The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, June 24, 1913, Page 2, Image 2
2
Letter to Gen. Pickett's S
It will be fifty years on July 1 were from j
since the battle of Gettysburg be- alone. The di
gan, and the anniversary Is celobra- his three brigi
ted In the July American Magazine conspicuous 1
with an extraordinary illustrated black hair, an
Btory of the struggle by Edgar Allen sent the men
Forbes. The battle lasted three blood now gav
days and, us everybody will recall, back. And ji
General Pickett made his famous away to the i
charge toward the end of the third Penibertou w<
day. This charge concluded the under a tree,
battle and indirectly determined the of the surreni
outcome of the war. The following "Of all the
extract from the article, which is ett's great clia
herewith reprinted through the est human in
courtesy of The American Maga- his letter to
zinc, gives a dramatic picture of later became
Pickett's charge, and of the final " 'You uev?
events leading up to the great ca- it. They mov
tastrophe that overtook the Confed- death as a b
eracy. At this point in the narra- ward in line of
live Pickett is just leaving Long- commander in
street to go into battle. leading and c
"There was one touch of human- Two lines ot'
ity in the parting between Pickett were taken
and Longstreet that has just come to came,
light after fifty years. It humanizes " 'Ah, if I li
the hero of that daring charge to two brigades,
know that he was much in love. As have been lias
idckett turned to go, he placed iu Seven of my c<
Longstreet's hands a letter address- one was raor
ed to a brown-eyed Virginia girl of my lieu
who yet lives. And this was the wounded and
postscript which he had written in nels were kilU
the brief interval between the can- cer of my wh
nonade and the charge: Cabell, was u:
" 'Now, my daning, I go; but re- my company <
member always that I love you with tion'
all my heart and soul, with every "As the tui
fiber of my being; that now and for- die, and the <
ever I am yours?yours, my be- Pickett and
loved. It is almost three o'clock, seeks the Chi
My soul reaches out to yours?my From an emi
prayers.' * heroic battle
"Now the smoke of guns lifts like 'Light Horse
a great curtain, and discloses to the ike hopes of
eyes of the whole Army of the Po- With uncover
tomae the sublimest spectacle of ward to meet
the Civil War. slowly up the
"And how pitifully cruel it was! remnants ot 1
The long gray line hud to cover al- tears washing
wuHi a nine ul upeu ^ruuua ueiore iiv?u 1110 *-?<-<
it could use its guns, but it was a,ld gives no
within the range of the replenished within his br
Union batteries from the start. fault,' he says
"The Union gunners began on it save that \vh
with solid shot; as the silent line "At midnlg
draws nearer, they change to hurst- charge of th
ing shell and shrapnel. The Vrigi- were gatherin
nians fall like sheaves before the waited at til
sickle, hut the ranks silently close, last the gray
About midway the line1 is halted and appeared in tl
dressed under lire. Then it moves Lee wearily d
slowly forward in the face of a been a sad d
storm of canister that literally and then leai
mows great sections to the ground, in utter exhn
But the shattered brigades preserve mindful of th
their alignment, oblique to the loft, 'you are
and sweep against the stone wall aj sajt] t'iie (
from which now come the cruel volleys
of the infantry. , , . 8.
"The high-water mark of the u> e*<laimcd.
charge was reached by Armistead's , l0mma,l>
brigade of Virginians. With his cap !'on,('VI 11 , ?
upon the point of his sword to guide . Vi m"1
his men, like the Helmet of Navarre, VW'i1/' * ?
he pressed far beyond the fence, ^ oflicei
rushed the batteries, and fell dying task, a
beside the guns that he had taken. away by an o
So desperate was the fighting here ^in of the C<
that twenty Confederate flags were so,|l exceeding
captured within a space not a hun- daps of hi
dred yards square. valley of his
"Pickett's division lost 2,888 men " 'Anil he '
killed and wounded, of whom 1,11)1 and fell on hi:
CLEAN THE SEEDS. [ oH<
I Union Times.
If You Don't Like Weeds Why Do heir in
You Sow Them? ("hard times."
In the current issue of Farm and that many pe
Fireside a contributor shows how pessimistic, in;
many farmers lit rally sow the weeds hard times it
whic hthey will hate thoroughly and twigs of all tin
light so desperately later. Follow- these wallers ;
ing is an extract: he heard in tl
"I have known farmers who sow- thing about it
ad their oats year after year with- much attentioi
out ever cleaning them, and then "times are han
wondered where the yellow dock vation is ahea
and other weeds all came from. If by this time t
you wish to see just what there is in howlers are Ju
your oats in the way of weed seeds ars, or that th<
put in a scren just large enough so ->n. As a matU
that tin- oats will not pass through scarce in this c
the mesh. Now run a bushel or a man must wr
two of oats through the mill, and a living It's t
see what you find in your screen and will he so
box. It is the same barley and other We believe no
small grain Means are a staple lieved, that a
crop in many sections, and are usual- strives neeo
ly sowed with a common grain drill, "hard times'
While they are the easiest, of all
grains fo separate the weed seeds
fror- where they are loft in they Men ot t
?i do more harm than in other Kdgefiehi Advt
crops as they come <p in the row <)in great n
where the cultivator teeth cannot generation is
get tliem. who are willin
"Clover seed is a particularly one, not waitii
hard seed to clean, as If has to be :,p. going to
cleaned very slowly in order to do exigency. In
a good job and not blow over all the Walterhoro IT
seed. The separation is very ditfi- statement was
cult because the seeds ar?* small and t|H. whiskey
of one size, requiring often to he county: "A* rut
run through the mill several times (js in" the strei
before the seed is right " attorney has
agree to refus<
cases. If the o
The Proper Age l'or Marriage. would do
"What is hie proper age at which it aeems tha
to marry?" her of the V
This question has become so good imp]lis,
chronic in the worn, n's departments direction to w
of the "yellow" newspapers that u pursue, hut
statistician has gone to considerable courage to act
trouble to collect data that will en- not say: "Let
able the questioners to settle the their sense of
subject for themselves These pre- directs, but as
cedents con-'fitute the result of his fend men who
labors: a blind tiger."
Adam and Lve, \. Shakespeare would have a
18", lien Jonsoa, 21; Franklin, 21; ie bar and u
Mo/art, 2f.; Dante, Kepler Fuller, j ])0 Advert,i
Johnson, Burke, Scott, 2 6; Tjche
Brahe, Byron, Washington, Bona- t "here ,n
parte, 27; Ponn and Sterne, 28; Lin- Held bar who
naeus and Nelson, :'! * Burns. 30; lated sum urn
Chancer. Hogarth tml Pel 32, raPn who aro
Wordsworth and l>a y, LI; Aristotle,
36; Sir William Jon and Welling- in defiance of
ton, 37; Wilherforce. 3S; Luther, mo. ligation
42; Addison 44; Wesley and Young, Furthcrmor<
47; Sv ift, 40; Buff on, !>f>; Old Parr, Ie itate to tnl
last time, 120. Walterboro n
If Adam and Kve married before this type
they were a year old. and the Vet
eran Parr buckled with a widow at
1 "0. bachelor and tpli.sters may " .
wed at any age tle-v like, and find ^ , > ,1
shelter under great names for either i,. ' rri
early or late marriage. u <,.< ->
THE LANCASTER NEWS,
1 METHUSELAH A YOl^iSTEK.
weetheart
I Higher Criticism Reduces His A?e
to Less Than Eighty \ \ IMPH
\rmistead's brigaade Chicago Tribune. A \ .
^i?raW?iCnoofiPnv?r How old was Methuselah? Nine ' ?"s<
adie s Pas iMn? hundred and sixty-one years is the
/ fti h % a*e whlch> from ?ur earliest youth,
id the o ce t.at we have been accustomed to assign Wa
across the field of tho patrlarch. Scientific research,,.^
e the command to fall abroad, however, has reduced these
ust at that hour, far imposiug Hgurea to 78% years. have
southward, k,ant and The expert8 po,rt out that there rV(i i
?re standing together haa aiway8 existed a certain amount .....i
arranging the details of joy^t, even among orthodox be- ,.s ?it
ier ot \icksburg. Itevers, in the literal truth of the
i descriptions ot Pick- uit>le concerning the great age to
irge, that ot the great- which the patriarchs uttained. Many
terest is the la est theories have been evolved to reduce
the Virginia gu. who j^e Biblical records of this kind to i,,,,,,,
ins wilt-; 'something near the allotted span of jY..-".!
r saw anything like matl. J -""
ed across that held of j iias been surmised that in the soutb
nttalion marches for- earliest times the mouther?the pe- ^et j
battle upon drill, each ri0d of a moon cycle?was called a ..OUU)
front of his command. ; year> Thus, Adam's 930 years of vioUy
heering on his men ufe> caicuiuting a year at 29Vfe days, rece{,
the enemy's infantry the length of a lunar month, works jjOUig
i?and no support ()Ut to 75V* years. After the month buve'
! year there would appear to have jud
lad only had my other come a five-mouth year, the limit of
a different story would five being derived from the fingers frJm
bed to the world. ... of one hand, it being remembered
olonels were killed and that primitive people always used cjfjte'
tally wounded. Nine the fingers for purposes of calcula- 'A 't(,v
tenant-colonels were tlon. Then came the 12-montli ^voujt
three lieuteuant-colo- year. \Vest<
id. Only one field ofii I Ground for this rearrangement is '
ole command, Colonel alleged to ho given in the psalmist's ' .
nhurt, and the loss of limit of life of three-score and ten c
sfticers was in proper- years. Furthermore, it is maintain- * '
ed that, between the times of Noah . ..
liult and the shouting and of David, no such extraordinary . .
eye turns away from change could have taken place as to '.
the bloody field he reduce the life of a man by eleven- M'
eftain who has lost, twelfths. On the five-month year
nence overlooking the basts, Abraham's 17 5 years shrink !'
ground, the son of to 72 and Isaac's 180 to 74. ? '
Harry* I-.ee has seen It may be, it Is also pointed out, j11"' fc
the Southland perish, that there intervened a six-month 1)et>u
ed head he rides for- year, discovered by Jacob while lte<
I'ickett. who comes watching Laban's flocks. Thus Ja- cattle
slope with the pitiful cob's 147 years work out at about lmngj
his broken legion, the 73. The 12-month year began with rest j
the grime of battle the Egyptians, who saw that a com- range
ks. Lee's face is ca'm plete period was made up of the two that j
hint of the emotions "years." in one of which the days gia a
east. 'It was all mv were longer than the nights, and in thous
>. 'Now help me t> the other of which the nights were cattle
ich remains.' longer than the days. rang!
. . . ~ _ . It is a curious fact that the Chris- matu
lit a cavalry officer in , , m ?
e rough wagons that , s Klarat,for in due 1 ,
g up the mangled men {.)urs(i Qf Uim? Horh Hashona will "Vcrij
le Generals to>nt. A. af Christmas time and then shipp
outline ot Traveler ;UOh ,,p with the Christian year. citv.
tie dim moonlight au i yjUs. however, will not occur for senici
lismounted. This has :}() 000 g
ay, General! he said, * .
ned against his horse dippe
lustion, seemingly uti- Our Excellent Intentions. I"?) .
e other's presence. , ... ...
, ? . I atu quite clear tliat one of our om
much tatigued, Geaer- xcorst failures is at the point where, Ei,id
tavalry officer having resolved like angels, we drop shinn
00 bad! It's too bad!' iiack into tiie old matter of fact life tie
Then he gave the and do just what we did before, t>?- j soutli
1 of the day?and it cause we have always done it, and 'suit
e wounded men who because our fathers am*, mothers I a heat
vain and whose moans did it, all ot which mav he the vorv .....
1 - * ?" ; 1 Hilt
rere ot the Lost Cause reason vhy we should not do it. j as (0
went to his harrow- There is no station in life, ai d no far \
nd 'Traveler' was led place of one's home, where, if he tor b
rderlv. Then the Cap- want to enlarge his life by caring Gf sc
anfederacy, with his people outside himself, he may pUstu
t sorrowful, drew back not start 011 a career of enlargement ; small
s tent and entered the which shall find the answer to our breed
Gethseinune alone question to be tha t the man who reaso
went forward a tittle, enters upon infinite purposes lives most
4 f. (1)> . the intinite life. He enlarges his cattle
life by every experience of life.? breed
ted ward teverett Hale. of pU
nd Times." aU ?c
1 II
Put Vuur Money in Ileal Estate. ( j
uch being said about ' Spartanburg Herald. grazii
It's a sort ot liabi' ! The Atlanta Georgian is giving the >
ople have N'uturaii- Uoung men of Atlanta a little talk ??
kny men would preach on real estate. And what is true of I
dollars hung in t t. jn Atlanta is true in Spare?
trees Kverv summer tan burg and in any other growing
about hard times may (own in the South,
ip land. One blessed The Georgian says:
is that nobody pays "Some of our friends seem to be
1 to them. The cr? nee llessly alarmed because of a
i. money is tight, star- stringency In the money markets in
d.'' Everybody knows ten rope and America,
hat these calaamity "Money stringencies are neither
1st plain, everhodv Ii- new nor startling. They were old
ey have distorted vi.-d- in the days of Joseph. They come
r of fact, money get- :ind tr0 a frightened bird,
ountry .-very summer V\'al! street may l?e in the dold>rk
or lieg or steal : >r rum -. but the rest of the country is ;
bat way ev?-rywh>i ru.? . it g along in its normal way. Of
to the end ot time course, the revision of the tariff is
w, as we always lie- tu-mg some uneasiness, hut that,
man who honestly too. wil! pass away,
have little fear o: 4 tVe bid our friends cheer upAr.d
1 * we were asked for advice we
would say to those who have money
to Invest: I
enrage N-ede.t , , r,.a] estate Put your money
rtiser i. the ground' All wealth comes
leed <>: this day and out of the earth! More great for- I .1
men of courage, men tunes have been made In real estate!
g to stand >r fail al- ' v ?p 1 over ll?iiu in any other
ig to see w bat others I ' '*'/
L or do ln a , ena n I 1 ..w! Buy In the right
a recent issue of The place Hii> on the line of advanceess
and San da r 1 Mu ?? *?>' ??> 1 development. liny only
1.. gl.nii.iil> > - much .is von enn enrrv
situation in Colleton Then improve your property, and
nor is going tiie roun- >'>" need have no fear of tin' fu ts
that a prominent tursaid
that lie woul i "The Hearst newspapers have ale
to take blind tiger ays urged readers to buy real v
ther attonerys at this estate
likewise." "I' you i?u> right you fan not
t tills particular im-ni f;,i: r<> increase the money you in- '
falterboro liar had a v,'sf
his conscience giving 'Many people will tell you that
hat course he should f'11 ~ r-l?at or the other part of tho
lie was lacking tn >'*'ir ls not the 'real estate season.'
upon n Why did he "tiood real estate has no season,
other la-AV.-Y. io ' " xround is always hero. Tlio
duty and their < >;, to buy is when you have the
for me I will not le triune/ to carry your purchase?and
bear the ear-marks >: v r" tliat >*ou huy only property
' Such a stand ae that ' :eTta,n to develop and imwliole-onie
? tt upon i'r ' '''* days go liny.
pon the community 10 ,hl* >'ou nefMl not wor"
Iser is pleased to state V >'' ^?re is assured."
members of the Edge- ? . i;..; a shrewrt mnn to Rct rU:h
will not for a stipu- , vpire his wrlortake
the defense of .
known to soil w uiskey j < hurnlierlniii's Colic, Cholera nn<l .
i.i? .i i j i iMurrntM'u lusinooy.
conn.i nil Every family without exception ,
these attorney \ > not should keep thla preparation at hand '
'uch stan i openly during the hot weather of 'ho sum-1
' la ryers of nier monthe. Chamberlain's Celle
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy Is i
worth many times Ita cost when
a Cold in One Day an? ,S *Lm0flt Cftrta,|l 10 be '
7 needed before th summer Is over i
,hr It has no superior for the purposes
for whi?h it is Intended. Ruy It
it < now P'or sale by all dealers. I "
JUNE 24, 1913.
TFD MMIirV f ATTI F bile; the Kreat varl<
I L<I* yllALIII LA I IIX ture grasses and leg urn
grow luxuriantly ou all
tOVR thk PAHTIIRI.?) because of the mild wint
tov R 1 Hh I AHTUIU.S. If the western rauchm
ford to pay southern far
iern Farmers Advised Against prices for cows, pay the h
dling Off Their Cows to rates to the West, stand
... ? .. . which naturally occur d<
Western Kanchmen. ping th,n cattleX 8Uch loug
.shlngtou, June 23.? During also bear the losses due t
ast twelve months cattle buyers climatic conditions,
been active in Louisiana, Miss- raahe money on them, v
>i, Alabama, Georgia, and Flo- ^he southern farmer w
purchasing cattle to be ship- owns 'be cattle as well a
0 the Middle Western markets lu? lands, and who needi
.her canners or stockers. The uure upon the soils, keel
> paid for canners during this on ^be farm and secure t
1 have been so high that thous- <;d profits? He can, if h
of cows and heifers have goue bis cattle of ticks, increa
e shambles which should have ciency of his pastures h
retained on the farms for mixtures of lespedeza, I
ing purposes. This is especl- while clover, or perhaps
loticeable when the receipts of alslke clover, and redtoi
ern cattle at the St. Louis mar- pasture lands; and by ra
or the last twelve months are bays ami forage crops foi
ared with those for any pre- bis stock and finishing the
period of similar length. The k,,t. The surplus cattle
its of Alabama, Mississippi, and fattened by feeding cotto
iana cattle at that market ?" Kras?. or grazing field
almost doubled duriug this per- beans while feeding sor
trate; or they can be flnii
ice the tlrst of Febuary buyers ''r>' '?t during the wiub
the farms and ran (drees of the winter feeding 110 ro
have been scouring the Gulf proved more valuable tl
s in search of breWiug -stock. as the addition of it to I
r years agt? this class of caattle ration invariably increase
1 have been scorned by the 01 the daily gains and re
urn ranchman as breeding cost, thereby making grea
, but with the shortage of cows The quality and quantity
reeding purposes the ranchers which can be produced c
lad to get these cheap cows, these cheap lands cannot
:iich they will breed good beef by the high priced la
The halfbreeds resulting from corn belt, whereas the c<
mating make fairly desirable duclng it is far less beca
animals. cheap labor.
eral thousand cattle have al- The farmers of the !
been sent from these States therefore urged to discoi
jxas, Oklahoma, and Kansas, wholesale shipping of tli
tome of them are said to have cattle to other states, t<
shipped as far as Montana. pastures of the cattle ti
cently there were perhaps more ?n<l
unloaded at one time in Bir- ?
ham, Ala., for feed, water, and P gen
while en route to the western ; ? .. \t, cl11* In
... . . and better cattle, but
>s than have ever been seen in mo f,table to ;a|se ?
place before in one day. Oeor- th are h uatlves Th
,nd Morida are sending out lncreased in fortility ,
;ands of these native southern wMch t
' atftho returns when applied to
ug from $15 to $2.1 a bead for cro d vegetable
re animals. A shipment of 40 tho S()i, \h amount t
ads of cattle was recently ...
. , . clal fertilizer necessary
from Oseceola county, ? ____ , , ,
. rr., "a crop will be reduced a
da, 111 one day. They were ?i?i 1 ,
ed to Kansas via Oklahoma , jt , 1 1 .. 1
The cattle were dipped in ar- '
il solution before loading, to ,, aj ' tl ... V'.
.. ,. * . ? % eradicating the cattle tic
them of ticks, and were to be ..
. . ' , , , rt, , , obtained from the Bureau
d again 011 arrival at OklahoMty
before going above tho Industry, Department o
ral quarantine line. ture, Washington, D. C.
lie people of the South seem farmers are also advised
that these cattle are being the Department's county
ed out as the number of scrub onstratioil agQnt8.
are being reduced and the
1 will get better cattle as a roThey
do not look far enough Guaranteed Ke/.eina 1
1. however, or they would see The constant itching,
if Ihe shortage of cattle is HUdl rodnose rsisli onH
c..use buyers to come from the fects of eczema, tetter, s
Vest to buy these scrub cattle itch, piles and irritating
reeding purposes, the chances tions can be readily curi
uthern farmers refilling their skin made clear and si
res with good cattle are indeed Dr. Hobson's Eczema Oin
, for where are these good J. C. Eveland, of Bath,
ing cattle to come from at a "I had eczema twenty-flvi
nable price? The best and had tried everything,
profitable way of getting good When I found Dr. llobso
throughout the South is to Ointment I found a cui
up the native cattle by the. use ointment is the formula
re bred bulls, and by castrating clan and has been In usi
rub bulls at an early age. ?not an experiment. T
e South is especially adapted we can guarantee it. A1
ising cattle, because of tho long or by mail. Price 50c.
ig season, the t-.ormous areas Chemical Co., Phlladelpt
rap land, much of which is now Louis.
Every Woman SI
New Per/
mm ii i i,i j m
Oil Cook
It means a cool, clean kitel
cooking. No wood to cutsmoke?no
soot.
M ile with 1, 2, 3 an
Indicator marks amount
ct a \m a or* mi
i rkiiJLy/^rviy V-/ JL L
Washington, D. C. (New Jers
Richmond, Vau BALTIMC
Norfolk, Vo.
sty of pas- Notice of Election. \ ^
ies ,, whlcl} Wheras. one-third of the elector?
' and one-third of free-holders reslder^'
. ing in Riverside school district, No.
en cau at- Lancaster county, have petitioned
Piers ?.??t the county board of education to
f. order an election to determine
the losses Whether or not the 3-mill tax now
v}gt ship- levied on all real and personal prop'
ai8lahces, erty |n 8ajd 8Ch00i district for school ~y: j
? a.change purposes shall be repealed. K
and then We hereby order the truotees of I
. hy cannot Bald 8Ch0ol district No. 7 to hold the
ho already election on Wednesday, June 26,
S t? . Kraz~ 1913, at Riverside school house, at i
3 hi ?m^J which election only such electors as j
) his stock return real or personal property for j
nPTUS taxation and who exhibit their tax I
e will free receipts and registration certifl- I
se the eili- i cates shall be allowed to vote. I
iy planting ; Rules for opening and closing of I
>ur clover, J pQn8 to be same as in all general A
iiuililntiic I ? it
utvifwuu, elections.
p over his A. C. ROW ELL,
dsing more j. GARDINER RICHARDS. 9
r wintering V. A. L1NGLE, 1
in for mar- County Board of Education. I
can the be ?. > ^
nseed cake , \f \ (A
s of velvet Notice of Election. [ \ ufl
ne concen- whereas one-third of the electors f \ M
died In the aml one-third of free-holders resid- ' \H
er months. jng jn Craigsville school district, jH
ughage has No jn Lancaster county, have K
tian silage, petitioned the county board of ed- ?>
.he feeding U(.atir to order an election to de- ;
is the size termine whether or not the 3-mlll
duces their tax now levied on all real or perLter
profits. SOual property in said district for
i of silage school purposes, shall be repealed.
>n some of we hereby order the trustees of
be surpass- aaid district No. 8 to hold the eleouds
of the tion on Wednesday, June 25,'1918,
ost of pro- at Craigsville school hourfe. At i
luse of tho which election only such electors as '
return real or personal property for
South are taxation and who exhibit their tax
ntinue this receipts and registration certificates
lelr female shall be allowed to vote. Rules for
> free the 1 opening and closing shall be the
ck, and to , same as in all general elections.
quality of A. C. ROWELL,
if purebred J. GARDINER RICHARDS,
y will not V. A. LINGLE,
nlfo lsircnr pAiinfv Hnnril n f ITHnpotfnn
will be far _________
ind to feed
e soils will NOTICE,
by the ma
the?cotton To Teachers nml Trustees?Second
matter into Notice.
>t coiunier- You are hereby reminded that the
to produce jaw now requires the annual report
ind a more Qf 0Very teacher to be filei. in the
iroduced. office of county superintendent of
methods ol education witliin two weeks after
South and the schools close. Several ba\e not
ks may be done this as yet. Some teachers
i of Animal have left their reports with the
f Agrtcul- trustees and the trustees have fallSouthern
to send them in.
Please attend to this at once as I
to consult am hound ly the same law to make
farm dem- uiy report to the state superintendent.
The penalty for failure to
make the report is per above Is $26
and cancellation of certificate of
temedy. teacher.
, burning, Now unless the reports are forthreeable
ef- coming in due time, I will be forced
lalt rheum, to resort to measures that will bring
skin erup- them. You will please (those who
ed and the have not made their report) govern
nooth with 1 yourselves accordingly and save me
itment. Mr. j this unpleasantness.
111., says: | Also the county board offered at3
years and , tendance buttons to -ill chldren of
All failed. j the rural schools of the county who
n's Eczema made 90 per cent on attendance,
re." This These buttons have not been ?rder-^
of a physl- j ed because only one teacher in thjC*^
s for years ( county has made a report, as to tbV
hat is why number needed. Please send you^^
1 druggists, reports and the buttons will be
Pfeiffer given as stated,
ila and St. A. C. ROWELL.
County Supt. of Education.
lould Own A
ectiort
n Tii Tum
stove
ten, less work, hotter
no ashes to carry?110
d 4 burners;
of oil in font.
. COMPANY
ey) Charlotte, N. C.
)RL Charleston, N. C.
Charleston, S. C. I
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