The Pageland journal. [volume] (Pageland, S.C.) 1911-1978, February 06, 1918, Image 7
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Citation for Letters of Admlnlstion
I )ii WWft Carolina,
Conntv of CrrefttoEfjeld
By M, J. Hough, Prohftte
Judge.
Whereas, H. W. Pate and G. C.
Pate made suit to me to grant
them Letters of Administration
of the Estate and effects of Marv
M. Pate, deceased, these are
therefore to cite and admonish
all and singular the kindred and
creditors of the said Mary M.
Pate, deceased, that they be and
appear before me, in the Court ol
Probate, to be held at Chesterfield,
Sj. C., on October 10 next,
after publication hereof, at 11
o'clock iu the forenoon, to show
cause, if any they have, why the
A J 4-t - * ^
nam Auuiiuisbrabion snouia noi
be granted.
Given under my hand this 25th
day of September Anno Domini
1922.
M.J. Hough,
Probate Judge.
Down (o Brass Tacks
We have, on account of hard
times, overlooked in a good many
cases our cash in advance rule
for subscriptions. Now the cotton
season has come and we expect
those whom we have favored
to favor us with a dollar bill to
tip for the paper. We shall
H^V/ait for jbl reasonable time to
J^Kiear from this notice, and
cash does not oome we shall otI
the paper off whether it goes to
white or black, rich or poor,
W friend or foe. It will not be that
J we will discredit your honesty,
r but that we are on a cash basis,
and must have the cash from our
patrons to run the business. We
pay bash for each and every item
n and pay from our receipts.
*. t. J
?o uu uui wo.ui; iaj urufj tiii.yimc,
rand now depend on each one indebted
to un to aav what.
Latham Varlaty I if Damans.
Thera has been a big demand for
the Latham raspberry this year. Nnraerlee
are almost completely sold oat.
Watchword of $uooaee.
A tic sprayer and n little prayer
In the wAtct)*Qr4 of wcoaaaful trait
' . ' . .
See
AMI
w
ten's Gothin
I
A DANDY 1
b are also site
Coats, O1
EDMQND'S F0(
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(EATERS, GLOVES, LEBG1NS,
Be ?ure you vl
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Mi
I Mango Bros.
I^NEFXl A DA
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We order or r
We save y
THE STATE*
CHARLOTTEC
COLUMBIA EV
WILMINGTON
CHARLESTON
Tell us what you want, pay
Argentina's Favorite Hon*.
Renowned among turf follower* the
world over, was the racehorse Botafoga,
the darling of the Argentina
*tud. Though only eight year* old, he
died racently at Mar del Plata. Not
particularly fortunate In his parentage,
as great racers usually are, he nevertheless
became a phenomenon of the
track. At two years he sold for $25,000
at auction, although he wus never
good looklne. When h? rnnaii t ha
horse stretched himself out like a
greyhound. He made his debut in
1917, and all the classics fell before
his amazing speed. One day wl.en he
was not in form and lost to Gray Fox,
the event was regarded in Argentina
as quite a national catastrophe. In a
subsequent "revenge race" he defeated
bla conqueror with perfect ease before
the greatest crowd that ever assembled
at the Peleruio trucks.
I Scientists Baffled.
What do the eye spots on butterflies'
wings mean? The naturalists
say, frankly: "We do not Enow." It is
i iiioupi uiai tnese eye i^tyts may
have some utilitarian application.
They form one of the moat Intricate
of all natural designs. The fact that
butterflies have been captured with
hair eye spots pierced, as If from the
attack af birds, has been used as an
argument In favor of the view that
I Ciey must-be "protective markings,"
i imitating eyes because birds strike at
(lie eyes of their victims. But this
J suggestion is hardly regarded as satisfactory.
Among butterflies the most
| rtrlklng examples of eye spots arc
, found on the undersurface of th?
|
v
V
ing Is
t PJ
g at Price I
,INE of YOUNG H
>wing this H
vercoafif
)T FITTER SHOBJ
ITGHESS PANTS, J
TRUNKS, AND SUIT CASBj
isit our Milline*!
"THE Bl|
ingl
J??
ILY PAPER
enew for you.
ou trouble.
OBSERVER *
ENING RECORD
MORNING STAR
NEWS AND COURIER
us the price, we do the rest
Mortality of Troom.
Human beings cannot compete wl
trees In the matter of longevity, bf|
human beings are more fortunate thM
trees up to certain ages, according ||
mortality tables. A forest at maturljE
contains about 5 per cent of ull tltfj
trees that have started life thepe. THi
percentage of persons living from t?S
to fifty Is much greater In the cast
of trees. About 95 per cent of otn
frees die before thev are elchtv vent*
old, while only 87 per cent of person!
will die before reaching thnt age. a
But when It cornea to trees 100 yeftri
*f nge and over we have to go Imci
Into Biblical history to find human be
lugs who compare with them in lengtl
of years. Methuselah and Noah wert
far ahead of the majority of our corn
mon trees as centenarians, hut no maj
and no nation hap lived as long id
have the sequoia trees. The sequojl
attains an age of about 4,000 years, a
England's Daylight Saving.
Daylight saving In England passd
under the term of summer time, f)
has been under consideration in thl
tsritisn parliament, where new stufi
tory authority has been given. ,
seems there la something of an agj
cultural bloc in England, too. Its a
tlvltles resulted In shortening the p
rlod for early rising by three weeks t
each end. In other words, Englunt
with its high latitude, anil the cons
quences upon the relative length ?
sunlight and darltness, will next yet
begin daylight saving late in April sn
end It early in September.?Froni^j
Fstkon's musUlftM- ^
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~V.''' '?r " ~ V^?* ,v'
BiEsSiiiiiii
-*
BF * '
felievi]
id i
ft Are Movtai)
I Clothing. Latest
Hon'a line of a
ftioes and
KLARS, STETSON I
ft OVERALLS,
B LANTERNS, GUI
Hi {ladies* Wear I
; BIRD"
Br;
-The Churches r
nlethodist Protestant Church. I
At Rose HilJ next Sunday. L\Sunday
School at 10 o'clock,
yl'reacbine at 11:30. This will JE
t)e our last -appointment for this
inference year. Come out. "J
| J. W. Ouick. Pastor. ? ^
};*
^Methodist Episcopal Church u,. i
KH chool next Sunday J
I 1
servient at 11. Subto
prevail with God.'*
f| H not have service at yo
jj|9HHHrie.and Worship with pit
I an
|HFi. Ingram;. Pastor.
J rit
M. E: Church dr
he Pre8-Cbinf? at the
?rke M. E, church Sun -1 cr<
Ta*W^if?ht &t 7:30 o'clock by the *>
1 ] W. V. Jerman, Pastor. tn
[TV- Bnslness Locals ?
IMfeone puffing a business lo- ^
^l^yKThe .Journal be sure and ai]
jm^Jph coupe with the copy, la
ISP? little Items are more exrHHtt
aS ac>:ounts than we get th
i l^E? them. The rate is one en
WffibMc) per jvord, with a mini- Ci
i#f?? ceiHs per single inser- ?
j^H?Please forget our 0f
we are fonW^o adhere vv
^ |rictly- , 1
Miction Sale
|| Bi
ill sell, Fyidfly, oAt. 13, at ^
tiillip An.ni placV Five ?i
to the highest bicf der for
he foHpww. Corli, about ^
shels; fodq . >r>00 'to 3000 h
?s; lot gooq .fsivi re hay; 1 11
e wagon; 1 u>'/\ 2^jhules;
?e; plenty .or terming d
etc. Sale. .... , at 10 *
k. J, R* i^eriody b
/
<xxxxx>
II0
.00
g the Goods
Models.
rmy goods I
1 Boots.
HATS, TIES,
S.
I SHELLS. AXES. 1IB0LES.
lepartmont,
?S.
\ . Meet me at Mu
wwwwww^
Stories of n ?^T
Great Scouts Wmtsou I
.
. ?. Western Newspaper Union.
TXEDIAH STRONG SMITH, THE
AMERICAN ULYSSES
L'hls Is a story of a modern Ulysses,
frontier hero of many wanderings,
0 died without receiving the fame
ich was his due, a man whose servto
America has been but lately
iiieciated by his countrymen. J ?deli
Strong Smith was his name, and
1 contribution to history was the
it accurate mapping ef the great
iSt.
Smith was born In New Yerk In
i9. As a boy he played wtth the
ung Seneca Indians of Chief Oorninter's
tribe, and learned their lore.
i became an expert with the bow
d arrow, which he afterward carid
on all of his expeditions. Once
brought down a hawk flying about
yards above him, and be could
ive e shaft to the heart of e buflo
as skillfully as any Indian hunter.
In yours of wandering Smith
ussed the western country on the
uth from the Colorado river to the
icltlc; he crossed It midway from
e Rockies to the Pacific, and he
i versed It on the north from Callrnia
to-the Rockies. He visited all'
e Important streams from Arizona
the Yellowstone c<$untry, and he
ndo accurate notes of all Imi saw.
lis Information was used in eorrectg
the unreliable maps of the day
id proved of Inestimable Tata* to
ter explorers. _
Smith's death was heroic. In 1831
> was guiding a wagon train over
e Santa Fe trail. The train had taki
a short cut around the head af the
ma iron river and soon was lost In
desert country. Water must be
uud at once. Smith set out in search
a stream, and finally reached one.
'hlle drinking, he was surrounded by
band of Comanches, who determined
have the white man's gun.
The Indians signaled peace, and af>r
talking In the sign language for a
hlle, they succeded in frightening
[tilth's horse. As it turned, they shot
t the scout with arrows, wounding
Lm in the arm. Smith wheeled about,
?Ka AkU# ?4*W Via A
*Wb Uir VUlUi uvsu "HU UIO KUIV K0Q
tiled two more Ravages with Ms pls>U.
Then grasping his ax, the scoot
ashed into their midst. They cat
!m down with their lances, bat when
ley approached te scalp him. Smith
>se np again and stabbed three of
lem with his knlfs. Then he dropped
ead The Indians afterward admit.
?d thnt he had MB** IS af their pnrtj
efow> he 4MH
RMS *?dpw.'
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COLLAR PADS, *
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If
The Pageland Journal is the only
printing plant that pays taxes
and license in Pageland.
II
The Pageland Journal is the only
printing enterprise that has an
investment in Pageland.
If
The Pageland Journal is the only
paper that advertises the town
free, that works for the upbuilding
of the town and section.
Is
It not entitled to more consideration
from the town authorities,
business men, orders, churches,
school and individuals when it
comes to printing, etc., than is a
concern off yonder that does not
have any interest here and never
does anything for the town.
A concern that gets your dollars
and takes them all away, while
The Journal gets your money
and the town gets it back?
Is
A good newspaper worth having
I in a community? It must have
the hearty support of the oeoDle
if it succeeds.
We
Do good work at reasonable
prices. Call and try
US.
ON HAND J
We have in stock the follow* 1
ing legal blanks: \
Note and Mortgage.
Note and Bill of Sale.
Notes.
Mortgage of Personal Property
Title to Real Estate.
Also Extract and Medicine
i Certificates* and Fertilizer Books
GET YOURS
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