when the tide Is Try this to low? er, and see 1 shall slip my moorings and sail not the bettei away. Refers to S< ough purple shadows that darkly Kansas City trail At a teachc the ebbing tide of the Unknown |jc Horary on ?fta' on the subji ia.ll fare me away with a dip of Scatterbraln ' aa,11 # . ??,???.?? Serious Stude a ripple of waters to tell the tale courRG( ]0 no i luuuiy vuyftRci ooih"p? a"your own bw< mystic Isles, where at anchor lay craft of those who have sailed strength before I Don't euffe the Unknown Sea to the l'n- kidneys. Tot seen shore. by taking Ele derful remed 'ew who have watched me sail everywhere. away day, you will 1 miss my craft from the btisy woman with i bay, out fear of pi ic friendly barks that were anch- Df gan Fran ored near, , tude for the ie living souls that my heart held Electric Bltte dear. It cured my ' dlent sorrow will drop a tear. ed." Good I shall have peacefully furled Nothing bett? my sail biliousness, moorings sheltered from storm Lancaster Ph and gale. Drug Compar I greeted the friends who have sailed before ^ the Unknown Sea to the Unseen uj^j| icourage Kindness in I bildren. I I I hange. H H i [indness Is one of the habits that stent in every normal child. It :t be encouraged, and you may be E|j j , that the child that is kind to 0 ; [T nal? and birds will be considerate lis treatment of persons. There ilwovs something Interesting in {^< ? nals' Children love anything with gl 9 and if taught to care for birds. H I I or animals there will bo a certain jfj 0 1 ngth of responsibility that makes & Q y /.Iviroftf.r Es B rertised letter*! For Wwk Kiulini; Sf'|ih'inlM*r 'Jo. 1013. ) R. Webb, Mrs. Annie Thomers, is Trusdel, Miss Lillle Anderson. H s Henretter Simans, S. W. rues, F. F. Robinson, Walter Mov. Miss F.ub Hanaid, James Maa, Miss Marie Mark, Jes Myers, att Coleman, Che Fuesale, Mrs. jfSKSBSfiSjS ner MoManus, G< orge Ann Lowry, *. Geo. Jacobs, Mi>s Hattte Lee, is Marley Henson, Miss Jannle A (ton, Mrs. Emma Chrlslel, Willie kson, Sarah Alsebrooks, Alexan- i Adl. i rVhen calling for above letters ase say "Advertised." J AS. F. HUNTER. Postmaster. HEN HER BACK ACHES ( T IVoinan Finds AH Her Energy and a Ambition Slipping Away. f Fancaster women know bow the * ies and pains that often come pt en the kidneys fail make life a rden. Raekache, hip pains, beadpells, distressing urlry troubles, are frequent indlca- > k kidn vs and should be 1 " eeked in time. Doan's Kidney Is are for the kidneys only. They ark kidney disease by striking at R 3 cause. Here's proof of their R rlt in a Lancaster woman's words: t( Mrs. W. M. Barton, Main St., Lan" ^ 1'' n I ~>t(T, S. l Buys. -U..- .vU ? ? eat deal from kidney complaint. lk r back ached and the secretlonH B 4 >m my kidneys were unnatural. I , V " cton d and tried one remedy after i other, but 1 was not benefited un- 1 f", I used Doan's Kidney Pills, pro- 1 ^ red from Crawford Rros.' Drug 1 >re. They lived up to all the 1 m ilmn made for them, giving me 1 eat relief Don's Kidney Pills are % ? a best remedy I know of for kid- % y complaint." m For sale by all dealers. Price 50 % nti. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, 1 ;w York, sole agents for the 1 lltfld States. ' Remember the name?Doan's? , d take no other. *? ' ?.,.r , mih ER 16, 1913 &r Morning Thought? j nicle. Sprtngfl ur morning thought? | 3h of all of yesterday's ' The Is it a continuance of T ? a herein you brood over chec*B you? asks The Phlla- me.nt ? land th? ' tlnn -1 ike In the morning to ? >urden of spite, where- 'nte the downfall of an ha8 experlei Ings are true, then you c miserable day. Things g with you. You will althoug bled brow of anger, and ?tho uely sks l go draggingly, and bearing will engender ? seord. Ugly looks will a?ree ;ly looks. Gloom will . . Suspicion will beget lange all this? ware ho* ave a morning thought ,t. for all that has been tarlff la )e poor In this world's f? nevertheless, you have ? kindly greeting of J0 d ' j raclous arch of the blue jnto id down on you as you rt of arrow street. Import? upon your life. Have la t led and cared for all creaso ?r a fashion which no ve, ?rt of your own could jQW 'Ft0 . 1 quiremi n, for your morning forc<> <n imming up of all the ajmo9t hlch have come to you. SOVeresi ful for them and ready veflJ and pass on that thankidness and good cheer. .. ." " rcrnt that thpQP thines llrei. rrotn the Giver of all *"<1 thinking of that loving ou will escape Just a f^ts at cell of clay In which ' ' i have formerly revolvis way know a greater harmony. *. morrow morning, read- ..... f all day Ions you are r ,or 11 wealth . . a9 OUI" r>mebody Else s Child. over ta Star. pean ci srs' meeting In the pub- prepare e of the addresses was 1 ean m set, "How to Tartn a, Their t Imp of Mischief Into a English >nt." The reference, of run jn t Intended to apply to tomed et, angel-faced cherub. not ^ ?? ? but no en Weak Kidney*. ket Is ir longer with weak export j can get prompt relief while, 1 >ctric Bitters, that won- thing, y praised by women I enormo Start with a bottle to- i recent soon feel like a new ambition to work, wlthiln. Mr. John Dowling cisco, writes: "Gratlwonderful effect of Lifers prompts me to write. Mrs. wife when all else fall- ?"Lon for the liver as well, buy wll ?r for Indigestion or i Vast! Price 60c and $1.00 at, it, my armacy and Standard I founc 7. I the anc Xt-w MODEL 5 ]| G fj y rwo-color Ribbon; tack Spacer; Tabulaor; Tilting Paper B 3 jf ^ ? 'able; Hinged Paper "ingers and other New fi jj | * eaturea. ^ ^ j| __ nffBl iflflCa ^wssssssss^msm^^m 1 NEW MOD Rg]| rHE Royal always is a new model \ Krvi if Tx? /\ * rr* I A \ /-? ^1 ^^1 C uuui ivwy ai O apher, every up-to-d ratur* /. TWO-COLOR RIBBOP The only one that insures perfect twoover-lapping of colors impossible. tature 2. TABULATOR. An impoi ment, perfected with usual Royal sir future 3. BACK SPACRR. Touch tl riage draws hack one space. A poj And so on through all the poi the one perfect visible writer; the i Loyal type-bar accelerating princip > he the greatest single invention typewrite and mar A O ^ w. * Wc * > ?!1 \ .a fully pnn ruarantce / net "th. 1 the Royal Standard Typewnter M Dp, nAde of the highest grade ma- M ta!a obtainable and by the I dcmonstr oat sluUlul workmen money M a severe ti an hire. I rhat it will do work of the M * beat quality for a greater M length of btne at |&} ea- M penae tor upkeep than M any other typewriter.1 m regardleaa of prate. m Ma ^ soiat. rrnwinu matron ] Fall Trade Prospect*. . STATE ME eia iujpuuiirun. indications for an active fall Tiff? CAD re excellent in spite of such inGrfllV to confidence as the impair- located a( f harvest prospects in corn cioge Qf t ? long delay in tariff legislate Influx of buyers from the Loans as Into New York this month Overdrafti orally surpassed all previous Furniture nee, according to the testl- Due froi >f wholesale houses and the Bankeri Buying is on a liberal scale. Currency, h representatives from the Gold.. .. ?stem drouth district are con- Silver anc re in limiting orders to Im- Coin.. ? necessities. Various can- Checks ai >f sentiment among merchants ferent parts of the country Total., n reporting expectations of ictivity. Striking confirms- Capital SI these reports is to be found Surplus F tendency to draw imported Undivided ind materials from bonded Current uses in New York without Taxes F for the enactment of the new Dividends iw. Demands for imports are Individual sing that many mercantile ject to prefer to stand the loss of Time Cer anticipated from holding the posit. . n bond until the lower duties Certified ( effect. The government re- Cashier's 1 the July foreign trade shows Notes an< i of merchandise the second counted in amount on record, the de- Bills Payi from the hieh record of Julv i Parttfloi ir being bvit $6,385,000. Only Borrow cks and the Imperative resents of domestic trade could Total., iports on this scale in a month STATE O Immediately preceding the Coun t cuts In tariff duties made in Before "8- Cashier o ctlve fall trade would be en- who, belt onsistent with tariff revision the above th the partial failure of the Is a true op. Inasmuch as the Injurious shown by 3f those disturbances are more :o be felt later on than this Sworn i. It has been realized all me this 1 that stocks of manufactured vere low In this country, after ost bountiful harvest year Correct? In American history, which t over $9,000,000,000 in new from the soil. Apprehensive manufacturers may have been riff reductions, their Euro ompetltors are by no means jf,e g >d as yet to invade the Ameri- OROVR ST/ arket on a formidable scale, blood, buiidi rade at home has been good; derinity *tre i trade especially continues to the depre?ai heavy volume In its accus- . channels. German trade is pa.j.. good, particularly In metals, ? German dumping In this mar- Premh Imminent. Our own foreign N? ?.? trade In manufactures, mean- as inform s like to be stimulated, If any- guarantee by tariff reduction, and how Daily < us this trade has become in No. Ill vears needs no emphasis. Hill and 1 No. Ill Columbia Mistake. No. ID Columbia, tlons. Vastlee Rich( sentimentally) No. 11' igfellow says: 'We cannot Hill, York th gold the old associations.' " Charlotte, lee Rich?"Don't you believe and New dear. When I was in politics W. E. ] 1 that cash would purchase bia, S. C. ientlst organization on earth." Charlestoi >EL of the N^jj| j 'xrl KkM ?S HffS^ bu* j has been abreast with th< vhicb places it far in the 1 ?every office manager, e> late typewriter user ! >4 DF.VICE. convenient in billing, tabi color writing} feature 4. TILTING PA PP.* on Royal?gives instant ar< rtant improve- tabulator stops; a time-saver nplicity. Feature 5. HINGED PAPF. tie key and car- feature, exclusive with Koi ntlar feature? extreme of either edge of p; nts of Royal supremacy?the direct vision special facilities for quick and easy handlin le, famous among typewriter men, a fcatur since typewriters began. The Royal is rs for durability, for ease and speed of oper lifolding power. rite or 'Phone for "The Ro the finest pieces of typewriter literature ever issu ted and illustrated, and above all, interesting. It ; Royal Book," whether you are in immediate net id our Guarantee! That is the basis ii| ate the Royal to you. All we ask is an opportuni est in your own office on your own work, alongside is the price of Model 5?same as charge* ^ 4 O with Tabulator. Everything included. .ancastcr Publishing C Bank No. m :nt op the condition of w MERS BANK & TRUSTCO ^ : Lancaster. 8. C.. at th? lusiness August 9th, 191S. RESOURCES, d Discounts. . 9141,249.lt i l,98t.9T and Fixtures 2,875.09 n Banks and i 20,309.lt 3,673.09 9.42.59 1 Other Minor 126.69 id Cash Items 603.39 9171,666.09 LIABILITIES. Lock Paid In.. 9 60,000.00 'und 1.260.00 Profits, less . Expenses and 'aid 3,898.74 Unpaid.. .. 12.00 i Deposits SubCheck 16,396.lt tlflcates of De 10,088.17 Checks 10.09 Checks 10.69 1 Bills Redis1 10,000.09 able, including ites for Money ed 80,000.00 9171,666.00 F SOUTH CAROLINA, ty of Lancaster?ss. me came W. H. Mlllen, r tbe above named bank, ig duly sworn, says that > and foregoing statement condition of said bank, aa the books of said bank. W. H. MILLEN. to and subscribed before 5th day of August, 1913. W. P. ROBINSON, Notary Pnblle. Attest: ? W. T. OREOORT, < A. B. FERGUSON, W. P. BENNETT, , Director*. est Hot Weather Tonic ISTBLKSS chill TONIC enriches the i up the whole aralem and will wonagthen and fortify you to withatand ag affect of the hot lummer. 50c. lies Southern Railway. rr Carrier of the South. -Schedule figures published lation only and are not d. Effective Sept. 16, 191S. leparture from Lancaster: I?10:06 a. m. for Rock way stations. J? :31 a. m. "or Camden, and way stations. 1?1:46 p. m. for Camden, , Charleston and way ste7?7:48 p. m. for Rock :vllle and wa- stations. Also Washington. Philadelphia York. McGee, A. G. P. A., Colum; W. H. Caffey, D. P. A., a, S. C. mnrmTiml /al Tvji^writor H fk at Hartford Conrv StosR i aaWr. the Royal is on? of th? id most important typcnufacturing concerns in with unlimited resources e ability, offering erery ' of dealing with a highmess Institution. ^ best; here ead. Read /cry stenog dating or correcting. I I AHI.F. Found only :e s to all margin and and great convenience. K MNCJHR9. This , >al, permits writing to I a per. of writing, making g of the paper, the e which is admitted he mari'el among all atio.i, for alignment yal Book" ed. 32 pages, heauti- I i is important that you I d of a machine or not. pon which we want to ty to give this machine of any other machine. J for lvfodel 1 <v No extrxa. >o., Agent H '