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iErskin gkRon Illustrated by ' COPYRIGHT BY CHARI i i i? TT The front door Hnrry hailed him and Barbara cniue runni-e' out. "I forgot to gei you huomut sou ??i clothes last night," lie snl I, "and we were scared this morning. Ye thought m ' "I Was Rude to You Last Night and I Owe You pr? Apology." , % i you had left us. and Barbara there nearly crlqd." Barbara blushed now and did not deny. "Come to breakfast!" she cried. . "Did you find anything to shoot?" Harry asked. "Xo'thin' hut some squirrels," said I the lad. ^ 'il : ' ' Then J[Iughf*came In p:toe of face and looking rather ashamed. He went straight to the Kentueklan. "1 was ruilt t?> you last night and I owe you an apology." He thrust out his hand and awkwardly the hoy rose and took it. "And you'll forgive me, too, Barbnfa?" "Of course. I will," she said happily, but holding up one finger of warning--should he ever do It again. The rest of the guests trooped in now. and some were going out on horseback, some for a sail, and some visiting op the- river Ju a barge, and all were paired off. "I'm going to drive Cousin JCrsUlne over the place with ray ponies," said Barbara, "and?" "I'm going buck to bed," interrupted Hugh, "or rend n little Latin and Greek with Mr. Brockton.!* Thdre was impudence as well as humor in this, for the tutor liud given up Hugh in despair long ago. * Barbara shook her head. ' "You are going with us," she said. "I want Hugh to ride with me," said Colonel Dale, "and give Firefly a little exercise. Nobody else .can ride hinf." The Kentucky boy turned n challenging eye. as did every young men at the table, and Hugh felt very comfortable. While every one was getting ready, Harry brought out two foils and two masks on the porch a little later. "We fight with those," he said, pointing to the crossed rapiers on the wall, "hut we practice with these. Hugh, there, is the champion fencer," lie said, "and he'll show you." llarry helped tile Kentucky hoy to mask and they crossed foils?Hugh . giving instructions all the time and nodding approval. "You'll learn?you'll learn fast," he said. And over nis shoulder to Harry: "Why, His wrist is as strong as mine now, and he's got an eye like a weasel." With a twist ho wrenched the foil from bis nntnironist's hand and clat terod it on the steps. The Kentucklan was bewildered and his face Hushed. Ho ran for the weapon. "You can't do that ngajn." . ""I don't believe I can," laughed Hugh. "Will you learn nio soaie more?" asked the hoy eagerly. "I surely will." A little later Barbara nn.l her cous'.u were trotting smartly along a sandy road through the fiehls with the colonel and Hugh loping in front of them. Firefly was a black, mettlesome gelding, lie had reared and plunged when Hugh mounted, and even now he was champing his bit and leaping playfully at times, hut the lad sat hint with .an unconcern of his capers that help tin Kentucky boy's eyes. * "Hush," he said, "but Hugh can ride! I wonder if he could stay on , him bareback." "i suppose so," Barbara said; "Hugh can do anything." Many questions the little girl asked ?and soiii? of the boy's answers .. , . it V t 'A- ~ A gg??g??n? e Dale S )K<!-Y leeiMi yy |lJC,dlf|?|fe R.H. Livingstone *?*.' - _ ; made her shuddpr. "Papa said iast night tluK several of our kinsfolk spoke of going to your country In a party, and Harry and j Hu?h are crazy to so with them. Papa said people would he swarming i over the Cumberland mountains bei fore long." "I wish .you'd come along." Barbara laughed. ''I wouldn't like to lose my hair." | "I'll watch out for that," said the | boy with audi confident gravity that : Barbara turned to look at him. "I believe you would," she murmured. And presently: "What did the Indians call you?" | "White Arrow." "White Arrow. That's lovely. Why?" , "I could outrun all the otlier boys." "Tliei you'll have to rupttomorrow ; when we go to the fair at Williams| burg." "The fair?" Barbara explained. For an hour or more sti.e.v had I drivfn and there was no end to the fields ot tobacco and grnin. "Are we still on yotjr land?" Barbara laughed. "Yes; we can't : drive around the plantation and get ; back for dinner. I think we'd better i turn now." "I'lan-ta-tlon," said the lnd. "What's that?" Barbara wavcjJ her whip. "Why, all this?the land?the farm." "Oh!" ( "It's called Red Oaks?from those big trees "back of the house." "Oh. I know oaks well?all of 'em." She wheeled the ponies and with fresh zest they scampered for home. Rverybody had gathered for the noon! day dinner when they swung around | the great trees and up to the back porch. Just as they were starting in I T'miMiAl-v hnv mvp a orv arid ; darted down the path. A towering i figure in coonskin enp nnd injnter's | garb was hylted at tlio sun-dial and , looking toward thorn. "Now, I wonder who that is." said Colonel Pale. "Jupiter, hut that hoy can run!" They saw the tall stranger stare j wonderingly at the hoy and throw ! hack his head and laugh. Then the i two cauic on together. The hoy was ! still flushed hut the hunter's face was grave. * "This is Dave," said the boy simply. "Dave Yandeli." added the stranger, ; smiling and taking off his cap.' "I've i heen at Wllllamshorg to register some lands and I thought I'd come and see how this young man is getting along." Colonel Dale went quickly to meet him with outstretched hand. "I'm mighty glad you did," he said heartily. "Erskine has already told us about you. You are just in time for dinner." "That's mighty kind," said Dave. And the ladies, after lie was presented, still looked at him with much curiosity and great interest. Truly, strange visitors were coming to Red Oaks these days. That night the subject of Hugh and Harry going back home with the two | Kentuckiuns was broached 10 Col one Dale, aid to the wondering delight of the two bojs both fathers seemed 1 to consider it favorably. Mr. Brockton was going to England for a visit, the sum; ler wi s coming on, and both fathers thought it would be a great benefit to their sons. Evejj Mrs. Dale, on whom the hunter had made a most ; agreeable impression, smiled and said ' she would already be willing to trust i her son with their new guest any| where. "I shall take good care of liiin, madam," said Dave with a bow. Colonel Dale, too, was greatly taken i with the stranger, and he asked mun.\ questions of the new land beyond the mount:iins: limn, wiik ilnnelnir nenin that night, and the hunter, towering a head above them all, looked on with smiling interest. He even took part in a square da nee with Miss Jans Wll1 loughby, handling his great hulk with astonishing grace and lightness of foot. Then the elder gentlemen went into the drawing-room to their port and pipes, and the hoy Krskine slipped after them and likened enthralled to the talk of the coming war. Colonel I'ule had been in Hanover ten years before, when one Patrick Henry voiced the tirst intimation of independence in Virginia; Henry, a tuuntr y storekeeper ? bankrupt; farmer?bankrupt; storekeeper again, and bankrupt again; an idler, hunter. Usher, and story-teller?even a "barkeeper," ms -Mr. Jefferson once dubbed him. because Henry had once helped his fathor-in law to keep tavern. That far hack Colonel Dale had heard Henry denounce the clergy, stigmatize the king as a tyrant who had forfeit- I : ed all claim to .oedience, and had I seen the orator caught up on the shoulders of the crowd and amidst shouts of applause borne around the court-house green. He had seen the j > same Henry ride into Itlchmomi two 1 years later on a lean horse: with pa pers Jn Ids saddle-pockets, his ex- | pression gTiiil, "his fail iii^iru stooping, a peculiar twinkle in his sjiiall l)lne eves, his lu-own wig without powder,' his coat peach-blossom in enior, liis knee-breeches of leather, and his stockings of yarn. The speaker of ' the IJurgesscs was on a dais under a red canopy supported by glided rods, and the clerk sat beneath with a I mace on the table before him, but Henry cried for liberty or death, and the shouts of treason failed then anil there t<9 save Virginia for the king. The lad's brain whirled. What did all this mean? Who was this king and what had he done? lie had known j hut the one from whom he bad run away. When he got Dave alone he | would leip-n and learn and learn-! everything. And then the young i people came quietly In and sat down , i quietly, and*Colonel Dale, divlnjng I what they wanted, got Dave skirted ! on stories of the wild wilderness that : was his homo?tho first chapter in tlie j Illn?l of Kentucky?tho land of ^ark | forests and enne thickets tlmt separated Catawbas, frocks and ('hero ! kees on the south from Delu'.vares. ' WynCalotte* and Shawnee# on the north, who fought one another, and ! nil of whom the whites must fight, j How tho first fort \fns built, and the first women stood on the hanks of tho ; Kentucky river. lie told of the perils I and hardships of the first Journeys ; thither?fights with wild beasts and ; jylld men, chases. Hand-to-hand combats, escapes and massacres ? and j only the breathing of his listeners i could he heard, save the sound of his j own voice. And | he chine finally to | the story Ol tile annex on me ion, | the raising of n sninll hand nhove tlie enne. palm outward, and the swift dash of a slender hrown hod.v into the ! fort, and then, seeing the hoy's fare turn scarlet, he did not toll how that same lad had slipped hack into the woods even while the fight was going on. and slipped hack with, the hloody scalp of his enemy, hut ended with the tinieJy coming of the Virginians. | led by the lad's father, who got his j death-wound at the very gate. The tense breathing of his listeners culminated now in one general deep ! breath. Colonel Dale rose ar.d turned to I General Willoughjty. "And that's where he wants to take our boys." "Oil, it's much safer now." said the hunter. "We have had no trouble for some time, and there's no danger inside the fort." i "I can imagine you keeping those | hoys inside tho fort when there's so 1 much going on outside. Stil!?" ; Colonel Dale stopped and the two ; hoys took heart again. Colonel Dale escorted the hoy and j Dave to their room. Mr. Yandell must ' tre with them to the fair at Williams- I lmrg next morning, and Mr. Yandell i would go gladly. They would spend the night there and go to the governor's hall. Theyiext day there was a county fair, and perhaps Mr. Henry would speak again. Then Mr. Yandell must come hack with them to lted Oaks and pay them a visit?no, the colonel would accept no excuse whatever. ' The boy plied Dave with questions 1 ahout the people in the wilderness and passed to sleep/ Dave lay awake a I long inic thinking tunc war ws sure to come. Tliov wore Americans now, i said Colonel Dale ? not Virginians, i just as nearly a century later the same people were to say: "We are not Americans now?we I are Virginians." (To be Continued). _______ MAY START SOMETHING. ' Jt * Leon Trotzky is said to be planning the recapture of Poland in an effort to gain prestige. His early fall is forecast, with the breakup of the Soviet regime as a consequence. ? Greenwood, June 20: Without so much ns a smile t<> clothe him, Hen Frazier, a young white farmer, appeared early this morning at the , ! home of W. M. Davenport, near Greenwood and told a story of having been 1 held up at the point of a gun by two [ i i ien who demanded his money, and in lieu of money, strippi I him of all his ; clotliing and left him naked in the road. The hold-tip took place" on the (Ireen wood-.Abbeville road four miles | from Greenwood, about a. m. Fra- j zior claimed to have been returning from Greenwood, where he had been to buy medicine for his wife when two men in an automobile overtook him. Thrusting a pistol in his face, they d manded his money. Finding that he had no money, one struck him over the head and he was then stripped of 1.is clothes, I razicr maintains. After I borrowing a pair of trousers from Mr. Davenport. Frazier returned home. The sheriff's office was notified and i officers Ihis morning found the eloth- ! ing beside the road about a mile from the scene of the holdup. They are i i WPROYED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SimdaySchool ' Lesson * (By RKV, P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Teacher of English Bible in thi Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright, 192i, Western Newspaper Union. LESSON FOR JUNE 25 REVIEW: JUDAH'S PROSPERITY AND ADVERSITY % GOLDEN TEXT?"Blessed is the nation whose Qod is the Lord."?Us. 23:12. PRIMARY AND JUNIOR TOPIC-Men Who Obeyed God. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC ?True and False Leaders of Judah.' YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC ?Some Lessons From Judah's History. I. Central Thought of Each Lessor Gathered Around the Key Words ol the Day's Lesson Subject, Namely. Prosperity and Adversity. A good outline is the following from Crannell's Pocket Lessons: 1. Judah's Prosperity. Bused on? . (1) Reliance on God, lesson 1. (2) Courageous Venture for God lesson 2. * (3) Business Methods for God, lesson 3. (4) The Vision of^od, lesson 5. (f>) The Law and*readership ol God, lesson 7. ((!) Wise Leadership Buck to God lesson 8. 2. Judah's Adversity. Due to? (1) Presuming Upon God's Blessing, lesson 4. (2) Presuming Upon Gojj's Purpose, lesson 0. (3) Rejecting God's Word, lesson 10. (4) Persecuting God's Messenger, lesson 11. (5) Disloyalty to God and Man, lesson 12. II. Goldon Text Review. Assign the texts to your einss tne preceding Sunday and ask them to show how the lesion Illumines the text, or ask the class to prepare on all the texts and have the members of the class draw the text and give the answer. III. Character Study or Portrait Review. Assign the following characters the Sunday before: Asa, Joash, Jeholada, Uzziah, Isaiah, Hezeklah, Hilkiah, Jeremiah, Buruch, Jeholuklm, Ebedmelech. Zedekiah. IV. The Summary Method. This method calls for the salient facts of each lesson with a statement of its outstanding teaching. Note the following suggestions: Lesson 1. Asa cleared the lund of lcioiuiry Juki ciuieu upon .jimuu iu seek the Lord. Because he rested upon the Lord, God gave lit victory over his enemies. Lesson 2. Athaliah attempted to destroy the seed royal rind then usurp the throne. Jehoiada checkmated her by hiding away Joasii for six years. At an appointed time Joash was crowned king and the usurper slain. Every attempt to thw^, God's purpose fails. Lesson 3. Jesus arose from the dead, showed himself to His disciples and sent them forth as witnesses t'oij Him. Certainty of the resurrection of Christ Is essential to witness for Him. Lesson 4. Uzziah made a notable civic and military record, but In his pride he presumptuously intruded int.. Uio nriaet'o nffli-o A<5 n hide ment God smote liliu with leprosy. "Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall." Lesson 5. Isaiah's vision of God brought 1dm to a sense of his sinfulness. Man's supreme need todny Is a vision of God. Lesson 0. Isaiah foresaw the end of all strife in the world through the establishment of Christ's kingdom. Peace and restoration shall come to the earth when Christ shall come and remove from men's hearts the cause for strife. Lesson 7. Hezekiah led his people back to God. This be did by means of the passover least. The only way for a sinning and divided people to get back to God and be united Is around the crucified Lord. Lesson 8. Through the repairing of the temple the law of God was found. When it was read before the king it brought penitent sorrow. God accepted his penitence and postponed the evil day. Lesson P. Jeremiah was arrested and brought to trial because be boldly proclaimed (foil's word to the nation. 'Jibe one whom God calls to proclaim Ills word should faithfully discharge his duty regardless of what men may do unto him. Lesson 10. Jehoiukim tried to destroy God's Word by burning It. Trying to destroy God's Word will not avert His judgments. Lesson 11. Item use of Jeremiah's fidelity to God lie was cast Into prison, fasting the- prophet Into the dungeon will not turn aside God's judgments. Lesson V_'. Nebuchadnezzar captured Jerusalem and carried away the people captives. Though God's judgments tarry they eventually fall. working on clues which they believe will lead to arrests. quail are classed as songbirds by the Minnesota State Humane society. The executive committee of tHe society has adopted resolutions urging the fanners of all states where there are quail to feed and care for them because of the fact that the small amount of grain expended would be abundantly repaid in the destruction of seeds of noxious weeds and insect peats. ? Queen Victoria of Spain is a great j lover of children and takes care of her youngsters personalty, instead of having nurses and tutors. GENERAL NEW SNOTES Matters of Interest Gathered From All Over the World. ? Kansas City, Kan., June 19: Three white men and-two negroes took $7,000 : front the Quindaro .state bank here today and escaped in an automobile. ? Norfolk, Va., June 19: Maria Savage and Mabel Drummond, negroes; are dead and six other negro women are ir. a serious condition following a drinking party Friday night in which they arc believed to have drunk liquor containing wood alcohol. ? New York, June 20: Cantaloupes in the wholesale market cost only a little j more than half of what they sold for j yesterday, duo to heavy shipments ifioni California and Georgia. Georgia crates fell from $2.50 to $1.50 and some were turned back for the railroads to i dispose of. ! ?Poitland, Mc., June 20: Senator | Frederick Hale, Republican, without making a personal campaign, won an i easy victory in the state primary yes I ICruay. I lie villi's uuai mi 111 j larger than the total of hia two oppoj nentg, former Congressman Frank E. j Guernsey and for State Senator Howard Davies, and hia plurality over Guernsey was nearly 20,000. Davies was a poor third. ? St. Paul, Minn., .June 20: A woman his been nominated for tl.e United j States senate by a major political party for the first time in the history of the country. This became apparent tonight when returns from half the precincts participating in .Monday's primary election showed Mrs. Anna Dickie Olesen had won the senI atorial nomination of the Democratic | partjf over two male opponents. ? Pascoag. IL I., June 19: Robert Pollard, 40 years old, of this town, died tonight of hydrophobia nearly year after he was bitten by a dog. The dog later died of rabies. With four other men, Pollard was bitten by a dog in July of last year. The live took the Pasteur treatment. The other four felt no ill effects of their experience. Two months ago Pollard complained of Hint ss and early tonight <%-d in agony. ? San Francisco, June 19:'* Police chiefs numbering about 400 were here today for the opening of the twentyninth annual convention of the International Association of Police Chiefs. Subjects to be discussed included the establishment of a national bureau of identification at Washington under government supervision; jxissage of uniform vehicle laws and broadcasting of police information by radio. ? Washington, June 19: A recent survey by the United Stat*es public health service showed there were 1,200 lepers at large in twenty-five states. Dr. C. H. Lavinder, assistant surgeon general, announced in a statement today. There is only one means of preventing further increase in the number of cases, Dr. Lavinder said, and that is by providing isolation facilities large enough to take care of the present cases. ? Chicago, June 20: Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees today received his third lay off of the season \flien President Ban John3on of the American league suspended him for his argument in yesterday's game at Cleveland with Umpire Dineen. No time limit was set tin me suspension, me duration being indefinite until Mr. Johnson receives a full report of the affair. Ruth was out of the game at the start of the season as a result of a suspension by Rasoball Commissioner Landis and recently was given a oneday lay off and a fin<* by Mr. Johnson for an argument with an umpire at New York. ? Washington, June 19: Men and women prominent in official life, members of the business woild and stars of the theatrical world, united Sunday in paying tribute to the memory of Lillian Russell Moore at memorial services held in Keith's theatre. Similar services occurred simultaneously at all Keith theatres throughout the country. Attorney General Daugherty, I Secretary of Labor Davis, Acting Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt, Chairman Lasker of the shipping board; Senator Hiram Johnson and Senator ; Samuel M. Shortridge of California, ; were among those who either in person j or through statements gave voice to j their sentiments. | ?Atlanta, Ga., June 20: J. It. Humj phries, Ga., is the owner of a cow that I has become the new junior four-yearold champion of Georgia, and has won a silver medal awarded by the American Jersey Cuttle club. The cow is known as Raleigh's Zilla of Hrookhill 389,671. She .started her test at four years and one month of ago. She has produced 1:5.38:) pounds of rnilU and 615.64 pounds of butter fat. In April, 1921, she produced 1,391 pounds of milk and 65.52 pounds of butter fat. Sin.' [qualithd for the 50-pound list for the | first ten months on test. Zilla is by j Raleigh's combination 107,229, with j eight daughters in the register of mcrI it and out of Zilla of Lee Farm, 216,j 840. ? Syracuse, X. Y: Miss Agnes E. j Campbell has specialized as a Sund ay | school teacher with the same degree i lot' thoroughness that a teacher in the j secular schools studies for educational j work. Site holds the state Sunday school teachers' certificate and able theologians say there tire very few j students as familiar with Bible lore as i I she. In fourteen years thcro has been | only one wctk during which Miss Campbell litis not attended a Sunday, school session, and on that occasion i she failed simply because she found I the church door locked on account of 1 an epedeniic. She holds a gold bar j [and a star for different periods of at- 1 tendance. Miss Campbell, whose home I is at Walton, X. Y., is a junior in the | j Syracuse I'Diversity college of buri- j Iness administration. I I ? Chicago, June 19: A sordid picture of modern civilization was painted for the students at North-Western university, by former Gov. Chanles K. Osno of Michigan, who deliver..tl the commencement address: "The while race," said Mr. Osborne, "is predatory i and epiphytic. When it is not preying upon and existing on the blacks, browns and yellows, It slashes its own vitals in unwitting soc'al hari-kari for the chance to gorge itself in economic ' cannibalism. During tlic last 300 years' the white race, as represented by the recently allied powers, siized threefourths of tin. areu of the earth and , placed two-thirds of its population in tributary slavery. Unless Americans learn the way of life and huraun Justice, this country will gi> the way of Babylon and Greece and Home. It shall be a part of your sublime task to blaze a new trail of life and lead the march." I ?Atlanta, Ga., Juno 20: Pitting his mind against the tribe of burglars, robbers, sneak thieves and hold-up men to find a safe place for the money the store had taken in during the day, the manager of n local cigar store at night pitched the c intents of the com- ; pany's cash register into the trash box, i I reasoning thut t<fce lawless gentlemen ?u?i.. _,:?m See, Phone or Write to THOS. C. O'FARRELL FOR High Grade Monuments In Marble and Granite Plant on Eaet Liberty Street, Adjoining Roee Hill Cemetery. I 1 TAKE NOTICE The Sanitary Market Has moved from Congress. Street to Madison Street And we a%c now ready to promptly fill all orders. Just'continue to Call No. 6 For your wants in all kinds of meats. SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON, Mgr. ? DI Til n MOW/ UU1JLI/ 11V TV BUILDING MATERIALS ARE ABOUT DOWN TO BEFORE WAR PRICES AGAIN AND YOU'LL MAKE NO MISTAKE TO START THAT HOUSE OR OTHER REPAIR WORK NOW. I have a full Line of Builder's Supplies Including CEMENT LIME BRICK BUILDER'S HARDWARE PAINTS. You'll Save Money by Seeing Me about j It. W. L. WALLACE Warehouse Near Travora Mill. Telephone No. 233. YORK, S. C. :j: SUMMER CAMPS FO | IN THE MOI I SOUTHERN RA1 x |: IN WESTERN NC I AND NORT1 4* y Accommodations reasons i $ amusement aiul cduo | SUMMER EXC! | { Tickets 011 sale daily, goo * 15.1st. Stop-overs all< V >. mation applv to: y ? A O TT H O. XX. X :j: District Pasi | Columbia, >X~X~X"X,,X"X~XMX~X~X"X,?X~X I S. L. CO II Sa,cs <*$&, j! ' THE UNIVEI ]! 48 S. Main St. <WWWWWWWAWWWVWWW f ? I* would overlook this in their search. The manager was so sure that he had outwitted any possible burglar whioji t might fancy his store on that nighty I and was so 'sure that the $100 was safe, that he went home und slept peacefully, dismissing the mutter from { his tpind. It remained dismissed. When the manager entered the store and prepared for the business of the day, he threw the trash box and its I ' .? precious contents into the refuse can, .-I which is the first step on the way to the city garbage pile. So far as is known, the cash box completed the journey, for when the memory of his burglar-foiling deed game to the ntore manager, the money had forever disappeared. Police believe "The Mys- |1( tery of the Trash Pile" Is fated to he ?U? .......,1. I ? ..11C ??- ? ??-, ? ,,, . 1'a.l.M. Was the money found in the re- , fuse can by some wandering hunger- ,(Il stricken tramp? Or did It go the way of the other 'trash of a great eity? Only one thing is sure, and that is the statement of the store manager that hereafter he will take nis chances with ,, the burglar. '?111 I'i =5 . IVUJr?; THE CITADEL The Military College of South Carolina. SCHOLARSHIP EXAMINATION ? On July 14th a Competitive Examination Will Be Held at York to Fill , ((,?y One Vacancy in the Citadel Scholarships for this County. Applicants must not be. under sixlet 11 and not over twenty years of age on the opening day of the next Col- u.i-. lege session? : , , j SEPTEMBER 20, 1922. The subjects tor examination win uq , I as follows: Algebra, through quadratic equaj I ions. > I' J'lanc Geometry. English Grammar, Rhetoric and Literature. . !'1" ' Ancient History, and. American History. , t The winners, of Ihe scholarships must meet the requirements of the Association of Colleges of South Carolina for admission. Application Blanks, Catalog, and further information furnished upon request Address Col. 0. J. BOND, President, The Citadel, Charleston, 8. C. 40 f.t 15t 64. . , | THE CASH GARAGE: IS IN POSITION TO DO YOUR AUTOMOBILE REPAIR AND WELDING WORK AT MOST REASONABLE PRICES. ? : YOU SAVE MONEY 1 BY PAYING CASH; Expert Workmen : REPAIR your car when you bring It to . 1 this Garage for Repairs. WE CARRY./ I" A full line of Automobile Accessories. THE CASH GARAGE J. S. JOINER, MANAGER *?*? AT THE OIjD CITY HALL. EAST LIBERTY STREET Say, Don't Do It! PON'T LOOK LI KB YOU HAVE Indigestion. Smile about it. If your table trimmings are not agreeing with your digestion, try buying your Groceries at this Store. We do not sell any'hing but Gie best in Groceries? you are sure to get Quality Groceries when you buy your supplies at this store. Tell us what you want?if you | know?or better still, COME AND SKFI WHAT vyE HAVE?Then you ll know just what you want. IF YOU WANT anything in the way of Canned Vegetables, or Fruits, or Onniu '?t* T?ic-h I?rrifliiet<c nr Ttottled or* Loose Pickles, Bottled Fruits, or Fancy Cakes and Crackers, Fresh Vegetables?Beans, Cabbage, Potatoes?it is pretty sure you'll find what you are looking for here. *Then too we have a good variety of Dried Beans and Peas and the Fat Back that goes with 'em. i CHEER UP?you'll get over it if you will buy your Groceries here. SHEBER & QUINN >>X"X,vv*X'VVVV*H"X,VV4X"X,V'X E BOYS AND GIELS ? JNTAINS ON | 1LWAY SYSTEM I ? )RTH CAROLINA ff GEORGIA I iblo, and every feature of jr, ation available. ? LIRSION FARES | ? (1 to return until October $ n 1 jwed. For further liifor- % % I iIcLEAN, | senger Agent jr. - - S. C. | v *! v v v v vvv v vvv wv v v % v v v v > URTNEY !| Service 1 RSAL CAR' YORK, S. C. ! i IftlWWWWWWMWMWMWWWW