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OOOKEE MAN SHOT. < Junes K. Addis, 75 Years CXWU , Wounded by J. L. Surrat*. WolhaJlu, Oct. 29. ? James E. j Addle, aged 75 years, was shot and seriously wounded here by J. L. j Surra'*, who is about 40 yeans old,, yesterday. There are various re-; ports as to the origin of the diffi-! culty, the parties to the troublle having made statements that arej widely apart. Officers were summoued shortly 1 after the affray, but Surratt was not locked up until this morning about 9 o'clock when he was arrested bv Sheriff Knv and Oenutv I Reid between Walhaila and Seneca j as he was walking along a by! road leading into the main high-1 way. His house was watched all last night, but Surratt did not appear, j When arrested, however, he stated' that he was on his way to give up; . that his first Impulse was to leave,! but that he later decided to give j himself over to the authorities. What Wounded Man Says. Addis states that he and his sou j were driving to their home and had passed Surratt yesterday, but that later Surratt overtook them and asked if he wished to pass. The reply, according to Addis was that i he did not want to pass, but that J * he, Surratt, had it in for young Ad-j dis; whereupon the old man says he got out of his buggy and began to reason with Surrat, who pulled a pistol and fired. The shot took ef-1 feet in Addis' stomach and the re-, suit is indefinite. Doctors, so far, have been unable to locate the bullet. Surratt's Version. On being arrested Surratt gave J his version of the affair, saying j that in the quarrel he was hem- j uicu 111 ?eiween ins own vemcie | and the wheels of Addis' buggy and | was forced to defend himself. He showed several places where his clothes had been cut. There were no witnesses except the three interested ones. There has been bad blood between tiie two families for some time.. ROiiERH 1FL1ES LONG DISTANCE Covers .231 Miles on His Coast-to Coast Plight. Sierra Blanca, Texas, Oct. 28.? C. P. Rogers to-day. covered 231 ? miles from Sanderson, Texas, to Sierra Xlanca, in 229 minutes flying time. It was the longest day's flight Rogers has made on his, trans-continental journey, and in many respects the most spectacular. Delayed by damage to his machine while getting under way. Rodgers left Sanderson at 11.41 o'clock this morning. Attaining an nlf(4.i^o o# O KAA V - ???v?vuuv vi *??wv icrv, xic? ucaucu iui EH Paso. Just before reaching Alpine, his first stop, Rodgers flew into the Clouds and was lost from sight for several minutes. Flying from Alpine to Marfa, Rodgera crossed Paisano pass, 5,082 feet 'n altitude, J?)y 300 feet. Alter a brief stop at Marfa, Rodgers again took the air and landed here at *.37 to-night. Rodgers plans to resume his flight here at 7 o'clock to-morrow morning lor El Paso, where he expects to land at 9 o'clofk. GAFFNEy MAN KILLS FARMER Prejudice Against Automobile Costa Whither His Life. Charlotte,. N. C., Oct. 29. ?Because be allowed his prejudice against the automobile to carry him to the extent of drawing a pistol on a passing car this evening, Sam Whither, a wealthy Cleveland farmer lost his life. Facing the drawn weapon in Whither's hand and believing that he intended carrying out his threat, Lucius Randall, a prominent Gaflney business man, shot Whither twice, killing him instantly. The tragedy occurred two miles from Shelby in Cleveland county. Randall, who is .a native of Cleveland., made the trip to North Carolina to-day to visit relatives. On a public road he met Wither in his | buggy. The latlier alighted, and i drawing a pistol approached Ran-1 dall's machine and announced thatI he was going to kill him. Randall plead with him, but as he continued to approach, increas-: mg 11 IB inreai, ivanuaii urew j own weapon and put two bullets in the farmer's head. He then surrendered to the Sheriff. The men were not acquainted. Whither's well known antipathy to the invasion of the automobile is the accepted theory in accounting for his ac- : tlons. VAN1KD BKARH TO EAT HJER. Despondent Woman Tries Suicide By Throwing Herself Among Beasts. \ Lima, Ohio, Oct. 28. ? Miss Anna Harter, 38 yean old, while despondent leaped into a bear pit at j the City Park early this morning! in an attempt to end her life. The enclosure contained two large black bears. The woman was found by Lee [ Stuckey, an attache of the park. The bears attacked him when he went to the woman*' rescue and he was driven from the pit. Returning with a hose he subdued the bears with a stream of water anddragged the woman from the enclosure. 8he 1 was numbed with cold and could i not stand, but bad not been injured by the animate When reecued the woman said she bad thought that the animals would 1 devour her. She said ah? did not know what had prompted her to commit suicide In this manner. Mlse Harter recently lost $500 and this Is believed to have preyed upon her mind. Old Ben, the Oldest bear in the Bronx xee, New York, died of a broken heart, attendants say, following the removal from bie cage of his mate. ; i u ? WOMAN I>KACjKJEI> TO DEATH. c Jealous HuNb-vml Clurg^d With 1> a ing her to VIcIoum Morse. ti e Albuquerque, N. M., Oct. 28-, ? d Taken from her bed at midnight in her night clothes, Mrs. Juan de la t Cluimizal was tied behind a bronco, s the animal was lashed and turned 1 loose. t' Two days after the lady disap- a peared here shapeless body, bearly t recognizable was found with the h broken lariat knotted on her neck, t The bronco was found later, its skin covered with welts, showing ? mac 11 iiuu ueen jaauuu iuiu luijr v before it had been released. p Officers have picked up clues here and there which cause them to " charge that the husband of the woman is guilty and that he commit- h ted the crime through jealousy. He r is a wealthy ranchman and when, t he was not found at his home it \ was first thought he had been mur- c dered when his wife was dragged away. But the lariat and saddle were proved to have belonged to him and he was known to have . made trouble over finding another man dancing with his wife at a re-j cent ball. It is now known that he boarded j a train .at a station one hundred I miles from here this morning. He j was arrested on telegraphic orders! and brought here. Mansard's Itascally Son. London Globe. The great hall of the Hotel del Ville of Aries, designed by Mausard, is the wonder and admiration ] of every one who has seen it on ac- j count of the grained roof. | In regard to this a neighboring! cafetier tells a somewhat grim | story. King Louis XIV happened to be passing through the city just at the time Mansard was superintending the completion of his creation The roof won Rimrwirtliv a powerful pillar. The monarch admired the work and congratulated the architect on his design. At that moment the architect was passing through great domestic tribulation. He had a son under sentence of vdeath, so he thought it would be a good opportunity to intercede on behalf of the lad Mansard threw himself at the feet of the King and said: "Your Maijesty sees in the centre that nmBlve column? If you will spare the life of my son I will remove the unsightly pillar and the roof shall stand without support." "Mansard," replied the King, "if you accomplish that miracle I will pasdon your son, but if you fail I will hang you with him. The architect removed the pillar without great difficulty and with the result desired. The cafetler is a philosopher and he concludes his story with the reflection that had not Mansard's son been a scamp the haE at Aries would be just like any other hall. $*4,(MM) FOR TWO MEtf. Mincer Wants to Reward Those Who Helped Him Out. St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 28. ? If thene are two persons in St. Paul or elsewhere, by the name of R. S. Knapp and F. B. Knapp, they are heirs to $84,000 for doing au act of kindness to a man now dying in a hospital on the Youkon River in Alasko. At least a letter written by the man, who signs himslef Thorn as Lynch, on his deathbed, and received by a local paper, so states. Here it is: "Please notify R. S. Knapp and P. B. Knapp that there is $84,000 I leave or will to them. In 1898 in (what looks like "Farice,") they took care of me two weeks when I was sick, and I want to pay them for it. I have been in Alaska nine j years and have made a stake. I have bat a few more days or weeks : to live. The last heard from them , was in St. Paul. Please locate them or notify them. "Thomas Lynch. "P. S.?I have no relative liv-1 ing. This money I will leave to j them. They did me a good turn! and I will repay them. They can 1 come here and see me or it will be | sent to them. Please locate them. "Thomas Lynch." No person by the name of Knapp j with the initials "R. S." or "F. B." appears in the St. Paul direc-! tory. HER "BABY" BARKED. j Women Resort to Many Ingenious Bchemes to Smuggle in Their Pet. Dogs. London, Oct. 28. ? The days:' when bold, bad smugglers ran their boatloads of rum and brandy and tobacco into secret covers and caves on the seashore are gone. The smugglers of to-day are women, and a their cargo is often dogs. The devices which they are now u adopting to evade the custom officers and the quarantine law of the land are as Ingenious as they axe amazing. i Twice within the last fortnight; women have been charged at tkrver with attempting to smuggle dogs In by concealing them in pockets in a their underclothing. They would b have succeeded in their intentions, f too, but for the dogs having yelped if and betrayed their mistresses. a But popular and suoceeaful as i is the hidden-pocket dodge, it la t commonplace beside some of the e methods of dog smuggling which have recently been attempted at o Dover. "A woman, a nurse and an Infantj u In long clothes boarded the steamer b at Calais. They Immediately shut j d themselves up in the cabin, and 'T were not seen again till Dover was f reached, except by the customs j a men on board, who were quite sat- n Isfied that they had no contra- , h band with tbem, | ij "At Dover, however, when the ! t< party was coming ashore, the 'in-1 tl fant,' whose head was completely muffled up in lace and muslin, d barked " ei Here la another story, the would- b be smuggler in this instance being si a man: j tl "A travelling rug on his arm exited suspicion. He was stopped nd the rug examined and found o contain three little pockets, !n ach of which was a valuable tiny og." And these by no means exhaust he means which women employ in muggling their pets. There seems o be no limit to their audacity in he matter, and the following are mong the well known methods hey now resort to rather than iave their dogs sent into quaranine after Continental trips: Suspend them in bags from their leeks. Women who do this always rear well-buttoned-up coats or else ilenty of furs. Put them in big pockets of loose overcoats." Carry them in their muffs, one land holding the dog inside the uuff. This is a frequent tried rick at seasons when muffs can be vorn without exciting any comment ir suspicion." MKN PLY LIKE 1IVZZAKDS. iVrights Have Perfected Aeroplane That Flies Without Power. Kitty Hawk, N. C., Oct. 28. ? )n this remote post of the American continent the Wright brother* 'nr thn nu<il h ron woolrv hovo ltonr conducting aeroplane experiments hat will have a vital influence or he future of the aerial transports ion. The climax of the plodding painstaking tests occurred when Or riile Wright caused his motorless piplane to hover over a spot only 'ifteen feet in diameter for inort hnn ten minutes. "Our experiments have been verj satisfactory," said Orville Wright iiscussing his flight. "They hav< >een far beyond my expectations [ came here simply to carry ou1 some ideas I had worked out a home concerning gliding machines \s a matter of fact, I was not verj pptomistic about extensive success But after I had re-arranged a num >er of details, I was astonished a ;he ease with which I succeeded ii keeping the craft in the air foi Juch a long period. Our success ii lue to the fact that the craft is ex ceptionally efficient. By efficiency [ mean that all its parts are bal meed so as to make a perfect lift ng vehicle. "\V\en an aviator speaks of ef ficfency, he means the capability o m aeroplane to fly with the leas imount of motive power. He ha in mind the soaring qualities of ai reroplane. I can truly say that ou craft is enormously efficient, iont' mean to claim that we cai fly without pjwer, but I do meai that we can fly with less powe than any machine that is built. "Under certain conditions I at certain that the ideas we have de veloped during the past few week would enable us to build a ma chinne which would fly with evei less horse power. I know that w< could fly for an hour without pow sr, given proper atmospheric con iitions, and I see no reason wh; we cannot fly for ten hours if w< tiave flown for one minute. It i dmply a question of the time, thi place, the wind and the machine. "In order to make extensive pow ?rless flights, however, the craf would have to be bunt 120r? strove ly. At the present time such con Uruction is now economical. Owinj :o the state of the skill of avia ore it would cost them too much t< Jay for the frequent breakage of ai jxpensive craft. "But I don't wish to give the im jression that I think the presen Machine in use Is defective. It ii ny opinion that our latest type o: liplane is about as good as an] :raft will be for many years t< :ome. It flies with less powei han any craft in existence; It ii strong and durable, and it is sua eptible of almost 'perfect control iVhen some of the things I have dis covered here are incorporated ii i:e craft, I don't think it wil nslly be surpassed. "I do think that the future of tht leroplane depends to a certain exent upon the future of the motor <ot that I want to say the pres >nt motor is lacking in any seriouf nanner. I think the motor of tlu >resent is just as perfect as the hunan machine. But I do believ* hat, with natural evolution, moors will be made to deliver more >ower and will be built more coralactly. There are many features ol he motor that will be refined. "Concerning the automatic stabilty device which has been so overemphasized in the press, I can ony say that we regard it as subeldiry. Our machine is practically auomatically balanced now. It can't urn turtle if properly arranged. The pendulum device and the alleon contrivance, operated by oomtressed air, are old ideas which we lad no purpose of trying out here. "The device we wanted to try is simple affair which can be rigged ip our or any material in ten minitee. We will test It at Dayton. RODE A BIGHORN SHBEP. "rank Baker Did What No Other Man Had Done in Montana Harrisburg, Pa., 28. ? "There ren't many men who would have een so kind as to let that big Locky Mountain bighorn sheep keep ts bead and horns, worth |100 of ny man's money," said Col. Parker, but Frank Baker hadn't the heart o kill the buck and so he' let It scape to Its mountain fastness. "But Frank had done what no ther man has ever done and he was atlsfled. He bad captured by his naided strength a Rockv Mnnnt*tn Ighorn sheep allee, after riding it own a steep hillside to the plain, 'his happened in Montana, and Vank Baker hadn't been there but little while at that, which makes le feel quite proud of him and is feats, for he is a Pennsylvan1 boy. More than that, he belongs > my own part of the State up on le Susquehanna watershed. "Maybe when I say that Prank aptured that bighorn by his unaidd strength I ought to qualify it y saying that perhaps his smart aepherd dog, Dan, is entitled to ie credit of rounding up the op U. portunity for him to do it. Accord' ins to what 1 am told about those I sheep of the Rockies, it would seem 11& be about as easy h thing for a person to get his hands on one of those wary and agile animals as it would be to grab a streak of lightning. They tell me about hunters following a bighorn for days and weeing and almost to the clouds on the breast of the Sierras before j they managed to get within rifle reach of it. Consequently the capture of one in a mixup at close quarters is something of a feat. "Prank Baker went to Montana to become a cattleman, and he started a ranch somewhere in the neighborhood of Boulder. If he had been out hunting bighorn sheep that day perhaps he wouldn't have got ' within a mile of one, but he wasn't out hunting sheep or anything else. tve was simpiy out lor a stroii among the hills, accompanied by . his shepherd dog, Dan. Dan wasn't trained to herd bighorn sheep, but when he and his master came suddenly upon one at the foot of a sloping bank which was crowned , by a perpendicular rocky cliff thirty feet high he pitched right in to round that sheep up. "The sheep, thus taken by sur. prise, bounded up the sloping bank, i Dan at his heels. The high clift i cut off its retreat up the mountain, 3 and when the sheep came to the rise i of the rocks it recognized the . critical situation at once and con, eluded that the only way to get re lief from it was to do up the dog i and it turned on Dan. "The bighorn presented a front tc } the dog that instantly caused hini to pause and ponder. Wisely keep' ing out of reach of the tremendous . battering ram the sheep wielded, th< 5 dog Dan was still some onto his job, for he kept the animal standt ing at bay, backed up against the t cliff, by safe and noisy manoeuvres "Up on the Susquehanna water T shed Prank Baker was always'quite a thinker and he sized up the er help came and got Prank back to the ranch and ttk)k the lassoed sheep along. "If that bighorn had only known what was well for It it would have acted differently, for Frank intended to send it Bast to nse, and it could have spent the rest of its days in Pennsylvania, the Susquehanna watershed, at that. But when Frank took his next look at it, which was a week or so after he arrived at the ranch along with it, the trip down the hill and its sequences having required that length of time in letting up their effect on him, he llsaw that the sheep was persisting in refusing both food and drink. It was pining away and would die in a short time if kept in captivity. "It possessed a magnificent head on/1 ?> ?'- - * 1 _uu r?r 01 norns, a prize ouch afl hunters were risking their lives every day to secure. All Prank Baker had to do was to put a few ounces of lead into the vitals of the big sheep and have the prize, but he hadn't the heart to do it. So he ordered the captive , bighorn set free. In lees than a minute after regaining its liberty it had disappeared among the rocks far up the mountain side. "Having accomplished a feat such as no man had ever done In the as no man had ever done in making of that great mountain sheep a prisoner, Frank Baker watched it bound to freedom again with a feeling of pleasure rather than regret." -! strategic points of the unpreced t ented situation and found hlmsell i remarking to himself: r " 'There's a first rate chance o B my breaking my neck in trying it " i but if I don't break it I will d< '| something that I never heard o: " any one doing yet, and that's t< make a prisoner of a bighorn ant and take it home alive. Guess IT I take the chance.' "So he sneaked around until h< I found a place he could clamber ui 8 ! the cliff to the summit. Returninj 'Ialong the top of the cliff until In !j l was directly above the sheep, wnicl was still standing on the defensivt II j against the dog. Baker took th< 11 i thirty foot drop and landed astridt r the sheep's back. Without a sec iond's delay, although the dro] 11 ] shook him up until his teeth rat tied he threw his arms around th< B sheep's neck and locked his finger together, bringing all the pressur< 11 he was capable of bearing on th< e ; bighorn's breather. "I "The instant Frank1 struck th( " sheep's back the sheep thei y lost all interest in the dog, makinj B a couple of tremendous hounds, th effect of which on its rider was suf | ficient to make that of the cominj down of the buckingest of the buck " ing broncos feel like landing oi downy feathers, and finding that i "J-eo?Id not shake off the incubue "the sheey tiirevt* itself on its aid and rolled over downs",.^e jBlope " Frank was shoved along as "From that itme on the sheep rose he was on its bacTE again liki a flash. . '"FVom that time onn the sheep s man and dog, Dan having takei j. part in the downward trip, bound ; ed, rolled and slid, until the bot } torn of the hill was reached. Th< r journey was not long but it was ful i of action, and when it ended a the bottom Frank Baker had scarce ly a stitch of clothes on him, am * I h P wna muahd .. - J * i ???.v-u auu omoiicu, ana ai " near out of wind as one could wel j . be and still had enough left to keej | things going. But he held on t< 4: the sheep, still on its back, am 5 clasping it around the throat. "J "In the melee the sheep had pu' " | I>an out of commission, and th< " dog was raising his yells with th? > shouts Frank was lifting up, in th? hope that some one at the ranch | which was only a quarter of a milt away, would hear and hasten to hit [ "The racket at the foot of the hill was heard after while by one ol . the men at the ranch, who grabbed a gun and scooted for the seat ol trouble. Frank was naked, bleed' lug and covered with dirt, but J when his man arrived and was i to shoot thesheep, he shouted to him Jiot to shoot but to go back and get a rope and rope the critter. The man wasn't long in obeying orders, and he got back in time to rope the sheep before Frank fell exhausted from his struggle to hold it Oth ? h mm ?mm imim mm w mumming* I CLASSIRED COLUMN? ? 6 or 6 doses "6G6" will cure any case of Chills and Fever. Price, 25c. A Dreadful Sight. to H. J. Barnum, of Freeville, N. Y., was the fever-sore that had plagued his life foi years iu spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Bucklen's Arnica Salve and wrote: "It has entire healed with scarcely a scar left." Heals Uurns, Boils, Eczema, Cuts, Bruises, Swellings, Corns and Piles like magic. Only 25c. at Evans Pharmacy. Not a Word of Scandal. marred the call of a neighbor on Mrs. W. P. Spangh, of Manville, Wyo., who said: "She told me Dr. King's New Life Pills had cured her of obstinate kidney trouble, 1 and made her feel like a new woman." Easy, but sure remedy foi stomach, liver and kidney trou, blee. Only 25c. at Evans pharmacy. It's Equal Don't Exist. No one has ever made a saLve ointment or balm to compare wltl Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It is th? > one perfect healer of Cuts, Corns Burns, Bruises, Sores, Scalds, Boils Ulcers, Eczema, Sale Rheum. Foi Sore Eyes, Cold Sores, Chapped Hands or Sprains it's supreme. Un rivaley for Piles. Try it. Only 25< at Evans Pharmacy. Treasurer's Notice. State of South Carolina, Dillon County. The tax books for the collectioi of taxes will be open at my offici on October 15fcb, 1911, and wil f continue open until the 1st day o Jamxary, 1912, without penalty. Af f ter January let, 1912, the follow I n ~ D.. <11 AAllA/??A/i. iii? win ue wiicvtcu. > 1 per cent, through January, f 2 per cent, through February, j 7 per cent., until March 16th 1 1912, when the books will be cloe I ed. Following will be the levy: g State tax, 6 3-4 mills. ^ Constitutional tax, 3 mills. ; Ordinary County tax, 4 mills. 0 For court house and highway im , provement bonds, 1 3-4 mills. a Balance due on claims 1-4 mill. e Following school districts hav< g extra levies. District No. 2, 3 mills, a District No. 4, 5 mills. _ District No. 6, 4 mills, g District No. 7, 2 mills B District No. 8, 8 mills. 0 District No. 10, 3 mills. B District No. 11, 2 mills. District No. 12, 2 mills, g District No. 13, 6 mills. District No. 14, 8 mills. z District No. 16, 4 mills. e District No. 16, 3 mills. District No. 17, 4 1-2 mills. < District No. 18, 3 mills. District No. 19. 3 mills. n District No. 20, 9 mills. X District No. 21, 4 mills. , District No. 22, 4 mills, g District No. 25, 6 mills. , District No. 26, 5 mills, g District No. 27, 4 mills. v District No. 28, 2 mills. District No. 31, 4 mills . B ^ycommutatation road tax of $ can belaid at the same time unt March *912- All persons b< . tween the' ?' 21 aJld 5 . years, except othc7$iBe exempt b g law, are liable to a \<5?mmutatio I WIX. . Q ^ All persons between the ages' > 21 and 60 years are liable to i j poll tax of $1.00, except Confeder 8 ate soldiers and persons otherwls j exempt by law. W. Mclnnis, Treasurer Dillon County j 10-5-11 t P. WATKINS, THE AUCTIONEEI i ?If you have a farm, lota ? horses or anything else to sell ? Watklns is the auctioneer to get , He is an experienced auctioned and knows how to get the wortl , of anything. Sale of horses ? mules and anything you have be ; gins promptly at 2:30 every Sat [ urday. FOR SALE. ? 546 ACRES GOOE farming land on main line of A i C. L. R. R., 1 1-2 miles of Bule, N. C. 150 acres under cultiva 1 tion. Sufficient dwellings and outbuildings. Public road rune through place. McRae and Gibson. Red Springs, N. C. FOR SALE ? SO ACRES WITHIN the corporate limits of the town of Red Springs, N. C.. Can be laid off and sold in building lots . For further information write McRae & Gibson, Red Springs, N. C. Averts Awful Tragedy. Timely advice given Mrs. C. Willougbby, of Marengo, Wis., (R. No. 11 prevented a areadlu.l trogedy and saved two lives. Doctors had said her frightful cough was a "consumption" cough and could do little to help her. After many remedies failed her aunt urged her to take Dr. King's New Discovery. "I have been using It for some time," she wrote and the awful cough has almost gone. It also saved my little boy when taken with a severe bronchial trouble." This matchless medicine has no equal for throat and lung troubles. Price 60c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Evans Phar macy. Gives Aid to Strikers. Sometimes liver, kidneys and bowls seem to go on a strike and refuse to work right. Then you need those pleasant little strikebreakers ? Dr. King's New Life Pills ? to give them aid and gontly compel proper action. Excellent health soon follows. Try them. 26c at Evans Pharmacy. - AUCTIONEERING. ? MY SER? vices as auctioneer are at the disposal of the public anytime. Only a reasonable fee charged for auctioneering any kind of property. 1 can serve you any day in the week. B. A. Harrelson, Dillon. S. C. 10-19-4t When you have an elephant on hand, and he wants to run away, better let him run. ? Lincoln. FOR SALE. ? ONE THREE ROOM house, two lots attached, 60 by 185, also three other lots with no buildings thereon, 3 head of stock and farming utensils to the highest bidder for cash. Sale will take place on November 13th at 2 o'clock in the afternoon at the home of the undersigned. J. W. McCollum, Dillon, S. C. 10-26-3t-p . I ~ dtn PI v.. To Mingo Grice and John Grice, heirs at law of Sophie Grice, deceased, and C. V. Williams, a elalm[ ant under Mingo Grice. You are hereby required to ap| j pear at the Court of Probate, to be . | holden at Dillon court house, for I Dillon County, on the 24th day of [ November, A. D. 1911, to show i cause, if any you can, why the . proceeds of the sale of the real es- tiff* 1 tate of Sophie Grice, deceased, sold by me should not be paid over to ^? * G F. Bethea. administrator of the ^ said Sophie Grice, to be applied by t ; him to the payment of the debts of ? the said Sophie Grice. ?| Given under my hand and seal T'' '' this 13th day of October, A. D. * l 1911. J (Signed) R. A. Brunson, : Probate Judge of Dillon County. 10-19-6t ' " ? w, Pains or 1 Cramps * "I carry Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain i Pills with me all the time, and -! ?for aches and pains there is ! nothing equals them. I have j used them for rheumatic pains, headache, and pains in side and back, and in every case they give e perfect satisfaction." HENRY COURLEN, # Boonton, N. J. t Pain comes from tortured nerves. It may occur in any part of the head or body where there is weakness or pressure upon the nerves. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills Relieve pain, whether it be neuralgiac, rheumatic, sciatic, head- - *1 ache, stomache, pleurisy or ovarian pains. if* Druggists evsrywhsrs sell thsm. H .**. first package falls to benefit, your druggist will rsturn your monsy. a ? 0 MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ia4, ,y , ' n ? v * ; DON'T WMi ,! To have jrour orders filled for rough ! ar r)n>.c.l 1? 1 ?? - luwucr wnen l can da* 1 liver it to you on short notice. PHONE OR MAIL ^ > Urines your lumber Just as quick M . a personal order. My equipment ia ' such that I can furnish you anyI thing in the lumber line Just when 1 you need it. ^ ' T. W. Bethea Jjj DILLON, S. C. . -q* ( ; f YOUR GROCER HANDLES ^ i JjXYOR BUS-r < . - ^ You now sow Chickens 6nw IP YOU HAVE NOT USED " THE PARK O POLLARD m GRITLESS-CHICK mni } GROWING FEED Mwmt Vwl if r*wJu cluaa. Dillon Wholeiale Grocery ' W DISTRUBTORS J