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PROPER CARE OF THE LAWN Grass Plat Must Never Be Neglected If Home ls to Have a Proper Appearance, t _____ One of the most important duties on the home place during the summer is the care of the lawn. There ls nothing about a place that makes so much for general attractiveness as a well cared for lawn. Many people make the mistake of "keeping the lawn cut too close. In that case the grass roots are exposed to hot sun and drying winds during the summer. Cut the lawn frequently, but do not set the machine too close. To keep the lawn looking clean at all times have a grass-catcher attachment on the mower. A careful watch for weeds on the lawn should be kept Cut them out well below the surface with an old knife as soon as they are large enough to be seen. A roller on the lawn ls advisable, but it should be used with care. Lawns that have been rolled tor a long time are likely to become over-rolled; there ls surface cohesion or close packing of the top soil, which prevents the admission of air and healthy root development. The remedy is the use of the spiked tamper. A home-made one may be made by taking a piece of. two-inch plank, some 12xl2-inch tim ber and inserting four-inch spikes an inch and a half or two inches apart Bore holes a little smaller than the spikes before driving them in, to pre vent splitting the wood. Perforate the whole surface thoroughly with this, give a top dressing, lightly rake lt in and water the whole thoroughly j late in the afternoon. HAVE TOP SASH SCREENED i . May Be Considered Small Matter, But ! ls Always Advisable-Advice for Prospective Builder. Don't forget that you may at some, ! time want to open the top sash of the window, and that flies and mosquitoes I are not particular as to through which bash they enter; therefore have the screen run from top to bottom of the window; to do this, side springs will be necessary in the screen frames, but they will cost little more than a screen which can be used only from the bot tom sash and which ls little better than no screen at all. Don't forget that there will never be B better time to build than the press ent; materials of all kinds are cheap er than they have been for several years, ard as soon as the European war is over there ls ?ure to be a shar p advance tn prices. Don't say you can't build now be cause you have not enough money; if you have a little, the co-operativo banks and building associations will loan you the balance needed upon terms under which you can pay for tho house In monthly installments which would be no more than you would or* dinarily be paying for rent-Ex- j change. The City Beautiful. A one-time mayor of New. York, George B. McClellan, said: "In a l leif-governing community, the -ul- ! timate object of the government is the j isppiness of the governed. Something j oaore is needed to make the happy j Hty than health and,stealth and wis- j dom. The -city healthy, tte city j wealthy, and the city wise, may excite Satisfaction, complaisance and pride! ?it it is the city beautiful that com pels and retains the love of people." When, last the tree men of the South, met at Riverside, in the music room Of the famous Glenwood Mission inn, an illuminated sign stretched across the stage, which read: "Make your city beautiful and you will learn to love it" Standards for Electric Service. A representative of the United States bureau of standards has been i ta conference with the public-service commissions and managers of public- , service corporations in various parts I of the country. The Information BO obtained has been used in preparing ! the bureau's forthcoming circular on .".Standards for Electric Service." An- ; ether representative of the bureau spent the entire month in the South, making measurements of street il-1 iumination and electric current in the j ftreet-lightlng systems of a number I of cities and towns, The results of ! the investigation will form the basis j ti a circular on street lighting. Ute Only Fire-Resisting Material. There has been established in Cleve land, O., a society whose object ls to disseminate "information on the safe, sane and sanitary building of mod erate-priced houses. This society rec ommends only such building materials j as will resist the action of the ele-1 m en ts, thus reducing to a minimum the fire hazard. Shads Tree? Improve Property. It h?s Been estimated "that within the cities of New York state there are 20,000 miles of streets capable of sus taining z. growth of 5,000,000 shade trees, which can be made worth $100,? 000,000 in increased property value. "GOB, THE FATHER Words of Scripture Convey Mes sage of Truth to All Who Will Read and Heed. Science shows us that all souls are alike. It has studied millions of souls in every part of the earth and it finds them exactly the same in their facul ties of knowledge, feeling and wilJing. Men may differ in color, in language, in size, in ability, but they don't dif fer as men. If one of them came from a certain original source, all of them must have come from the same original source, which proves that the Father of souls is the Father of all souls, and therefore the All-Father or the Universal Father. Science also shows that all souls are going" through the same discipline. No matter where we travel, we will find sin and sorrow, light and dark ness, pain and hardship, and all the other things that try men's souls and turn them out rugged and divine in character. This.being so, does it not prove that God takes an interest, and the same kind of an interest, in all men? H? is doing for all exactly what he is doing for each, and he is doing for each exactly what he is doiiig for all. This is another proof of his uni versal Fatherhood and a display of his partiality and favoritism. Sci ence will allow no religious sect; to monopolize God, any more than it will allow one part of the world to monopolize gravitation. Gravitation ls a universal law-everywhere found and everywhere alike. God is a uni versal Father, everywhere present and everywhere alike. Father of All Mankind. When we take the great-vislc ned characters of the Bible-Jesus and Paul-we find them united in be iev ing God to be the Father of all man kind. Hear Jesus: "When ye j ray say, Our Father." The "our" is an inclusive and not an exclusive Vro noun. Jesus authorized and made lt possible for every human being in this world to lift up his voice and nay: "Our Father, who art in heaven." Hear St Paul. He ls speaking to the Greeks at Athens. They are not yet concert led to Christianity, so that it cannot be replied that he is speaking to Christian Greeks. He says: 'God that made the world and all things therein. . . . hath made of one blood all nations of men, for to dwell on all the face of the earth. . . . In him we live and move and bave our being; as certain of your own po ets have said, For we ara also his offspring." There you have the doc trine of the universal Parenthood of God from Christ's chief aposcle and the greatest Christian preacher and missionary the world has ever known. It it hard for some people to come to this. They are as strangely deter mined not to believe lt as was Sinon Peter. But he had to come to lt and so will they. God sent Pete* a dream, a kind of heavenly parable, in which he told him to eat certain things that Peter, as a Jew, had al ways thought he had no religious right to eat. He thought that -.hey were unclean and were condemned by God himself. But God told hint to e?t them. In other words, he Com manded him to broaden out and to see that what God had cleansed could not be unclean, and also to see that no one whom God had created could be alien to God and should not be allen to him. Peter opened his ?yes and'said: "Of a truth I perceive that .God is no respecter of persons, but (n every nation he that feareth nina and worketh righteousness is accept able to him." (Acts 10:34.) You und I and everyone in Christendom and In the rest of the world should wake up and see and know and believe in the universal Fatherhood of God. I'or this is? the latest and highest discov 3ry the soul has made concerning God, the grandest discovery it can possibly make. He is not only a Father,.but a world-wide* Father, r True Christianity. Christianity, as Christ taught it is the only religion in the world that proclaims the universal Fatherhood of God, and is therefore the only re ligion that can bring about the univer? sal brotherhood of man. If you do not believe this doctrine, you have stopped short in your search for a Father, and have got a Father who ie altogether too small and too provln cia! in influence to save the multitu dinoas Inhabitants of this globe. He must be an All-Father, to save all. And this is the purpose and program dear to his heart, if I read the Bible aright and science aright The Bible says "that in the name of Jesus Christ every knee should bow, of things, in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ ts Lord, to the glory of bou. the Father." (PML 2:10, 22.) One God, one law. one element And one far-off Divine event. To which the whole creation moves. Entering Into Reward. We have been placed upon the way We have been t?tigst the truth. We have been made partakers of the life. The way must be traversed; the troth must be pursued; the life must be realized. Then cometh the end. Our pilgrimage, long as it may be or short. If we have walked in Christ will leave us by the throne of God; our partial knowledge, if we have looked upon all things in Christ, will be lost in open sight; our little lives, perfected purified, harmonized in him wfeom we have treated, will become, in due or der, parts of the one divine life, when God is all in all.-Westcott TO HEAL THE SOUI ft _ Impossible to Misunderstand th Purpose for Which Jesus Came to Earth. After all, our Lord's1 supreme pul pose was to be a healer of souls. Hat the Pharisees understood that he wa a healer, they would not have bee surprised to find him among publican and sinners. But they Judged Jesu by themselves. They expected hit to have the same prejudices, the sam narrowness and the same contemp for the socially and morally d?grad?e Men are apt to make' their own fee! lngs the standard of moral judgment We common people have eternal re! sons for thankfulness that Jesus Chris did not come as a priest, or a philost pher, with the proud, narrow contemp often characteristic of those who bea these titles; but that he came as healer of souls, with broad, warm syn pathies and with an abiding faith 1: all classes of men. This exposed hil to the censure of his contemporariet but has earned for him the gratitud' and love of all later ages. That Christ came into the world a a healer ol! souls has many lesson for us. It means, in the first place that Christianity is before all things ? religion of redemption. Its prone vocation is to lift the low, to raise tb fallen, to teach the ignorant the wa; of life, to set free those bound by st perstition, to cleanse the moral lepe and to heal those who are spirituall; sick. There is in the natural heart of maj a terrible selfishness and cruelt; which causes men to thrust the weal to the wall, and often to trampl savagely on the fallen. Hounds bit? their sick brother in the kennel, am the wolves tear the wounded one o the pack. ' Among savage ^ tribes th? aged, the sick and the injured wer* often killed or left to die. In polishe< Greece and imperial Rome chlldrei were exposed and slaves were merci lesBly tortured. Christ taught th< world that lihis cruelty and hardnesi of heart were earthly and devilish. H< taught us once and for all the sr.cred ness, not only of fine gifts and brillian intellects, but the sacredness of mai as mah. He saw the soul of beaut] in things ugly, and the possible good ness in things evil. Few That Are Whole. ' "They that are whole need not i physician," tiaid Jesus. Are there an] whole? We find many people who like the Pharisees, consider themteivei whole and certainly not in need of f . physician. Perhaps you and I cranl ourselves among the number/^ftc need no help, who are perfectly1 s<ife fled with our own morality. But th? day will come when we stand revealed to our own sight in all our unworthi ness, and we realize that the cancel of sin has been eating at our verj heart Some day we will understand what Christ told the Pharisees, thal God will have mercy and not sacri fice. Since Ghrist's supreme purpose In coming was to heal souls, then lt fol lows that his place was among the publicans and sinners. They sneered at him that day because he sat down at table in Matthew's house with those who were socially ostracized and mor ally tainted. But if the Gospel of .Je sus Christ is a saving gospel, then lt must go where it finds those who need It the most. When the church forgets that, lt ceases to be the true church of the Good Physician?--There ls some truth in the reproach which has been directed at the church at different times, that it has catered to the well and the well to do. But I believe that that time has to a great extent passed, and that of late years the church has been entering into a fuller appr?cia* tion of the spirit of th?? Master who ministered unto the world's leprosy, who healed the lame, the halt and the blind spiritually as well as physically, and who preached the Gospel unto the poor. Love Always. First In this story of the Good Physician 'here is a great comfort for us all. Christ's way with sinners was to love them and to believe in their re coverability. -He went among the out? casts and healed them, and it should be to us an object lesson in the possi bility of a restored humanity. When we preach the Gospel to men, we there by announce our faith in the Divine something in them which will respond to the Divine message which we bring ?hem. That is why Christianity is al? ways optimistic, and that is why the church should always be optmistic, having an abiding faith in the prog' ress and power of the Gospel. Jesus said, "Lo, I am with you alway," and is his love any less than when he walked the earth, and ls his power .any less than when be healed the tinner* of Palestine? "Cleanse thou, me from secret faults," waa the cry of David of old. He knew the heart of man, ind he knew his own heart This prayer finds an echo in every life. We are an con scious of sins which are hidden from the world, and some of which are al most hidden from ourselves. We are conscious of the wild beast within, which some day, we fear, win break forth. Our great shas have their secret antecedents. The dari: tragedies of life are not Isolated happenings. They are the outcomes of tbs deadly dis eases of sin which has- been secretly gnawing at our characters; Wen may we go to the Good Physician and plead with him for help, aad let us remem ber that ne never falls in his treat' ment He ts able to- savcv even to ibr uttermost PROCLAMATION. ?State of South Caro!ina--Ex ?^utive Department. j. WHEREAS, heretofore petitions have been filed with the Governor of this State and signed by more than one-third di the qualified electors of certain portions of Abbeville, Green wood and Edgrefield Counties propos ed to be cut off ro form a new coun ty styled and called McDume Coun ty s nd embraced within the follow ing lines, to-wit: 2. Beginning at a point on the South Carolina-Georgia line in the Savannah River, opposite the mouth of Coffer Creek, thence a straight line, N. 45 degrees E. 25,7?8 feet to the forks of roads at Riley's; thence, ; the public road, in an easterly direc- ? tion to Island Ford Bridge over Little River; thence, continuing 6,978 feet to, the fork of the road; thence, turning to the east, following th?1 right hand road to the south fork of Little River, known as White's Creek; thence, a straight line S. 85.degrees, 30 minutes E. 28,800 f?et to a point in the near Clatworthy's I cross roads; thence, a straight line N. ! 78 degrees, 15 minutes. E. ?5,700 feet to a point on the G reen wood-Abbeville county line; in a southerly direction to its intersection with the C. & W. C. Railway, about one mile south of Troy; thence, a straight line north 58 degrees east 5,000 feet. to" a stake, south of the incorporated limits of Troy; thence, a straight line N. 46 degrees E. 19,659 feet to a stake on the Abbeville, Edge field public road; thence, the said Ab beville, Edgefield public road in a southerly direction to a road opposite the Jabe Stone place; thence, N. 44 degrees, 30 minutes E. 7,200 feet to a stake; thence, a straight line S. 83 de grees E. 13,361 feet to a stake near or at Callison's old mill on Cuffytown Creek;' thence, up the run of said creek to the Callison-Kirksey township line; thence, the said township line in an easterly direction to the Martintown road; thence, the said Martintown road in a southeasterly direction to the Green wood-Edgefield county line; thence, the said Greenwood-?dgefield county*rtne in a westerly direction to a stake about one quarter of a mile west of the old White place; thence, a 9traight line south 13 degrees East 10,978 feet to a stake; thence, a straight line S. 77 degrees W. 3,750 feet to a stake; thence, a straight line S. 13 degrees E. 8,522 feet to a pine; thence, a straight line S. 35 degrees 45 minutes E. 20,400 feet to Cochran Bridge on Turkey Creek; thence, a stright line S. 26 de grees 30 minutes E. 16,800 feet to a point where a branch crosses a public road; thence, a straight line S. 59 de grees 30 minutes W. 27,908 feet to the run of big Stevens Creek; thence, down the run of Big Stevens Creek to a stake; thence, a straight line S. 50 degrees W... 22,826 feet to the South Carolina-Georgia State line in the Sa vannah River; thence, the said South Carolina-Georgia State line in a north erly direction to the beginning point. 3. Whereas, the boundaries of the proposed new county, tne number of inhabitants, the taxable property, as ,well as alli other requirements of the Constitutibn and Statutes have b?en' found and are as set forth in said peti tion. 4. Whereas, the report of the com missioners, appointed to ascertain the facts as provided for by law constitu tion and statutes as to area, distance, wealth and population and shape, et cetera, are complied with and are as stated in the petition, has been filed in this office, wherein it appears that the law has been fully complied wi til in every particular, which is hereby con firmed. 1 5. Whereas, no election had been held upon said petition in said area upon the question of the formation of such new county, upon the name there of &nd the location of the county seat j therein. 6. Whereas, under the Constitution J and laws of thia State the petitioners are entitled to have ordered and it is I made the duty of the Governor of the ' State to order an election in said area1 upon said questions. 7. Whereas, an opportunity to be, heard was given to both . proponents and opponents of said proposed new county, and proponents or the new : county and their counsel appeared in response to said notice, and some writ ten communication in opposition there to was received and considered but no person appeared in opposition thereto. ! 8. NOW THEREFORE, I, Rich I. Manning, as Governor of the State of South Carolina, by virtue of the power conferred upon me by the Constitution and laws of this State do hereby order: That an election be held in the terri tory embrazed within the proposed new county on the second Tuesday, the 14th day of December, A. D., 1915, upon the question of creating the said new county and that at such election the qualified electors within the proposed area shall vote upon said question, those favoring the proposed, new coun ty to vote "yes" and those opposed to ? vote "no." 9. That the Corn missioners of State and County elections of the Counties of Abbeville, Greenwood, Edgefield ? respectively make all necessary ar rangements for holding said election and shall appoint managers and do all ! things necessary for the holding of the same. 10. That the Commissioners of Elec tion of each of said counties shall have prepared printed tickets as provided for in Se :tion 236 in the Code of Laws, 1912, Vol. 1, as amended by an act passed by the General Assembly at its special session in 1914, and approved the 30th day of Oct, 1914, said act be- j ing No. 6 -in the act? of said special session; and the said commissioner shall furnish the same to the managers of election for the use of the voters at said election. The forra of the ticket j shall be as follows; . Form of Ballot, Special election upon the question of the formation of a new county out of Abbeville, Edgefield and Greenwood Counties, held DecemherT4?h. 1915. 1 Shall the new county be formed? Yetv * # No. What shall be its name? ? " here shall the county seat be- lo- I cated? j H. That at said election the question j of a name and a county seat for said proposed new county shall also be sub- , mitted to the said qualified electora. j 12. That said election shall be held i and conducted under thesame rules and regulations as provided for by law for regular and general elections. That the commissioners of election shall ap point managers of election as'provided for by law, who shall be sworn before ent?rine upon the discharge of their I duties as pro video for by law, and they I shall open and close the polls as pro vided for by law. . In case no voting place now established by law shall exist in any part of the territory by reason of the voting place of the voters r ?sid ing in this territory being on the out- ; side of the lines of the proposed new | county, the commissioners of election : shall in that event open the regular and I usual voting place for these voters on | the outside ot the territory of the pro posed new county and the election shall be otherwise conducted there just the ? same as if the said voting place were located on the outside of the territory of the proposed new county; provided, however, the managers ot election shall be careful not to allow ony one to vote j at said voting place unless he resides ' and lives within the territory of the proposed new county, and be otherwise qualified to vote at such ellection ac cording to law. The managers of election when the polls shall have been closed shall pro ceed without interruption to count and tabulate the same; they shall make a written return of the number of votes cast for and against the formation of the new county, as well as upon the same thereof, and the location of the county seat therein; they shall sign, seal and certify to the managers the result of said election; the same to getner with the ballot box, ballot and poll lists and everything else apper raining to said election shall be by them forthwith turned over to the com missioners of election as required by law; that the commissioners of elec tion for each of said old counties shall as provided by law tabulate the vote and declare tne result of the election and make due and proper return there of as required by law to the Clerk of the Court of their respective counties, to t^e Governor of the State and to the Secretary of State, in all of which careful and detailed compliance with the law is enjoined and ordained. 13. That tue commissioners of elee tion of each of the old counties do forthwith inform ?J. E. Bradley, Secre tary and Treasurer of the petitioners seeking to form said new county of the amount of money necessary to cover the costs of the ?expenses of said elec tion, and the said J. E. Bradley, as treasurer, shall forthwith deposit with the Clerks of Court of each of the re spective old counties said amount so designated by said commissioners and any otner and further amount which may be necessary under tne law to meetjand delray the expenses of said election as provide 1 for by law. 14. That the board of registration for Greenwood county, for the pur poses of said special election and in view of the fact that the Legislature has established two new polling places in Greenwood county wit lin the terri tory proposed to be cut off from said county, wherein heretofore no voting places nave existed, to-wit: At B. C. Talbert's store in Troy township and at T. B. Bell's in Callison township, oo afford an opportunity to all the quali fied electors in said area where here tofore as aforesaid no polling places have existed, to register or transier to said two polling ' places provided no transfer or registration snail be made by said board within thirty days of the date upon which said election is or dered to be held; and provided further, that the law governing transfer and registration be carefully observed in this matter. The said commissioners snail provide the usual books of regis tration for said two new polling places and furnish the same to the managers of election for said voting places on the day of the election as provided for by law. IN TESTIMONY THEREOF I have hereunto set my hand ana caused the Great Seal of the State to be affixed at Columbia, this 29th day of Octo ber, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Fifteen, of .the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred and fortieth. RICHARD I. MANNING, Governor of tne State of South Caro lina. By the Governor: R. ji. MCCOWN, Secretary of State. Southern Railway Premier Carrier of the South Passenger train schedules, effec tive October 24. 1915. Trains arrive from No. Time 108 Ausrusta, Trenton 8:2U am 130 Columbia, Trenton 9:40 am 110 Aiken, Augusta 3:00 p m 1U6 Columbia, Augusta 8:3Upm Trains depart for No. Time 109 Trenton, Columbia 7:20 a m 129 Trenton. Augusta 9:45 a in 131 Aug-Columbia-Aiken 11:45 a m 107 Augusta, Columbia 7:30 p m Schedules published only as in formation and are not iruarauieed. For further information apply to J. A. TOWNSEND, Ticket Agent. Edfgefield, S. C. Land For Sale. For the heirs of the estate of Sirs. Mary A. Miller,- I offer for sale the tract of 500' acres of laud belong ing to said1 estate. If is located oue mile north of Roper's and lies on both sides of the 5*1 ve Notch road. Improvements consist of dwelliug, five tenant' houses and pasture en closed by barbed' wire,- abundantly supplied with water. There is con siderable oak and pine timber on the land. Fosses-ion given at once For terms, etc./ apply to & B. MAYS, Byefield, S. C. Efov. 3^4*. Treasurer's Notice. The County Treasurer's office will be open for the purpose of receiving taxes from the 15th day of October, 1915, to the 15th day of March, 1916. All taxes shall be due and payable between the 15th dav of October, 1915, and December 31st. 1915. That when taxes charged shall not be paid by December 31st, 1915, the County Auditor shall proceed to add a penalty of one per cent, for January, and if taxes are not paid on or before Feb-' ruary 1st, 1916, the County Auditor will proceed to add two per cent., and five per cent from the 1st of March to the 15th of March, after which time all unpaid taxes will be collected by the Sheriff. The tax levies for the year 1915 are as follows: For State purposes . . ? 7 Mills " Ordinary County 6 " " Cons. School Tax 3 " " Bacon School District 4 " " Edgefield School District 5 " " Long Cane S. D. 3 " " Liberty Hill S. D. 3 " " Johnston S. D. 8 V " Collier's S. D. 3 " V Flat Rock S. D. 4 " ' " Elmwood S. D. No. 8 2 " Elmwood S. D. No. 9 2 " Elmwood S. D. No. 30s 2 V *,*. Hibl?r Township 3 " V P. Branch S. D. 5 " " White Town S. D. /') 4 " " Trenton S. D. 5 " " Ward Township 2 " Moss Township 3 " " Parks ville S. D. ' 4 " Si Modoc S. D. 2 " V Oak Grove 3 " " Red HillS. D. 4 " " Antioch S. D. 2 " " Shaw Township 4 " " Talbert Township 2 " .RR Bonds Wise T'sp 114 "RR Bonds Pickens 3 " "RR Bonds Johnston 3 " "RR Bonds Pine Grove 12 " "RR Bonds Blocker (portion] 12 " "RR Bonds Elmwood 12 " "RR Bonds Elmwood " Pickens 3 " " Edgefield sch'l bldg.v 2 " Town of Edgefield ' Corporation purposes 10 " All the male citizens between the ages of 21 years and 60 years except those exempt by law are liable to a poll tax of One Dollar each. A capita tion tax of 50 cents each is to be paid on all dogs. The law prescribes that all male citi zens between the ages of 18 and 55 years must pay $2 commutation tax or wurk six days on the public roads. As this is optional with the individual, no commutation tax is included in the property tax.- So ask for road tax re ceipt when you desire to pay road tax. - JAMES T. MI MS, Co. Treas. E. C. Land for Sale Life is too short to go on renting land, when you can buy a small farm for almost the rent money. I have land in small lots around Johnston, and near Batesburg, Meeting Street, Celestia, Rocky Creek or Fruit Hill, Ropers and near Edgefield, and lots and stores in the town of Edge field. TERMS EASY ArthurS. Tompkins Edgefield, S. C. .... ...l.miUMI.. ...Illl.l I,-. I Notice of Final Dis charge. To All Whom These Presents May Concern: Whereas, J. H. Holder has made application unto this Court for Final Discharge as*Administrator in re the Estate of Mrs. ?Sarah F. Holder deceased, on this the 9th day of October 1915. These Are Therefore, to cite any and all kindred, creditors, or par ties interested, lo show cause be fore me at my office at Edgefield Court House, South Carolina, on the 14th day of November 1915 at ll o'clock a. m., why said order of Discharge should not be granted W. T. KINNAIRD, . J. P., E. C., S. C. Oct. 13-4t. Chevrolet Automobiles are genuine values. Look at these prices: N "Monroe Roadster" at $460.00. Touring Car, "Chevrolet Four Ninety" at $490.00. Chevrolet "Baby Grand" (touring) at $750.00. A product of experience. Fully equipped. When in Greenwood make our garage headquarters. The glad' hand awaits you. We need a rep resentative at Edprerield. We can sell your Ford if you have one. THE AUTOMOBILE EXCHANGE, Greeuwood, ?S. C.