Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, February 21, 1922, Page Page Eight, Image 8
* ^tumorous grpartwcnt.
Guilty.?The prisoner came before
the bar with the bored air of the hardened
offender. The Judge looked
down at him pjid paused for words.
His face wore a look of disgust.
"Jacks, this is the nineteenth time you
have . appeared here to answer a
charge of petty larceny. You're absolutely
hopeless, and I don't dee what
I ara going to do with you. Have you
aitything to say for your:-elf?"
'"Yes, sir, judge," the prisoner hastened
to reply. "You see, it was this
tvaV{ I?"
, "It's no use!" the judge interrupted.
"Ijt doesn't make any difference how
' ^ou want, to tell it. I wouldn't believe
your statement If you swrrc to it on a
stack of Bibles." There was a moh.eflt'8
awed silence. Then the prisoner
addled craftily.
. "jlldge," he stated, "I plead guilty."
JUnavolent Old Qent No. 4,1*8.?The
regulation small and ragged boy was
isfiWdlng the traditional bitter tears
In the light of the street lamp when
tiff according-to-Hoyle philanthropic I
Old gentleman approached. Side whiskers.
black stock, silver-headed cane
r-dll the flxin's.
v "What's the matter, my old man?"
asked the p. o. g., just as they always
do tn stories.
. "I was goln' to the bakery," began
the small boy, playing up to the rules,
'to set me mudder a loaf of bread and
I'dropped zhy money In the dark and
I can't And it, and now I won't get my
supper and me muddcr 'II beat me."
"Never mind, little boy," soothed the
ancient, "here's a match."
iLi . 4 '
Satisfied.?"Who became prime minister
of England after being a little
local solicitor In Wales?" asked the
inspector at the college.
"Lloyd George," said the young student.
?
"Correct!" the Inspector mado answer.
"And who became prime minister
after he had won his first scat at
Boat Fife?"
V "H. H. ABquith," answered the stu
aenu
"Correct again!" replied the interlocutor.
"And. now tell me, Bethram
Banks, what's to prevent you from
bccothlhg prime minister?"
Bertram thought for a moment and
thea exclaimed:
"I've got a good Job now."
Gentle Reminder.?It was a thrilling
story that McGregor had to tell.
*1 had abandoned all hope," he said.
"As I sank for the third time my post
life seemed to rise before me in a series
of grim, realistic pictures."
X murmur of sympathy rolled from
the lips of listening friends; but just
aft McGregor was preparing to resume,
McTaviah interrupted him sharply and.
hopefully, "And did you happen to notice,"
he asked*" "a picture of mc lendIn
your a fiver in the autumn of 1919?"
Wall, Why? -S An eager-looking |
yourtgster apprbachcd a man hurrying
in the direction of the railway siatlon.
"Carry your bag, sir?" he asked.
"No," snapped the man.
"I'll carry It all the way for a
nicjtel."
"i tell you I don't want It carried!"
snarled the man.
Whereupon the lad broke into a
quick trot to kce|> up with hla victim's
hasty strides, as he asked, in inrocent
curiosity: '"then why a>-e you
carrying it?"
tare.?"Hallo, Fred! How did you
get on in Scotland?"
"Oh, fine, Jack. We had grand
T/eather all the time. By the way, do
you know, I heard a funny thing when
1 was thjsre."
'Indeed!" said Jack. "What was
itr\ it w
"Well, they told me that they didn't
hang a msn with a wooden leg in Scotland."
"That's queer!" said Jack. "How's
that?"
' "Oh, they hang em with a rope as i
a rule.'" *
Yes!?Theodve Cooke was proud of
liia library.
''Yes," he explained to one of his
friends, as he showed him into the
large room, "I take great pride in my
books. Whenever I find one of them
with a torn leaf I put it through a legal
process."
"What l??gal process?" the visitor
asked.
"I have it bound over to keep the
piece!"
No Clothes.?Doris watched her
mother sprinklo her furs with naplhaler.e
powder.
"Why do you do that, mother?"
"To keep the moths away, dear."
"Why?"
"Because moths cat clothes, dear."
"Were there moths in the Ga-den of
Eden when Adam and Eve lived there,
mother?"
"Of course, dear."
"Well, what did they eat?"
A Question.?"My boy," said the
minister, "do you know the meaning
UI t'IIt'1 auu cuici i>i iov ,
"No, sir," answered Freddy; "I don't
believe I do."
"Well, I'll tell you. One of the richest
men in the world came to this city
without a shirt on his back, and now
he has millions in his napie.'
"Millions?" he asked. "Why, how
many of them ran he wear at a time?"
Good Description.?A amateur mountain
Climber, relating his exj>erience in
the Rockies, said:
"Goin' up you can mighty night
stand up straight and bite the ground:
goin' down a man warns hobnails on
m, tau
I PEANUTS IN GEORGIA
Farmers Greatly Interested In This
Popular Product of the Soil.'
SOME ADVANTAGES ABE ENUMERATED
Thousands of Aere? Are Being Planted
In Them?Good Money in the Crop at
75 Cent* a busnei.
|
'(Ralph Smith In Atlanta Journal.)
Next to cotton, there is no product
of the soil that is attracting more attention
among the farmers of Georgia
today than peanuts, and, as has been
pointed out several times, there are
certain sections of the state in which
the acreage in peanuts will exceed that
in cotton. Many of the most successful
farmers in the state are convinced j
that peanuts can be produced more
profitably than cotton, and here and
there, I have found men who do not intend
planting a stalk of cotton, but are
determined to engage extensively in the
production of peanuts.
Recently at Madison, my good friend,
Charles M. Furlow, whose interest in
the welfare of the people and the development
of Georgia is appreciated by
I all who know him, remarked upon the
I go?d work that is being done by the
Bank of Rutledge in encouraging Morgan
county farmers to turn to peanuts
as a money crop. Thos. Peacock, cashier
of the bank, is one of the most pro
gressive citizens of the county, and he
is giving lots of attention to the farming
situation.
Rutledge Bank's Letter.
Mr. Peacock has recently addressed
a communication to the friends and
customers of the Bank of Rutledge
about the production of peanuts?a
communication that can not fail to
appeal to every man who reads it.
"We want to tell you in all frankness
that the time has come for an upheaval
of our farm plans and methods," re-marks
Mr. Peacock. "If you don't
know how to raise anything but cotton,
you had better be sitting up nights
figuring on something else because
your days of prosperity and prominence
are numbered.
"Whenever it gets cold enough for
your wells to freeze over you can begin
to plant, another cotton crop, but
until then there are other things infinitely
easier and moro profitable than
chasing up and down cotton rows from
April to September with every conceivable
kind of trap and weevil catcher.
Another fool idea the southern
farmer can dispense with is that he
'was put here to clothe the world.'
Let's let them wear fig loaves for a
while. Wc believe in planting some
cotton, but it ought to be so little that
it wouldn't make any difference if we
didn't make a boll.
"During the past several months we
have sent you every bulletin the department
of agriculture has issued, on
peanuts. We have sent you the booklet
the Peanut Crushers' association
issued; we are now Bending you in
pamphlet form, "How to Grow and
Gather Peanuts,' written by Mr. C. J.
Rambo, president o.' Edison Oil company,
and we are writing Mr. N. L.
Wijlet for copies of his booklet on
'Commercial Peanuts and Their Culture,'
which we shall mail to you. We
have orders with the State College of
Agriculture and the U. S. Department
of Agriculture for a supply of any new
bulletins that may be issued. By the
time we get through you will have in
*,AM" ltABoaoelAn oil iKft n X'Q i 1U hip infOT
JUUl |n/OOCOOiVII US* VilV t> * ?.v mation
in the world on peanuts; besides
you have been raising them more
or less all of your life and eating them
every time you had a nickel. There
can be no excuse for not knowing
what a peanut is and how to grow it.
Compared to Corn.
"The next crop after cotton that a
man in this part of Georgia thinks
about is corn. The acre that will make
fifteen bushels of corn at 50 cents per
bushel will make forty bushels of peanuts
at 75 cents per bushel. We leave
it to you as to which is worth the most,
the fodder from this corn or the hay
from the peanuts. If you never sold a
sprig of hay or a single peanut you
still raised a crop more than twice as
valuable as corn. There is no better
stock food in the world than peanuts.
Give him time and one pig will root
up a mousana acres iuukihh <?r urem, i
chickens will go a mile to find a patch;
you have to beat a mule away from
them, and the gentlest cow In the
world will tear down a fence to get to
them. Your children want them every
day In the year. What more can you
ask?
"The only real argument we hear
against peanuts is that you have to
work them and gather them. This is
true, as there seems to be no way of
wishing it done.
"We have written to every peanut
crushing mill in the south and have yet
to find one that will not buy them the
year round at a price that will give
them a profit on the oil. Candy manufacturers
have been buying 75 to DO
per cent, of the prop. Peanuts are now
found in every grade of candy from
'kisses' to dream jewels. Every grocery
store in the United States and
Canada handles peanut butter, and yet
somebody with nothing on God's earth
to sell is always whining, 'If we raise
them, where can we find a market?'
"Every man, woman and child is an
open market; every new-born babe
Just another customer. Wherever ships
sail or human feet tread peanuts find
a welcome. They are food for every
fowl, and for every animal from the
tiniest mouse to the mammoth elephant.
No hospital in any country has
ever placed one black mark against
them. No doctor lias ever prescribed
against them or liecause of them. It is
a food that has always been man's best
(friend. When everything else fails him
and the things that once so temptingly
(appealed now nauseate him, the little
ipeanut is ever faithful to its taste, and
is ns d^lic^t}3 aftattcrgil tpoth of
old age as it was to the milk tooth of
infancy. ?
Universal Food.
"No crime has ever been committed;
no dark plot concocted over peanuts;
nowhere at any time have they ever
been associated with anything but
peace and good will. It is the only
food that strangers forever unknown
to each other divide and enjoy. Whercever
civilization reaches, the bag of
ncnniits is the universal emblem of
peace, brotherly love and friendship.
No man can travel so far in time or
distance but that one whiff of parching
peanuts will not take him back to home
and mother, childhood, circus days and
sweethearts, and nothing else for that
instant of time can draw a veil over
things he dares not remember, yet
wouldn't for the world forget.
"No circus, no wild west show, no
ring bout, no world scries could ever
be possible without peanuts. Henry
Ford-is about to buy and build the
biggest plant in all the world and it
will make fertilizers for peanuts. Ho
now realizes his big mistake when he
hit the deep blue sea with his peace
ship. If he had loaded it down with
hot goobers, right then the war would
have ended. And later, when our boys
landed, letters came pouring back by
the thousands begging piteously?for
what? Candied peanuts.
"Let's bDw In humble reverence to
the little peanut, because it is the only
edible thing God has given us that
tastes alike and the same to every
beast, fowl and human being on the
face of the earth."
MANY MARRY YOl/NG
Census Report Shows Many Wives
Only 15 Years Old.
Sixteen hundred boys and 12,834
girls 15 years of age in the United
States are listed as married in 1920,
the census bureau announced in a
statement presenting special analysis
of marital statistics. Eighty-two boys
and 499 girls of the same age were recorded
as widowed or divorced.
The analysis revealed a distinct increase
during recent years or since the
1910 census in the percentage of married
persont for each year of age from
15 to 34, especially among the younger'
members of this group. The age group
from 35 to 44, inclusive also showed
an increase in the ratio of married
persons in the decade, although less
pronounced, especially among the women,
while the proportion for persons
JZ ?>AnMe r? rvA nnsi nlHnf chnttmH fl I
i o } cai a ui iv^t anu viuvt oi?v/rvv>v*. ?v
decrease.
In 1920, the figures show, 3,222 boys
of 16. years, or three-tenths of one per
cent, of the total of that age, compared
with one-tenth of one per cent,
in 1910, were married,, while those 17
ycar3 of age married numbered 7,699,
or eight-tenths of one per cent of the
total of that age compared with half
that proportion ten years previously.
The number of married girls 16
years of age increased from 34,829 or
3.7 per cent of the total female population
of that age, in 1910, to 41,626 or
4.2 per cent, of the corresponding tote
1 ill 1920.
? Investigators of the murder of Wm.
Desmond Taylor, film director, at Los
Angeles, California, are waiting to see
if anything would result from the announcement
of Thomas Lee Woolwine,
district attorney, that Edward P.
Sands, missing former butler-secretary
to Taylor would not be prosecuted on
an embezzlement charge preferred by
hiB former employer If Sands could
prove himself innocent of the slaying
of Taylor and "untangle this murder
mystery." Woolwine's announcement
followed receipt of a letter purporting
to have been written by Sands. The
writer stated he was in Los Angeles,
was not guilty of the murder of Taylor
but could name the murderer and solve
the mystery of the slaying. He inquired
whether he would be set free in case
he surrendered and proved Innocence of
the slaying. He asked that the district
attorney publish his reply "in any of
the Los Angeles" papers," and woolwine
made public the letter and the
answer, the latter being addressed "to
Edward F. Sands through the public
press." Woolwine stated he had no
means of knowing whether the letter
was genuine, but that he and his investigator
thought it better to "treat
it as such" in the hope that it was.
? Forty-eight years ago Peter
Mooney was shot to death in his bed
at Pnmo fin anH nn lust Fridav Sher
Iff Wilson forwarded to Birmingham,
Ala., a' warrant authorizing the arrest
of a man wanted ns a slayer.
The crime had long sir.ce been forgotten
in Home except by relatives of
the slain man until the sheriff received
a letter from a Birmingham attorney
which, it was said, contained the information
that the man long sought
was residing near Birmingham. The
attorney, George A. Favors, said the
man, whose name the sheriff withheld,
had been living under an assumed
name and had been married there 20
years ago and recently was divorced.
The divorce resulted in his identity
coming to light, it was said.
SHE LOOKS
SO WELL
AND HAPPY
See the rich, red blood, the
sign of health, showing
in her lovely checks
Some women have naturally beautiful
complexions that tell you there is
plenty of richness in their blood. Their
figures become well formed, supple
rounded and graceful. Those are the
results of rich, red blood and plenty
I of it. There is no need of being thin
I and srrnwny from poor blood. Get n
I few liottles of fJmle's Pepto-Mangan
?take it with your meals for a few
weeks. It will give you plenty of red
blood. Tly building tip the blood, you
give the entire system a ehanee to restore
itself naturally and that brings
natural bloom and beauty and all the
.ets and iovs of good health. Get
Glide's Pppto-Mangan at yojir druggist's
in liiptid or tablet form. AdverHisement.
CLEARING OLT VAGRANTS
Domino Players Have Tough Time in
Texas Town.
The playing of dominoes, a widley
popular indoor sport, or loitering about
domino parlors In the military area
here will constitute prima facie cvi
dence that persons so engaged are vag-,
rants, according to an order published
by Brigadier General Jacob F. Wolters,
sent to Mexia, Texas, several weeks
ago by Gov. Pat M. Neff to restore order
and break up alleged trafficking in
whisky and drugs.
General Wolters' orders were followed
by an announcement that the military
had arrested 72 persons in a raid
on a domino parlor a few steps away
from military headquarters and that
police had taken several scores In a
similar raid. The vagrancy charges
would be preferred against such prisoners
before the civil authorities, it
was said.
? Taxable incomes of individuals returned
to the government for the
calendar year 1019 showed an increase
of nearly $4,000,000,000 as compared
with 1918, according, to statistics issued
Sunday night by th^ Internal
revenue bureau. For the /ear 1919
there were 5,332,760 individual returns
filed for a total income of $19,859,000,000,
as against 4,424,114 returns
for a total of $15,924,000,000 for the
previous year. The tax collected on
the 1919 returns amounted to $1,270,000,000,
>vhich was an increase of
$141,908,000 over the year 1918. Personal
returns of Incomes of $1,000,000
D0L1
Thursd
mSB 9 MmaSr 1
fkAth
McConnell's
m
3 Only?$5,00 Silk Skirt
$2.00 Alarm Clocks?At
12 Prs. Ladies' Black IIo
2 Pairs Men's $1.00 Elas
Seam Drawers for
10 yds. 15c Dress Gingh?
10 yds. Good Bleaching f
10-vd. Bolt Long Cloth f<
3 yds. 40c Oil Cloth for..
2 69c Window Shades foi
1 $1.00 Shirt and 50c Nc<
2 yds. 75c White Table I
^.1 .\.ii ill T?n
t/t pUXl o VAJ.vj Viu aii
value $7.50, in size?? 3,'
41-2?Pair -
30 cakes Swift 's 10c Lau
Soap?30 cakes for.
S yds. 15c Cheviots?for
10 yds. Best 30 inch 11
Sheeting for
1 $1.50 House Dress for
12 yds. Apron Gingham*
10 yds. 15c Outing for
1 Ladies' medium weigh
and 1 pr. Ladies' 25c I
for
5 Boxes Mauvis or PalmrI\ilfiim
Pmvdr'v for
14 Cans 10c Air Float Ti
Powder for 1
(> yds. 25c Percale for
1 pr. Boys' $1.50 Pants 1
1 pair $1.50 Overalls for
14 Cakes 10c Ivory Soap
13 Cakes 10c Palm-Olive
$ Mc(
^
and over totalled- 25 f6r 1919, compared
with 67 in 191S, while for 1319
there wore tive returns filed for incomes
of $5,000,000 and over. For 1919
there wore six personal returns of income
from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000;
seven of incomes from $2,000,000 to
$3,000,000. Thirteen from $1,500,000 to
$2,000,000; 34 from $1,000,000 to $500,
000, and f>0 from $750,000. The average
not incomes reported for 1919 was
$3,724.05, the average amount of taxes
S23S.0S and the average tax 6.39 per
cent. The number of joint returns of
husbands and wife for 1919 was 2,858,597
and the number of wives making
separate returns from their husband
was 53,53). The number of corporation
income tax returns, other |
than personal service corporations, for
1919 was 320,198 of which 209,634 reported
net income amounting to $9,411,000,000,
with a total tax of $2.175,000,000,
compared with the 1918
figures of 317,579 corporations filing
returns of which 202.061 reported a
total net income of $8,361,000,000 arid a
tax aggregating $3,158,000,000.
% (
TRIBUTE TO BANKS
President Pays Tribute to Them for
Bearing Share of Nation's Burden.
President Harding paid tribute to
the bankers of the country for their
cnare in Deanng me n;uiuu? uuiucua i
in a letter read at the annual dinner
of the Trust Companies of the United
States, in New York last week.
"I thir?e every American who appreciates
difficulties of the epoch through
which we are passing," he wrote, i
"must recognize that the country i
owes a great obligation to the wisdom 1
ay, Februar
^ ne:
> 23D, v
% F going
' *:;" ^'..:r: XIaS3 w
arourn
ago w]
money
' ''>'. but th
ent?C
^ " will cc
F will he
I in buy
the da
boughi
We lis
big lo
them <
will fii
ues yo
it is fc
will b<
grow {
nell's
Come.
Com
est pi<
you pi
s $1.00 Each G large 2oc T
$1.00 Each 10 pail's Men
so?At $1.00 Only 12 $1.50
tic C1 AA Quilts?Ea
$1.UU $1.50 and $1.:
"tC1 nn Waists?E
ims tor $1.00 R ?a_
or $1.00 o Ladies' 50c
or $1.00 1 Man's $1.5(
$1.00 5 pair Men's
$1.00 2 yds- 9-4 Pc]
ektic $1.00 10 ^ 3(i"!IM
d nn l"am a,(' c'
'lncn $10? 8 yds. Middy
and black? 5 v(is. Lad-L:
land <C1 Aft 5vds.All.25c
. All Ladies' sf
ndry (fl AA Fall and \\
<P1*"U g yC]s< Dress
rtn AA tx'AfAn rvAAi
$1.UU I HWVW1 ftW
( l y $1.00 3 $1.00 Black
$1.00 girls' or B'
. fm. ci on ?an Ca])S *
> tm (?25c Bottles
jpi.OU 1 $150Ulllbl
t Union Suit 4pairHBaby
lose |1Q9 5BoxcsIIW
- T Powder toi
Olive ?1 AA o boxes 15c 2
(j yds. Hani
ileum <M AA Shirting t'(
2vds. Tan S
- $1.00 Pongee foi
for. $1.00 ?
$1.00 SEE THE
/ tt?i A*\ nnr) nmi
101' q>i.uj jvivu J.JL
Soap $1.00 ALL GOO
30NNEI
ur.d discretion of the banking community
which is so well represented
in your association.
"Whether in war or in peace, in the
era of hostilities or the equally difficult
one of reconstruction following
hostilities, the hankers have b?cn an
able and sound alliance. They have
ably assisted in carrying :he difficiil
uet? or our couniry.
?
EXECUTIONER'S PAY DROPS
$
Death Dealer at Sing Sing Had Dull
Time Last Year.
Nineteen twenty-one was a poor
year for Stato Executioner John Hulbert.
Ills income fell off $750 from
the previous year, when' he had sixteen
electrocutions, says an Ossining,
N. Y. dispatch. Last year he had only
eleven.
For each person he puts to death
in the electric chair Hulbert get^
$150. In addition to these fees he
diaws a salary of $1,500 for serving
the state in another capacity.
Prospects are for a more prosperous
year for Hulbert in 1922. So far this
year he has had three jobs. Three
other men aro to be executed soon,
and twenty-five condemned men are
now in the death house.
? A recei t investigation by public
authorities in Cardiff, Wales, revealed
r% v>Amo ur^/vpo' t hi rfcv-lhrr<? nfmnle
lived in three rooms.
DAY^
y 23rd j
?T THURSDAY, FEB.
rill be a Red Letter day
CONNELL'S?We are
to try to make the busirheels
go round and then
1 again just to bring to
;he days of a year or two
ien people had oodles of
to spend and spent it?
i3 time it will be differIn
Thursday*your Dollar
>me to its very own?It
Vtnnir < /"? iffl TIOWCV
/CtlHCJLi UatA UU 1VO J^vnvi
ing of ten years ago?in J
ys when a dollar really
b its full worth and over,
ive gathered together a
t of goods and priced
it A DOLLAR and you '
id here the greatest valu
have known in years?
>r One Day Only ; but it
d remembered until you
jray-headed as McConGrreat
Big Dollar Day?
See for Yourself.
i
te early and get the rich;kings?Stay
as long a3
ease. We'll oe pleased.
]
owcls for $1.00
's 15c Socles for... $1.00
> and $1.75 White QQ
|whiir\^ic; |i oo
l White Lawn for $1.00
Vests for $1.00
) Hat for $1.00
25c Wool Sox for $1.00
jcrel Sheeting for .. $1.00
;h Curtain Goods C| AO
olored borders <P
Twill for $1.00
issie Cloth for $1.00
! Ginghams for $1.00
>2.50 and $3.00 CI AO
rinterllats each
Haids, looks like I1.QQ
:ra specials
Petticoats for $1.00 |j|
ays' 50e Tobog- jj j
Bay liiim for $1.00 .
ella for $1.00 ii
09c Rubber Pauls $1.00
i Brown IMc Face ^ j QQ
!-in-1 Shoe Polisli $1.00
ilton Hickory $1.09
$1-00
WINDOW DISPLAYS
IER GREAT VALUES.
t>c* ar\T t> tiad A A C!IX
iaUJjJLf X \JJX V-TVJJJ-JL
US $
-pi I
MMMMUBMmUU MMM
, J.l-TLI
(DO YOUR EYES I
NEED ATTENTION? |
Do You Have Eye-Strain Head- H
aches?
Williams' Scientific J|
System of Fitting |
Glasses
(Moans all that is Best in Eye- H
Examination with Quality in K
material and Skill in work- H
manship. M
Broken Lenses Duplicated. 'H
Examinations Made By
Appointment. Sp
I
- I
Hampton 8tre?t |nj
ROCK HILL, - - 0. C. I
Eskimo
I . ; :
Pie
CANDY COVERED
ICE CREAM ,
10 CENTS
GOOD, TOO
YORK DRUG STORE
AUCITON SALES.
[" . ft, ^
CLERK'S SALE
Stato of South Carolina?County of
York.
In the Court of Common Plea*.
Ida M. Wylie, Plaintiff against FL B.
Montgomery, Defendant.
pUKSLTANT to an order of foreclosure
in, -the above entitled
[ cause, signed by Hon. I. W. Bowman,
presiding Jud$|?, notice is hereby given
that on 'i
MONDAY, MARCH 6, (Salcsday)
between the legal hours of sole, I will
sell at public auction before the York
Courthouse door to the highest bidder,
the following described real property,
to-wit: V
"All thnt tract or parcel of land
t without the townoCpfork, in the said
[ state and coffflftr1 P&rriTftttncing at a
stake in the branch at the bridge on
the Charlotte road* thence 8. 82 1-2 W.2.22
to a stake in the branch, thence
with the branch to stake, N. ,61 1-2 W.
6.50, N. 44 W. 8, N. 22 W. 4 and thence
(leaving the branch) N. 86 1-4 W. 4.15
to iron stake in, old road, 10 feet from
mile post; thence N. 30 E. 10 to stake
in old road; thence N. 34 E. 13 to stone
in old road; thence S. 64 E. il to a
hickory; thence N. 68 E. 11.30 to an
iron stake; thence S. 35 E. 9.65 to a
sta'ke in the Charlotte road; and
thence (with the road) S 46 W. 25.80
to .a stake and thence (with the road)
S. 27. 1-2 W. 4.62 to a stake in the
1 road and thence S. 16 1-2 W. 1.10 to
I the beginning, containing
SIXTY-SEVEN AND ONE QUARTER
(67 1-4)
acres, more or less, bounded by lands
. ..V VUllKnm onH Onrt
(>L (I; y? unii.n, u ?wv>u
yvright, (2) lands of Church Home
Orphanage, (3) Johnson land, and (4)
lying on the Charlotte road, opposite
the Cannon mill property."
Terms of Sole:? One half cash, and
the remaining' one-half within twelve
months frpm the day of sale, with
j Interest thereqp from the day of. sale,
I and secured by bond of the purchaser
and a mortgage of the premises so
I sold, with leave of the purchaser to
j pay entire bid In cash. Purchaser
{must pa^' for all proers, revenue
stomps, recording fees, etc. Purchaser
must comply with cash portion of
| his bid within ono hour from time of
such sale or the land to be at once
re-sold upon same day and upon
same terms, at the riBk of the defaulting
purchaser. Any of the parties
to this action may bid at said sale.
T. E. McMACKIIf;
C. C. C? Pis and R. M. C.
CLERK'S SALE
| State of South Carolina?County of
York.
In the Court of Common Pleas.
I J. S. Price and Agnes M. Spencer
Kxors. Last Will and testament of
" a ooH f siihatf tilt Ad
i r*. opcuv^i f. <uOVCTIOVU
for C. E. Spencer, attorney), Piain!
tilts.
I ' ' against
[Laura E. Parish * "and Peoples Bank
and Trust Cbnkpany, Defendants.
j pURSUANT to a decretal order by
I Hon. I. W. Rowman, presiding
j judge. In foreclosure proceedings In
[ the above entitled cause, I will expose
i to public sale, to the highest bidder, at
[ auction, bciwcen the legal hours of
; sale, before the York Courthouse devr,
on . ^
MONDAY. MARCH 6. 1922 (Salesdey)
the following described real property,
to-wit:
All that Certain tract of land situ*
nt.nl in the Southwestern portion ot,
nnd partly within and pertly without
the incorporate limits of the town of
j York, said county and state, conjljiining
' -U ' *
j SIXTY-ONW AND FIETY-REVEN
ONE-HUNDREDTHS (61.57)
: acres, tnore or less, and bounded by
1 ? ? * fAPmnrlv of f* R.
UiXllin IIUW \'l IUIIHV../ w ?- ?
Si>encer, C. M? Inman and lands for!
merly belonging to J. R. Witherspoon
! rind othors, being part of the ninety
j (90) acres conveyed to me by J. B.
| Withers, February 15, 1877. See deed
l recorded in Book P-2, page 14", R. M.
: C. office, said county and state, less
J ?3.<ts acres thereof conveyed away to
various parties, for description and
I acreage of which conveyances see
I following Deed Books and pages: L-12
page fOS; No. 21, page 646; No. 28,
; page 250; No. 30, "pages 126. 126 and
{ 203; No. 31, prfge 89 and 253; No. 36,
j page 132.
Terms of Sale: Cash. Upon failure
of the purchaser to comnl.v with bid
within five days, the Clerk of the
| Court is authorized and empowered
| to re-advertise and re-sell the
premises at the risk of the defaulting
purchaser.
T. E. MoMACKIN,
C. C. C? Pis. -