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?R i\ i V (1) 100 acres, 70 cultiv .:; her, ail can be cultivated, dwelling, two good barns and four rooms. Soil, s; healthy, located within o Kershaw County, on the highway passes immedia School and churches cor j price $4,000. Terms om pure miser. , (2) Adjoining* track Nc 115 acres, 80 cultivated, < growth dogwood and h cash?balance to suit tl these two places. The < ] bought a larger plantatic for him to sell in order f( the reason that the place (3) 246 acres, 75 culti\ i 3 1-2 miles Lykesland, g< f place. Nice four room ch tenant houses, good conn story school house adjoin ; and hickory undergrowtl small grain and tobacco. luilflrirp lnnor timo U mpi* ni (4) 1160 acres good lan five tenant houses, only t three miles from Edmunc miles from Lexington Coi Columbia. This place is produce corn, cotton, sma I GALLED FOR EXAMI- j , NATION AUG. 9TH U^ H>18 Colored Registrants. Peter Abram Wilson ? Luke Johnson ( Freeman Simmons 1 Geo. Ford Taney Kirton Burroughs McKinley Gerrald - Henry Small Sidney Green John Bellamy i a n vmsuMi ureen Haywood Boirj. Scott Arthur Singletary Sam'l Blossom Gore Willie Smith Prank Stackhouse James Godbolt Jim Cox Tom Weaver Ij, K. Gause Lancy W. Graham Dotten Jackson ^ Henry King* FORS One Saw Mill, complete, wilt \ i engine, No. 3 Hegy Saw Mill, American Edger, capacity 21 I saw, 175 ft. saw dust chain, |' thing in running condition. ! i price. Come and see me at . 1 < J. W. FAIR BLU I I I irst Cla t ated, balance pasture, good tinv , good orchard. Nice six roon i, two good tenant houses thre? andy loam, good crops on place ne mile of the town of Westville Southern Railroad. Good autc tely in front of all the houses ivenient. Buildings worth tin B-half cash?balance to suit tlu ). 1 and belonging to same part* one 3 room tenant house: under ickory. Price $3,500. One-hall \e purchaser. Good crops or .L' II. X 1 I iiwium" ui must' two places nas >n elsewhere and it is necessary >r him to make his payments, it s are offered so cheap. ated, ten miles from Columbia, 3od auto roads run through the welling, large new barn, throe nunity, church and large two i place. Good pasture, dogwood 1. Good land for corn, cotton, Price ${>,000. One-half cash? ent. interest. d very small portion cultivated, iwo in repair, good large barn, Is on Southern Railroad, six art House Depot and 16 miles well watered, healthy, and will 11 grain?fine peach land and F 404 National L vrvAitV WW A VV ? t 'f Albert William Chestnut Joe Jackson Clemmie Crawford 1917 Colored Registrarts. Henry White Abram S irgeant Herbert Franklin Henry Smith Geo. Washington Hemingway Simon Evans Henry Clarence Baker Dennis Baldwin Worth Johnson John Hemingway Joseph Holmes Jr. Braxton Benj. Brown Daniel McRay _ L i /"I iiooert i^ause Frank Moore Charlie McDonald Kellon Bellamy Wright Gore John Henry Charlton Samuel Stanley Domey Grant Charlie Green Henry Gagham Thurman Moore >ALE i 60 h. p. boiler, 50 h. p. , 35 ft. carriage, . No. 1 0,000 ft. per day, cut off set of good belts. EveryWill sell for less than half once. HILL FF, N. C. .. , ' THE HORRY HI ss Value ; i ? ? . * * * i , v- ' V ' I I I while tobacco has never gr< i competent party that it is i has been subdivided int acres and the owner will se ' from $10 to $20 per acre ( ? cash?balance to suit > pur< > This is the best bargain you will agree with me. % ? (5) 466 acres, 100 cultiva dwelling, cotton house, stoi A- I am nouses, two to six rooir very good timber, sandy lo produces well, situated wi miles Columbia. Has sidin wood on place will pay for ? $3,000. Good reason for sel (6) 124 acres 75 high slat ; good all round land as any bacco land and produces grain. Very good five rooir house, barns and cotton hoi ional highway runs throng half mile railroad town wi Price $60 per acre. Terms < (7) 377 acres, 200 high s cultivated land stumped, al Six 3 room tenant houses fronts National highway, thi school and cnurches. Crops and small grain. Price $50 balance $1000, annually wit! rents from place will pay foi (8) 41 1-2 acres, 25 cleare< >. A. H \.oan & Ex. Bldg. ,i Johr> Williams "*r \ Geo. Davis Floyd Wilie Melvin Bellamy Geo. Stephens % ' Wm, Joseph Livingston V, Tiney Vereen T..I A- ?-? juiui uscar r ioyd ""Russel rtolmes Bellamy J ; Reddin Woodbury > Sidney Chayers Hemingway Joe Thomas . John Gillian! Holy Johnson John Williams Perry Graham Peter James Gore Richard Elmore Bryant Sam Alston o TODDVILLE TIDINGS. M isses Jessie and Mary Dusenbury visited friends in Conway one evening this week. Miss Marguerite Oliver spent Sun day in town with relatives. | M iss Mary Oliver, an efficient i saleslady for the Florence Dry Goods Co., is at home taking- her an I ?i Tobacco S WE TAKE THIS OPP< OUR MANY FRIENDS F( AND HOPE TO SEE TH AGAIN ON OUR COMINI FIRST LOAD WITH US . THE BALANCE OF YOUR FARMERS W I Fullerton i ' CONWAl ij. aULP, OOMWAT, a. o. is in R( i : I i-< I )wn on the place I am told by deal tobacco land. This place 0 small farms from 30 to 65 11 a portion or all of it. Price >wing to location. One-half chaser at 7 per cent, interest. 1 have ever seen, see it and ted, large orchard, nine room e house, good barn, four tenis, water grist and saw mill, am, some with clay subsoil, ithin mile Gilbert, S. C., 22 tg on place. The timber and it at present prices. Price ling. e cultivation, clay subsoil. As in the state. First class towell, corn, cotton and small i dwelling, three room tenant use and tobacco house. Nath the place, located within ith church and high school, easy. late cultivation, most of the 1 the land can be cultivated. . large barn, tobacco barn, L'ee miles nice town with high grown tobacco, corn, cotton per acre. Terms $3000 cash, i interest at 7 per cent. The it. d. Good clay subsoil, very ODGEi COl f \ nual vacationttof 10* days. ' Miss Walker Gasque, one of our most charming young ladies, who has been with the Florence IJr>' Goods Co., for the past tweivc months, after spending her annual vacation of 10 days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Gasque, returned to her work Monday. During hei shoxt stay in this community siine "busy body" was circulating the report that Miss Gasque had resigned her position and gone in training. M isses Mary Oliver and Walker Gasque are popular sales ladies and speak in highest terms of the Florence Dry Goods Co. M rs. John H. Woodward, of George ] town, nee Miss Lena King, is visiting her sister, Miss Lillie King, near Evergreen. Mrs. Woodward was a regular attendant at Union Sunday School and her many friends are al-1 ways glad to see her. ?FORECAST. HOME WOOD ITEMS. The Progressive Home Makers Club will meet on Thursday with i I ales Open OUT UNITY TO THANK )R THEIR PATRONAGE EIR FAMILIAR FACES ; SALES. SELL YOUR AND YOU WILL SELL . LKUl*. AKEHOUSE tJohnson i i, S. C. , | '"'w' s ? ? ^?p? ? ;al Estal good four room dwelling, bar grow tobacco, corn, cotton and in half mile small railroad town suit the purchaser. (9) 333 acres, 85 cultivated, n clay subsoil, well watered, pro* ordinary four room dwelling, f good out building including tl community, church and schoc grown, cotton, corn and small now being grown it will grow t roads four miles Blaney on ? Columbia. Price $6000. Term: (10) 145 acres, 100 high state cated in town of Gilbert on So Columbia, two 6 room dwelli house. This is a creat hav<v?in for selling;, the owner has voluni (It) 60 acres, 30 cultivated al good tenant houses 2 and 3 n stable, good land, healthy. Ide; grow anything. Located 1 1line Columbia. Price $100 per j asked for adjoining property. r (12) 50 acres, 20 cultivated, < on National highway 12 miles C railroad town, good school. T\ with passages and piazzas. Pi Good proposition for home seek The above propositions are ji of them better. If none of thes cate with me I have others, ai want. s IUMBIA, c. Mtss Lairrti Harfflfc ' v * Mr. Oscar Harris loft last week for Camp Jackson. He will be great ly missed in this communty, and especially a$ Sunday School. We wish him much good luck. Misses Winnie and Lucile Dew spent the week-end with their cousin, Miss Nancy Dew. Messrs. M. A. Cause and Harry Bray left last week for Charleston, S. C. Mr. Hart Dew, of Norfolk, Va.. spent last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Dew. There will be preaching at Homej wood Hall on Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock by the pastor, Rev. Paul T. Wood. Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Dew and children, spent Sunday with their daugh ter, Mrs. Ed. Taylor The tobacco growers are well pleased with the prices this year. -1B. E. No. 666 This it a prescription prepared especially lor MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. Five or six doses will break any caae, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not pipe or sicken. 25c ? o LOR IS RED CROSS Editor Herald: The ladies of the local Red Cross unit of Loris, have been very dilligent in their efforts in raising money for the Red Cross. The President, Mrs. D. J. Butler, led in the drive that has been made by the members of the local unit. These good ladies organized and sent Committees to the three Warehouses each day, and asked the farmers as , they brought their tobacco in for a , handful of tobacco for the Red Cross. This tobacco was sold and the proceeds netted $544.00. These good ladies deserve the well done of all \ for their faithfulness in this most s worthy cause. ?(C.) i ? f NOTICE OF PICNIC. i t There will be a Picnic and Chil- ? dren's Day at Valley Forge School < House Saturday, August 17th, 1918. r Everybody is invited to come and i bring well filled baskets. We expect c food order. t Unie Boll Rabon, Leah Tyler, r Committee. o ?4 * ... ... . .\ * _ j "0 l'i .C f n and cotton house, will I small grain, located with- I . Price $2000. Terms to lost of the land good with I I duces well, good pasture, , I I irst class large new barn, 1 ... A ^ ? net: tenant nouses, gooa I >1 adjoins place. Crops ft, I grain. while no tobacco is ft^l obacco. Located at cross I >. A.. L. Railroad 22 miles I ; cultivation, over half lo- I uthern Railroad 22 miles I ngs, one 2 room tenant ft at $12,000. The reason BV tee red for the army. r I 1 can be farmed, two very I >oms, common barn and I il for dairy farm, but will I 2 miles College Place car I icre, much less than price Bl Terms to suit purchaser. ^ ill balance can be farmed. I 1 Columbia, two miles small I vo story four room house I rice $1500. Terms easy. I er or investor. ist as represented. Some I e appeal to you communi- ft rwl di c ...U . i. HVA van O^VUIU Wllill you "XI I I I hmhhhhmJ I .' ?THE? I HORRY INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL I OFFERS THE GREATEST AD*. I VANTAGES FOR BOTH A LITER ARY AND A BUSINESS EDUCA- I TION. I $175.00 covers all expenses for tl\e I year. Several may reduce expenses' I by work. A safe school for your boy I >r girl. For Catalogue, Information, I ect., write: H REV. S. C. MORRIS, President, I Horry, S. C. 4ti.!7!18|18. OFFICERS MAKE RAID | Officers from Conway made a raid H in Bayboro township one day lastM week under the liquor laws; bring'n^^B back to destruction about two of Jamaica Ginger put up in small C bottles. The method of using this H was to mix it with a soft drink or H sv/eelened water. H Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores vitality and energy by purifying and riching the blood. You can soon feel its Strenntb^^H ening, Invigorating Effect. Price 60c. TO THE CORN CLUB BOYS. ' fl All members of the boys' corn club will please mail me their names and S| addresses or come to Conway an<% leave same at my office. This is verylM important and should be attended to at once so that I can send them th^j necessary literature and institr&ions for them to write up their records. Mr. Davis, the former agent, Jeft no 1 i st of the boys corn club members and that is why I am asking you through tho paper to send me your names. A. J. BAKER, Co. Agent, When disposed to feel tired of the iva;- and the situation of the country is brought about by the war; simply 'emember that this war is a neces<ary war and had to be. Human ex- II stence is surrounded by difficulties it the best. No man find* it as gpod is he would likf? t*A t?u?* u - _ wv. mat would DC contrary to nature. If the war is II iceessary then we are obliged to lelp prosecute it to the highest of >ur ability, and to complain about HI he war is the same as complaining d>out life itself. The war is and nust he. Our victory depends on our I