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6 , TWO WOMEN SEWING ] (By Dr. Frank Crane, in Atlanta Journal.) For genuine soul-satisfying, communion and joy of talk, 1 IrriAur n/\tV?in<r uppmc mnVP i 11V >> UWIIIU^ tiutu ovv-nu? mv/A v/ perfect than that time when one woman brings her sewing and drops in to spend the afternoon with another woman. 1 say seems, for of course I never tried it. I am versed enough in womanly arts to be able to cook a bit, that is I can fry you a i fair plateful of ham and eggs and make real coffee, but sewing is beyond me. There must be only two wo- ' men. A third is a restraint. When the two get settled in their respective rocking chairs, and the sewing materials are < brought forth, then begins the J most ideal bubbling of human < speech. The children are at school, ] the men folks are at business, the hired girl is out, no one is i by to say them nay. f They talk. It is real talk. It 1 it not talk about anything, it is 1 just talk, in its freest form. It 1 is perfect self expression. , Neither wishes especially to hear what the other has to say; j each wishes to say her own say. They think of so many things : and so fast, that sometimes they are both talking at the ^ same time, like a grand opera duet. j They say whatever pops into their minds. Their ranee is bounded not by the bounds of ; the universe. They say what they would , not say at any other time and place, what they would not tell : their husband or children or mother. ! If they treat of scandal, it is in its most artistic, appetizing t form. But they do not speak of whispered matters nearly as ? much as they are supposed to, and when they do it is with so , purely a feminine touch that it is almost antiseptic. They relate how Jennie wears out her stockings and Mildred j cannot eat pastry, the felon on Bobby's finger, and the way y Mrs. Humperdinck's last gown is made. They also give judgment on politics, literature, art, society, and religion. j There is an air of eternity it about the sitting. There is an j atmosphere of universality and t eclecticism here you find no- i where else. It is the most natural forthputting of personality you can discover anywhere in nature, except in the twittering of two birds. Men are not capable of this |' free outpour in conversation. So much the worse for them. j Fitness Not Required. Before pledging1 The Obser- ^ ver to support Attorney Gen- ( eral Peeples for governor two j years hence, we would like to j see him show some sort of fit- J ness for so exalted an oflice. We confess that we have not . been favorably impressed with 1 his record as attorney general ' so far.?Newberry Observer. We are sorry to see that our contemporary, which is usually 1 so well up on all questions of the day, is so far behind the times when it comes to knowing the necessary qualifications for office. There was a day in South Carolina when fitness for any high olficc to which a man aspired was necessary but that day is far in the past. It is way back yonder. The only thing! necessary now for a man to get j office i.- for him to be a blatant | demagogue, i ms lesson nas; been learned to perfection and ihe men who have the fitness j are not anxious to measure I arms with these fellows of thej baser sort. It is sad to have to make such admission, but it is true nevertheless.?Greenwood Journal. How'd You I.ike It, George? (ieorgo Davis went out in the sand hills Tuesday to see how the sand would taste.?Orient Correspondence Blair, Okla., Progress. Lancaster Leads. Are You a Cold Sufferer? Take I)r King's New Discovery. The Ile.nt Cough, Cold, Throat mid I.ung Medicine made. Money refunded If it fails to cure you. Do not hesitate?tnko it at our risk. First d03? helps. J. R. Wells, Floydada. Texas, writes: "Dr. King's New Discovery cured my terrible cough and cold. I gained 15 pounds." Buy It at Lancaster Pharmacy and Standard Drug Co. V' "fi i\rrj -/ B BR V"-, F : " TI I'OET TIM ROD'S WIDOW We M DIED ONLY RECENTLY I Too Mrs. Catherine Lloyd, Whose that t Grief Over Babe's Death, farmii Called Forth "A Mother's detailWail." how t< FVlitnr nf Thp Ktnfp:?It will mule I L?e of interest, I am sure, to j.1 ^llov many persons, not only in South 'p()()Cerj Carolina, but throughout the (jie ni entire South, to learn that Mrs. to lea Catherine Lloyd, who died on cultur the 20th inst., at Ridgefield ness ( Park, N. J., was up to the time its r she married Alfred Lloyd of things England, the widow of the late farme Henry Timrod. She was the how t idol of the poet's life, and was kinds the "Katie" of his poem by that a fan name, and to whom he referred idea, in "A Year's Courtship." She these was the mother of Willie, their fortur only child, and it was the an- not ki ?uish of the mother's heart up- many on the death of the child that I the fj inspired the poet to write the where A?A i 1 4irv Itr'11* ? 1 ! mi poems enuuea uur vvniie ana i me 'A Mother's Wail." The last ern fi named poem 1 consider one of i forgot the most beautiful he ever, ciples wrote. Many of his admirers We d( will recall it. I will quote three the bi verses: perma , ture r My Babe! My tiny babe! My only babe! any n My single rosebud in a crown of cjent j thorns! ern fV My lamp that in that narrow hut of taugh life? no ma Whence 1 looked forth upon a night }lalujlc of storm he cal Jurned with the lustre of the moon jall(j . and stars! after' harm My Babe! My tiny babe! My only ^rQ babe! dairy r lehold the bud is gone! The thorns ^(,]| w remain! s milks My lamp has fallen from its niche? tj; ah, me! make iartli drings the fragrant flame, and j I am left list. 1 -"orever and forever in the dark. are tl consid My babe! My tiny babe! My own which and only babe ! We fc Where art thou now? If somewhere poor 1; in the sky hards] Vn angel hold thee in his radiant childtt arms, ]y wh< challenge him to clasp thy tender up tl form tern o With half tlie fervor of a mother's suit il love. that i It was to "Katie," who has ust died, as well as to his siser, Mrs. Godwin, to whom the from joet was wont to go for criti- \y0 (n :ism of his verses before send- cr0p t ng them to the publisher. sojj a HENRY TIM ROD GOODWIN iw'r, New York City. exhau consid Charity. and tl Write this down on the inde- swam] structible megiory of men: of ci Among all the handmaidens mar. if charity, wealth is one of the some east. the sc Men prate of charity! the That which divides the last from oaf, O Brother of Hunger, is So harity, and that which shares stock, the one shawl, (J Sister of cow, 1 [tags, is charity, much more idle ir than the heralded building of every hospital and asylum. do no We have in our hearts charity know if we bestow the myrrh of sym- ing, a pathy and the spikenard of un- worke lerstanding; We IV Or teach one little child that inanui the reddened sun on evening it is j waters is the golden door to were fairyland; river. Or are kind to those beaten by Far the knout of poverty plaited by need, the avarice of man. all, to And we have charity if we with turn aside without ostentation busim to aid the weak ; us, 1 Or track no man to his nndr>- Pnnrr served hurt; Or pursue no woman to her Mule tears; , Or never forget that one ap- ( ross preciative word carries a thief cow b from the cross to the eternal by a 1 Mowers of paradise, and that so ba he voice of solace to a wound- "p ed heart is as precious as the Voiir (h everlasting fragrance of the ojntmi alabaster cruse a woman broke two thousand years ago. " Charity is chivalry because it champions the burdened. It NO is art because it is the loveliest of lovely thoughts. It is courage because the maryrs who bore the flames for the sake of S^fi <i if HBH v/Iirtv irju.u, <11 Ml tut' DUJUJI tTS BflHBBMi who give of their strength to ?||F help other sufferers, today ^*| stand in the forefront of all the jjggia, warriors of the world. sagST; Charity is never measured in Seajw*: money. Its monuments are in the hearts of those we have taught to smile.- James Hay, v$rv' Jr., in Smith's Magazine. MBr^ I or Weakness and Loss of Appetite Utilit The Old Standard ii< rnl strengthening tonic, GKOVK'S TA.STI'.I.KSS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system A true tonic , and sure Appetizer, l or adults and children. 50c. IE LANCASTER NEWS, MAI a m a l / i _ i use iHKe a rresn urip on muie wen First Principles. i ing each many farmers imagine mule wa he important things about while the ig are mere matters of to the m ?that if a man knows tongue er j plow and hoe, to break a accident 1 and milk a cow, to adjust j drink anj ring machine and build a | that he \\ he is prepared to farm. | ation be] lany think that there are jured to ain things the boy needs Correspor rn when he studies agri e; that it is the first busi- DANDRl >f the farm paper to tell ? ITCHY eaders how to do these i! in short that, tho trnnrl ( E 25 < r is the man who knows (iirls! Gi 0 do well the different Make it of work necessary to run tiful?? n. This is a very wrong If you Jt is important to know that glist things, of course, and un- is radiant lately, many farmers do comparab now how to do properly Huffy and of the common tasks of ioe. arm; but there is not Just or our great trouble lies. the beaut great trouble with South- it immed inning is, that we have particle o ten the underlying prin- have nice of successful farming, if you ha ) not value as we should structive isic facts upon which any its lustre nent system of agricul- very life, nust rest. produces re will, of course, soon be itching o umber of careless, inefli- roots fan )lowmen at work in South- then the elds, and they should be If you t to do better work; but lected an* itter how well a man can scraggy < ; a plow, if he thinks that cent bott 1 break the same piece of derine at ind put it in cotton year counter; , year, he is going to work cd and ti by his plowing. will say matter how well the vestment nan can milk, if he cannot' ^ o sin hether or not the cow he ; 'vss ?f 1 is paying for her feed and i tised, th me, he is not likely to lustrous, his milking profitable. ?l it?no it is, through the whole scalp and The big elemental facts ?you n le things that need first Ihmderiin eration, are the things in n?t now? we are most deficient. >rget that when we make and, we are surely making There w hip for ourselves and our :,t Hopewe en. We forget?especial- Kinnil,8 at in the price of cotton goes 7 hat any single-crop sys- N f farming is bound to re- Whereas 1 poor land. We imagine i t is a small thing to drop j have petiti legume crop from our 1*0- j education 1 , because we may get a t,'rminc %sl more money this year I' d'on'all' corn or some other crop, ty in said rerlook the fact that every purposes, akes plant food from our ' .'"n nd that we must return I to hold th lant food if we would not March 1 ; . st the land. We do not house. At ler that the galled places, Sectors af he brush patches and the pu^it 'tVieir py strips add to the cost tration cei lltivating the fields they to vote. We try to think that in I ^J11?8 u way we can make up for as >il and the plant food that winter rains take away our land. Count when we come to our live No(i(~~ we forget that the poor ah part the non-laying hen, the of j. \v. lule are making us poorer hnvny '?oi day we keep them. We ('nl(' to ,1 t consider that, unless we estate wi how to feed, we are wast- 1 authentica II winter long, what we i . . 11 a 1 i Admr. Ei (1 all summer to make. Dacease< til to see that when the] Feb. 21 re heats or washes away, t list the same as if dollars burned or thrown into the state . . , Co mers ol the South, we i3y j. e. si first of all, and most of Whereat > renew our acquaintance c. Barnes the fundamentals of our fion^o/ ?t *ss. We have, many ol Mohos Ma ost our bearings.-?The These a essive Farmer. admonish red and C ' Kit,s Off rows Tongue. W dl r reeman of the 1 Gf Probate Roads section had a finejon Tuesda [> get her tongue bitten off "ft?1* i)U mule one day last week. It caus^if a ppened that the cow and Administn ed. iles Cured in 6 to 14 Days (liven u ncifist will refund money i( pazo day of Fel I'.N l (ails to cure any c?sr of Itching, reding or Protruding Piles in Mo 14 days. 1 application gives Rase and Rest. 50c. W IS THE TIME EGGS TO RAISE EARLY l>.V :y Eggs 10c each, Chicks \2ViC eac and mating list. ISDAKI) I'OI l/I RY YARDS, - "T" ?: ~ ? KCH 7, 1913. e put in stalls adjoin- T other and when the J is fed, in some way cow was trying to get Nice 6 ule's feed, he bit her up; tvv<* itirely off. Since the gt? the cow can't eat or $i,800.0< dhing and he fears 300 ac ill lose her from star- Cat and fore, he can get the in- ,ng8? , T-, 1 acr?s ext ngue cured.?Easley 2oo acre idence Anderson Mail, of saw ti told, is v IFF, FALLING HAIR I price of ucaip I for S10 ' end this at on Jash? PC> cent danderine. 61% , iris! Save your hair! Dixie, :io grow luxuriant, beau- 3-room i delightful dressing. ?pen. r care for heavy hair, s c.fE ens with beauty and 501/, ; with life; has an in- near Dw le softness and is houses I lustrous, try Dander- }ve11 ?,f located. .... , ,, $2,450.01 le application doubles ^ y of your hair, besides joining 1 iately dissolves every Sam i.an f dandruff; you cannot ro5l(1' nef ?, heavy, healthy hair ,)< r arrt!' ve dandruff. This de- gtogner11 scurf robs the hair of om> ,nne , its strength and its Arch roj and if not overcome it (,r?>ss ro; a feverishness and pri(e an< f the scalp; the hair l)VAls? * nish. loosen and die; * ro hair falls out fast. camper ir hair has been neg- Cut road d is thin, faded, dry, room tei >r too oily, get a 25 JJrln0g08o le of Knowlton's Dan- (>xtr any dry store or toilet street, apply a little as direct- cash. (1 in minutes after you nr. m< this was the best in- sale ot n you ever made. 98% cerely believe, regardeverything else adver- cultivate* at if you desire soft, tenant h beautiful hair and lots Rood p;u dandruff?no itching J Sma11 no more falling hair Snf.l4111^ ] nist use Knowlton's buihiingf b. If eventually?why ete. $if 4 6 % i nett's, n< Heaver C Special Notice. by Ma 111 be a missionary rally house an 11 church next Sunday be- r,>Rf In p 10:30 a. m. land. $: 150 a< Union otice of Election. open, tw i, one-third of the electors room an ird of the free-holders re- acres of tich Hill district, No. 24. $.1,000. oned the county board of 39 aci to order an election to do- miles no let her or not an addition- in cultiv wo (2) mills shall be lev- 70 acr real and personal proper- 5-room distriet No. 24. for school bouses. Price $11 by order the trustees of 87 acr Hill school district No. 24 $27.50 p e election on Wednesday, Three 1913, at Itich Hill school Blnckmo which election only such Nice s return real or personal land, No or taxation and who ex- Two ( tax receipts anil regis- Heath S] tiflifttes shall he allowed 2-acre Vln Lanes pening and closing i all general elections. A. C. HOWELL, _ _ 11. K. COFFEY, |T TV J. II. IIA.MEL, * y Hoard of Education. r> Debtors and Creditors. ies indebted to the estate t am A. Porter, deceased, are necotiat* .illed to make payment at , , die undersigned, and all wara on iving claims against said cotton f 11 present same, duly on l?nK tod. installmi J. E. POUTER, sums state of W. A. Porter, commlss j. sonable , 1913. 41-49-s of tltle 6 mop CITATION. OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Sehedl unty of Lancaster, Prom Lew man, Judge of Probate. n. TLi, Lizzie Blackmon and D. as info have made suit to me to guarantf n Letters of Adrninistra- Daily he Estate and effects of No. 1 ckmon. Hill and re, therefore, to cite and No. 1 all and singular the kind- Columbi redltors of the said Moses No. 1 deceased, that they be Columbi r before me, in the Court tions. >, to be held at Lancaster No. 1 y, March 11, 1913, next. Hill. Yo blicatlOn thereof, at 11 ChaHott [i the .forenoon, to show and Nev ny they have, why the said ' " E. ition should not be grant- bla, S. ( Chariest inder my hand, this 25th iruary, Anno Domini 1913. J. E. STEWMAN, T Probate Judge. Xj<XI1LcI . Scheduh TO HATCH Lv. Lar LAYERS. Lv. For { OLI) CHICKS ^ and 8 for Hatching ft; fr?m I,v. Hasj te Plymouth Rocks, Ar. Lan do Islard Reds, Conne em, 9< er Spangled Hamburgs, Northw? te Leghorns, Black ine Ra gshans and Indian Lancn Runner Ducks. h. White for catalog FOR gT Carbo - . o r ioKton 1 j - Lancaster, Js. It. The Ne, ' ( \ "arm Land -room house, nicely fitted Lc blocks of court house and caste rsection of Dunlup and Mar- , Sp Prlpft rlcrl?f MAW . On? 1 ). ~ ~ ? V ' j "bv res, D. P. Baker's, on Wild place Lynches Creeks, two build- 2-sto ree horse farm open. 50 Price ;ra fine bottoms and about T1 s in woods v'i'h thousands Price mber. Timber alone, I am 51 k'orth more than the asking Smal land. Adjoining lauds sell 5"' to $20 an acre. Will take Clyb r acre for quick sale spot ?2g i icres, Judson Usher's, near acres very fine saw timber, . . house and 3 0 acre farm ,, rice $4 0 per acre. Also 100 ' .a same with improvements, j , i be bought at $4 5 per acre. acres, Marcus Estridge's, acre, ight, 30 acres worked, two 56 5-room and 4-room, good per i water and pasture. Nicely 38 Price if sold right off Helb acre. es, Allen Alsobrook's, ad- 81 Ienry Frasler, Ben Hunter, hom< ley, etc., on Ginger Cake caste ir Union church. Price $2 5 upwj 3 7 es and small house, W. P. A nice and desirable farm, east of Lancaster, on New . id and on tlie McDow Hill ad. See me right off for Ktret' 1 terms. neJ' few other small tracts near- factc ew real bargains. ho us es about 1-4 mile north of 15 eek church and east of New Taxa , 3-room house and good 2- and unit house. Several good Knig About 20 acres cultivated. $2,0' r 72 Vfc acres at $25 an acre. 72 a nice lots on new Arch aml Will sell very cheap for hous [. P. Hardin lots.) SEE ME. Per 1 93 ?Intyre's nice new house for , bargain. acres, one mile east of 711 on piiinjc roan, wen waier- Dan rood place. 4 5 to 50 acres farm il. Good 4-room house, pg ouse, barn and stables and mile iture. By Rood school. J. both s. $32.50 an acre. road acres on Flat Creek, Ren acre, ace. Nice house and outi. Farm open, good water, knov >.00 an acre. $1,5 icres, T. H. and E. S. Ren- 6(1 ?ar Anvil Rock and west of me. 'reek road, on road leading Si rion Walker's. Tenant cliea d 10 acres of fresh land, 4C ine thicket. Some very fine 2 mi 20 an acre. 13 "res, Minor Johnson's, near Gold church, three horse farm with o houses, 4 room and 2 ' 3 d outbuildings, about 25 lots, nice saw timber. For place guso W. res. It. II. McMurray's, six strec rth of Lancaster, 2 5 acres 25 ation. Trice $30 per acre, nortl es, J. H. Barr's, near Dixie, side house and two tenant ham Also 4 0 acre farm open. Af 5 per acre. you es, near Tom Hance's. Price ber i or acre. cent nice 3-room houses, S. T. erty n place, very cheap. pron fl-room house, 4 % acres wanl rth Lancaster. Price $3,500. see i ). W. Mackey lots north of you ^ring, cheap. I ha lot by Farmers' warehouse W ister. See me. estec "STRAIGHT DE fl. BELK, Agent Money to Loan. STA prepared, as heretofore, to 3 loans of $300.00 and upfirst mortgage on improved THE arms in Lancaster County time, repayable in annual ents at 7 per cent, interest of $1,000.00 and over. No Rocs ions charged. Only a reafee for furnishing abstract C1?S( R. E. WYLIE. i. Atty-at-Law. I.on i ules Southern Railway. ^vei iier Carrier of the South. Due ?Schedule figures published Bi rmation only and are not Curi ?ed. Effective Sept. 15, 1912. Gold departure from Lancaster: Silv< 13?10:05 a. m. for Rock cc way stations. Che< 18?8:31 a. m. for Camden, a and way stations. T< 14 -2:00 p. m. for Camden, a, Charleston and way sta17 ? 7:48 p. ni for Rock Capl rkville and way tations. Also Surj e, Washington, Philad< lphia Und v York. Ci McGee, A. G. P. A., Colum- Ti W. H. Caffey, D. P. A., Dlvi on, S. C. Indi je Tim P< ster & Chester Ry. Co. J Bill! 3 in Kffect March 3rd 1912. c. Eastern Time. B WESTBOUND icaster 6:00a?3:35p t Lawn ....6:30a?44:08p STA iburg 6:55a?4:43p ,.C< ster 7:30a?5:20p B EASTBGUNI) Casl ster 9:30a?6:45p w.ho tiburg .. . .10:20a?7:25p | fomviiie. . . ,]U:soa?7:3f>p V1 t Lawn .. ..11:00a?7:60p Bh<" icanter 11:3 0?8:1 &p ctlons?Chester, with South- 3' onboard and Carol' & mo, istern Railways. Lawn, with Seaboard Air llway. Cori ?sler, with Southern Railway. A. P. McLURE. Supt. 'YLISH Wedding Invitations, n Paper or Oliver and Item Typewriter Ribbons, call at , *s office. 1-tf k ^ '-Mir? As I For Sale I >t back of Masonic ball In Lanir. Price $2,500. irlngs lots in North Lancaster. me. lrnt house lot by Perkins' >, East End, $750. Also Perkins' ry house and lot, East End. ) $2,250 to $2,500. iree lots, Sinclair Heights. J $150. % acres on Flat Creek, S. I's. $1,950. room house and 2-acre lot, urn's, East End, $2,000. 3 acres, near Elgin, 53^(Ti0. vo 50-acre lots by Geo. %[;\ker's, 50 an acre. M. C. Mosier's home place, t miles east of Lancaster; deed for 244 acres, $6,000. ^ 8 acres, Slstare place, 3 mifc% an caster, to be sold in lots ofoia Hole. Price $25 to $27.50 per Vz acres at Antioch. $32.50 acre. 6 acres, Jim Blackmon's Dell on place, near Union, $21 per 4 acres, T. W. McMurray's rx nin?A r T cj \jiatc, ?j miiun nv/i in ui uau r, cut up In lots at $25, $30 and irds per acre. 1 acres, the Moore tract, near n church. $25 per acre, ce 5-room house, North EancasI")r. Mclntyre's. $2,500. yler lots on Meeting and Barr 'ts, north of Bob Crawford's house, large lots. $400 and up. i7 % acres, one mile south if ?ry, known as Hunter place, two es and farms. $4 5 per acre. 5 acres, three miles north of thaw, known as Tom McManus Dewette tracts, and by Strict ;ht's one-horse farm open. 00. ! acres by Alex Waters place known as J. P. Carnes tract; e and 2-horse farm open. $28.50 acre. : V6 acres, Kufus Carnes tract, hove tract, house and one-horse i open. $22 per acre, i acres, J. A. Cauthen's, ne:ir Bailey's house, and 60-acre i open. $22.50 per acre. 1 acres, W. 10. Thompson's, 7 s northwest of Bethune, pu sides of Porter and Caindjrn , by Bill McCasties. $5 per 72 acres, north of Taxahaw, v as the Hugh McManus place. 00. 10 acres on Catawba river. See x desirable East End lots?very p. See me. i acres at fork New Arch road, lies of anacter. $7 0 an acre. : Vis acres, known as the Miller Mine, by Minor Johnson's mineral rights. $20 an acre. Sinclair Heights lots, corner Southeast side of Gay and Fern streets, $50. Also 4 lots N. corner Dunlap and Ferguson ts. $200. (Davis.) i acres, Carter Adams, 3 miles 11 of Lancaster, west of Riverroad and by W. J. Ciiwilng's Slstare place. $2 5 an Ave. <k me for other bargalnm^*! If have any land for sale isj ViI will handle it at 2 to 2 per commission and all town dtoo nt 2 per cent commission and I n lise you a straight deal. If you 9& : to sell or buy a homo or a farm ne for 1 can save you money. Iff IK want to rent a house in towjj? , mk vea desirable houses for rent. rite, plioue or see me if inter- H 1 in land. 9 ALING." 1 Lancaster, S. C. I TEMENT OF THE CONDITION S ! FARMERS BANK & TRUST I ' COMPANY 8 ited at Lancaster, S. C., at the } of business February 4th, 1913. ft RESOURCES. MP is and Discounts. .. $116,625.09 B drafts 3,144.55 | liture and Fixtures 2,876.00 I 1 from Ranks and S ankers 17,290.08 1 ency 1,214.00 ? i 870.00 I H ;r and other minor 8 in 748.03 1 41 ks and Cash Items. 1.427.88 ?.' 3tal >144,194.63 I LIABILITIES. | tal Stock $ 60,000.00 )lus 1,250.00 ivided Profits (less .J B urrent expenses and B axes paid) 6,014.64 I dends Unpaid 172.00 g vidual Deposits sub- 2 ct to check 51,276.22 ; | e Certificates of Do- k jslt 11,042.36 | iter's Checks 440.41 f $ i Payable, including $ Brtiflcates for Money orrowed 26,0.'V',)0 " ? otal $144,19?.63 | TE OP SOUTH CAROLINA, 1 ounty of Lancaster. eforo me came W. II. MUlen, , j iter of the above named bank,j| 1 , being duly Bworn, says that the 1 to and foregoing statement is a ? I condition of said bank, as vn by the books of said bank. W. H. MILLEN. ' ;} I worn to and subscribed before , this 7th day of February, 191S. V. B. CRAIG, Notary PubJ/c.. rect Attest * j W. P. HENNBT, A. B. FERGUSON, W. T. GREGORY, HHbi LMrectors, i J Subscribe for The New?. I